By the mid-70's his brother David had moved to London, where he shared a flat with bass guitarist John Illsley, and in 1977, Mark moved in with David and John and all three began playing music together, forming a new band called Dire Straits. The group's first demos were recorded in three sessions in 1977, with David Knopfler as rhythm guitarist, John Illsley as bass guitarist, and Pick Withers as drummer. After signing to Vertigo Records, their debut album was released in 1977 to little fanfare in the UK, but when 'Sultans Of Swing' was released as a single, it became a chart hit in the Netherlands and album sales took off – first across Europe, and then in the United States and Canada, and finally in the UK. The group's second album 'Communiqué' was produced by Jerry Wexler and Barry Beckett and was issued in 1979, reaching number one in France, and 'Making Movies' quickly followed the next year. This album moved towards more complex arrangements and production, which continued for the remainder of the group's career, resulting in my favourite of their albums, 1982's 'Love Over Gold'. By the time 'Brothers In Arms' came out in 1985, the band were a world-wide phenomenon, with Knopfler also making a name for himself composing film music scores, and writing songs for other artists, including 'Private Dancer' for Tina Turner's comeback album of the same name.
After his guitar style became noticed following the 'Sultans Of Swing' single, he was often asked to play on other artist's records, including such global superstars as Bob Dylan, Van Morrison, and Steely Dan. He played on Phil Lynott's first solo album 'Solo In Soho' in 1980, and was invited back to help out on the follow-up 'The Philip Lynott Album' two years later. After helping out on Kate & Anna McGarrigle's first album in 1983, he joined family and friends by appearing on albums by his bother David and former band-mate John Illsley. In 1985 he got to play with one of his earliest heroes Chet Atkins, contributing some superb guitar to 'Cosmic Square Dance'. Although this album ends in 1985, Knopfler continued to play on records from artists such as Sting, Randy Newman, Joan Armatrading, Jeff Healey and Hank Marvin up to 1997, adding his instantly recognisable guitar-playing to over 40 releases during that time. For this album, though, enjoy his earliest appearances on some classic albums of the 80's.
Track listing
01 Gotta Serve Somebody (from 'Slow Train Coming' by Bob Dylan 1979)
02 Loving You (from 'Oh! What A Feeling' by Mavis Staples 1979)
03 Time Out Of Mind (from 'Gaucho' by Steely Dan 1980)
04 Ode To Liberty (The Protest Song) (from 'The Philip Lynott Album' by Phil Lynott 1982)
05 Cleaning Windows (from 'Beautiful Vision' by Van Morrison 1982)
06 Love Over And Over (from 'Love Over And Over' by Kate & Anna McGarrigle 1982)
07 Blanket Roll Blues (from 'Climate Of Hunter' by Scott Walker 1983)
08 Madonna's Daughter (from 'Release' by David Knopfler 1983)
09 Never Told A Soul (from 'Never Told A Soul' by John Illsley 1984)
10 Cosmic Square Dance (from 'Stay Tuned' by Chet Atkins 1985)
I have wondered if Mark played on "Written On A Subway Wall" off of Dion's Yo Frankie CD. Dave Edmunds is listed on the credits so it could just be that a really brilliant guitarist was able to completely mimic the tone, feel, and phrasing of another brilliant guitarist. I'll add that track to this set for comparison, lol. Thank you for all your hard work!
ReplyDeleteI find rateyourmusic https://rateyourmusic.com/artist/mark_knopfler/credits a good place to check out guest appearances, and there's no mention of him, and discogs only has Dave Edmunds as guitarist, so looks like it could be a homage to Knopfler.
ReplyDeleteThis looks really good! Thanks.
ReplyDeleteThanks for the Mark Knopfler compilation such a distinctive guitar sound
ReplyDeleteRegards
Can you make of Michael Thompson, please? I'm Brazilian and I discovered his amazing guitar in "Vem Que Eu Te Espero" Angélica's 1991 song and I'm quite thrilled by his work.
ReplyDeleteThe Kate & Anna track is from the album with the same title "Love Over And Over". Thanks for this compilation.
ReplyDeleteI have lots of Knopfler's sessions for others if you're missing any - Phil Everly, Tina Turner, Joan Armatrading, The Judds, Brendan Croker...
ReplyDeleteLooks great, but your mac instructions reveal nothing for me. Been trying over the past months. No luck.
ReplyDeleteWould it be possible to post a "normal" zip we mac users can open?
In any case, thanks for the awesome posts.
Special 'MAC' link added. I'll do this in future, and hope that Yandex works for you.
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