
Dire Straits biography
Dire
Straits are a British
rock band,
formed in 1977
by Mark Knopfler
(guitar and vocals), David Knopfler (guitar), John Illsley (guitar)
and Pick Withers (drums), and managed by Ed Bicknell.
In an era when punk rock reigned, they played subdued, almost old-school rock
and roll. Mark Knopfler
(the band's frontman) was heard to have asked pub managers to turn down the
sound, so people could talk over the music, while they were still in their
early days. Despite this complete antithesis to popular culture at the time,
Dire Straits still became hugely successful.
Dire
Straits recorded and released their first, self-titled album in 1978 to little
fanfare but five months later a single release, "Sultans of
Swing" became an unlikely chart hit and album sales took off. The
second album followed soon afterwards; these first two albums featured a
stripped-down band sound. The third
album, Making Movies featured
keyboardist
Roy Bittan
(from Bruce Springsteen's band) and marked a move towards more
complex arrangements and production which would continue throughout the band's career. The band's 1985 release Brothers in Arms
was an international hit and spawned
several singles including the number
one hit "Money for Nothing ".
Aiding the
success of Brothers in Arms was the fact that it was one of the first
fully digitally recorded and produced albums available in the (then) new Compact Disc
format. This had the accidental side effect of making it one of the "must
buy" albums for consumers wishing to demonstrate the new technology.
Equally, the new format was an excellent showcase for Knopfler's
meticulous production values on the earlier albums, leading many existing fans
to repurchase the whole back catalogue. Partly as a result of this (and a
successful appearance in Live Aid),
Dire Straits were the biggest selling band in the world in the mid 1980s.
A long
period of inactivity followed with only a hits compilation and a live set
released for the next six years. The band's final original studio album, On Every Street was released in 1991 to mixed reviews and
moderate success. Mark Knopfler would later
concentrate on solo projects and film music.
The band's
line-up changed over the years, but one constant was Mark Knopfler,
who wrote most of the band's songs and acted as clear leader of the band. (The
best-of album Sultans of Swing contains only two songs not credited to Knopfler alone: "Money For Nothing", which is
credited as co-written with Sting, in fact Sting, at the behest of Knopfler, merely added the line "I want my MTV"
in the style of The Police hit, "Don't Stand So Close To Me".
"Tunnel of Love", which contains an instrumental section based on
music from Carousel but is otherwise all Knopfler's own work.)