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Facts and History
| JUNE-NOVEMBER 1977
It's less than a year after The Sex Pistols released Anarchy in the UK. Teacher Mark Knopfler (guitar/vocals, born 12 August 1949), his younger brother, social worker David Knopfler (guitar - they were born in Glasgow and grew up in Newcastle) and sociology student John Illsley (bass, born 24 June 1949) are sharing a flat in Deptford, South London. They start rehearsing Mark's songs and are soon joined by Pick Withers, formerly house drummer at Dave Edmund's Rockfield studios. Under the name of Mark's previous band, Cafe Racers, the line-up debuts at a punk festival, headlined by Squeeze, on waste ground behind Farrar House. A friend of Pick observes their sorry financial condition and says they should call themselves Dire Straits, which they do for their second gig - supporting Squeeze at the locally legendary Albany Theatre. They scrape together 120 pounds to
record a demo and take it to BBC Radio London DJ Charlie
Gillett, a renowned talent-spotter. He plays the tape on
his Honky Tonk show. Phonogram A&R man John Stainze
is listening and, in short order, Dire Straits are signed
to the Vertigo label. DECEMBER 1977 Stainze contacts Ed Bicknell, former
drummer in Jess Conrad's band turned agent at NEWS, and
asks him to book gigs for the band. As soon as he's seen
them play, he offers to manage them. They reach "an
informal agreement" and Ed gets them on Talking
Heads' first British tour as support act in the following
January. 14 FEBRUARY - 8 MARCH 1978 Dire Straits record their first LP at
Basing Street Studios, London, produced by Muff Winwood.
It includes "Sultans of Swing" , "Water of
Love" and "Six Blade Knife". Total budget
is 12,500 pounds - including artwork MARCH - NOVEMBER 1978 Constant live work - Marquee residency, tours of UK, France, Holland, and Germany to rapidly increasing audiences. Despite enthusiastic reviews and responses everywhere, their first single, "Sultans of Swing" and self- titled album merely drop into the charts and drop out again. The group signs to Warner Brothers
for the USA, but even before their album is released
there, Knopfler visits Muscle Shoals studios to play on a
Mavis Staples session produced by Jerry Wexler (whose
tack record includes Aretha Franklin, The Drifters, Ray
Charles). Wexler and Muscle Shoals keyboard player Barry
Beckett agree to produce their second album. 27 NOVEMBER 1978 - 10 JANUARY 1979 They record "Communique"
(including "Lady Writer" and "Once Upon A
Time In The West") at Compass Point Studios, Nassau
Bahamas. Meanwhile the Dire Straits album gives them
their first Number 1 - in Australia - and climbs steadily
towards the Top 10's in North America and Europe.
23 FEBRUARY - 3 APRIL 1979 Dire Straits first North American tour comprises 51 sold-out shows in 38 days, not to mention 300 interviews. Mark sessions for Steely Dan's "Gaucho" album. While they're on the road, "Sultans' of Swing" reaches Number 4 and the first album Number 2. When they play Los Angeles, Bob Dylan is in the audience and afterwards he asks Mark and Pick to play on his next album ("Slow Train Coming", his first born-again statement it transpires, recorded with Wexler and Beckett at Muscle Shoals May 1-12). Back home in Britain, though a little
later than in America, reissued "Sultans of
Swing" takes off to Number 8, stirring the Dire
Straits album to peak belatedly at Number 5 during a
chart stay of 130 weeks. JUNE - DECEMBER 1979 "Communique" is released
and becomes an instant worldwide hit (UK 5, US 11, the
first album to ever enter the German chart at Number 1),
usually sharing Top 10's with the extraordinarily durable
first album. Tours of Britain, America and Europe sell
out, but after pre-Christmas concerts in Dublin, Belfast,
and London, Dire Straits announce a six-month break to
rest. JUNE - JULY 1980 The band record "Making
Movies" (including "Tunnel of Love",
"Solid Rock", "Skateaway" and
"Romeo And Juliet") at The Power Station, New
York, with producer Jimmy Iovine. He had been
engineer/mixer on Springsteen's "Born To Run"
and producer on Patti Smith's "Easter". E
Street Band pianist Roy Bittan plays keyboards on the
album, David Knopfler leaves for a solo career.
SEPTEMBER 1980 - JULY 1981 Auditions produce a replacement
guitarist in Hal Lindes from California and a keyboard
player in Alan Clark from Durham (born 5 March 1952).
After the 17 October release of "Making
Movies", the band tour North America, Australia and
New Zealand and Europe (they draw 250,000 to their
Italian concerts alone). Despite their live success
"Making Movies" does less than its predecessors
in the States (Number 19), but in the UK the hit single
"Romeo And Juliet" lifts it to Number 4, four
months after release. MARCH - JUNE 1982 They record "Lover Over
Gold" in New York, Mark producing, backed up by
engineer Neil Dorfsman. The first side (in LP-era-speak)
comprises just two songs, "Telegraph Road" and
"Private Investigations". ("Private
Dancer", omitted from the album, was later chosen as
the title track of the 1984 album which relaunched Tina
Turner's career). Soon afterwards, Pick Withers leaves
the band, expressing a desire to play jazz. JULY 1982 Mark records his first movie soundtrack for the low budget David Puttnam production "Local Hero" (in part working on the set). He got the job after Ed Bicknell punted copies of "Making Movies" round various film producers (the album reaches number 14 in the UK the following year). Between work on "Lover Over
Gold" and "Local Hero", the demand for
Mark's services as a guitarist reaches a new pitch as he
records sessions for Van Morrison. AUGUST 1982 - JULY 1983 "Private Investigations" is Dire Straits' biggest UK hit to date (Number 2), despite being radio-unfriendly at seven minutes long. "Love Over Gold" is Number 1 album for a month, their first home chart-topper, and maintains the band's progress all over the world (Number 1 in 16 countries) except that in America, like "Making Movies" it stalls at 19. Terry Williams, formerly of Man and Dave Edmund's Rockpile, takes over the drum stool in September and immediately work on Dire Straits' "Twisting By The Pool" rock `n' roll EP (released in February). He and Mark then record with Phil Everly in London before Dire Straits hit the road. The band's conquests include the highest-grossing tour of Australia by any band to that point, the largest public gathering ever in New Zealand (62,000 in Auckland) and their first trip to Japan. In April - May, Mark takes time out
to undertake his first production work with another
artist (apart from the "Local Hero soundtrack")
when he co- produces and plays on Dylan's
"Infidels" album. AUGUST 1983 - OCTOBER 1984 Mixing the tapes for the live double album "Alchemy" recorded at the Hammersmith Odeon, 22/23 July 1983, Dire Straits eschew the usual "fairy dust" of overdubs and re-recordings and decide it should be released au naturel, mistakes and all. The album comes out in March (UK 3, US 46). Through the autumn and winter of 1983, Mark writes and records soundtracks for two more British movies, "Cal" produced by David Puttnam and "Comfort and Joy", directed by Bill Forsyth of "Gregory's Girl" and "Local Hero" fame. By this time, Mark has started working with keyboard player Guy Fletcher, who joins Alan Clark in the band. The "keyboard twins" are born. In the same period, Mark and John Illsley play on David Knopfler's first solo album "Release" while John records his solo debut, "Never Told A Soul", with assistance from Mark and Terry Williams. Also, in November at Kensington registry office, Mark marries Lourdes Salamone. In June, Mark produces Aztec Camera's
album "Knife" which goes to number 14 in
Britain. NOVEMBER 1984 - APRIL 1985 They record "Brothers in
Arms", Mark co-producing with Neil Dorsfman at Air
Studios, Montserrat. It includes "So Far Away",
"Walk Of Life", "Money For Nothing"
and "Your Latest Trick". Guy Fletcher (born 25
May 1960) joins the band as a second keyboard player
(from an early stint with Roxy Music and many sessions).
Hal Lindes leaves half way through the recording and is
replaced for the marathon tour to come by Jack Sonni, a
friend of Mark's who came straight from a day job at
Rudy's Music Stop, 48th Street, New York. An additional
musician on tour is Chris White on sax, late of the
National Youth Jazz Orchestra. APRIL 1985 - APRIL 1986 "Brothers In Arms" enters the UK chart at the top and stays there for 3 weeks, but this hardly offers a clue to the American and worldwide response which is to transform Dire Staits' status form First Division to Super League. The album launches a thousand statistics. In the USA, it reaches Number 1 in August and stays there for nine weeks. Similarily, "Money For Nothing" with Sting as guest vocalist, is Dire Straits' first American Number 1 single. In the following months, "Brothers In Arms" also tops the charts in Canada, Brazil, Austria, Belgium, Denmark, Eire, Finland, France, German, Greece, Iceland, Norway, Portugal, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, Turkey, Yugoslavia, Australia, New Zealand, Hong Kong and Israel. Incidentally, "Brothers In Arms" becomes, perhaps, the key album in transforming CD from a new-fangled curiosity into a mass-market "music carrier". The tour covers 23 countries, 117
cities, 248 shows and sells 3 million tickets.
Legendarily, they play some astonishing unbroken runs of
gigs for a major act, such as 23 straight nights in the
UK in December 1985. On 13 July 1985, they perform to a
billion TV viewers from the Wembley Stadium end of Live
Aid. The tour ends in Sydney, Australia, the 20th night
there, on 26 April 1986. JUNE 1986 - JUNE 1988 Mark and John play the Prince's Trust concert at Wembley Arena with Paul McCartney, Elton John, and Tina Turner, Mark produces 2 tracks for her "Break Every Rule" album, including his own "Overnight Sensation". Busman's holidaying from the band, Mark records for the soundtrack of Martin Scorsese's "The Colour Of Money" (starring Tom Cruise and Paul Newman). He joins the "host of stars" re-recording "Let It Be" to raise money for the families of the Zebrugge ferry disaster victims; he plays with Chet Atkins at The Secret Policeman's Third Ball - a benefit for Amnesty International - then again on an American TV tribute to the great Nashville guitar man; as is to become traditional, he guests with Eric Clapton's band for his annual Royal Albert Hall winter session in London and a European tour; he writes and performs the soundtrack for the Rob Reiner movie "The Princess Bride"; he produces and plays on Willy DeVille's album "Miracle" and several tracks for Randy Newman's "Land of Dreams". Meanwhile, John Illsley releases a single under the name of K Wallis B and the Dark Shades of Night, plus his second solo album, "Glass". On 9 November 1987 Lourdes gives birth to twin boys, Benji and Joseph. In early 1988, Mark socialises with
Steve Phillips and Brendan Croker, old guitar-picking
friends from his Leeds days as an apprentice journalist.
He offers to produce Phillips' next album. Over the
ensuing months Synclavier meister Guy Fletcher becomes
involved too and they very gradually record a set of some
of their country blues favourites. JUNE 1988 After two fan-club-only warm-up gigs
at Hammersmith Odeon, Dire Straits, with Eric Clapton on
second guitar, play the Nelson Mandela 70th Birthday
Party at Wembley Stadium (part of the Artists Against
Apartheid campaign), closing the show. JULY - OCTOBER 1988 Mark plays on Joan Armatrading's
album "The Shouting Stage", then he and Alan
Clark join Eric Clapton's band for an American tour. The
"Money For Nothing" hits compilation is
released (a UK Number 1). JANUARY - DECEMBER 1989 Mark writes and records the
soundtrack for the German director Uli Edel's movie of
the once controversial novel "Last Exit To
Brooklyn". During the summer, a pub conversation
with Steve Phillips and Brendan Croker reaches a
conclusion that they have temporarily become a band
called the Notting Hillbillies, that they will go out on
the road to promote their slowly gestated album and that
Dire Strait's manager, Ed Bicknell - last seen on a drum
stool in a ceilidh band for the "Local Hero"
soundtrack - is appointed official tub-thumper
fortwith. JANUARY - OCTOBER 1990 The Notting Hillbillies' album "Missing... Presumed Having A Good Time", is released by Phonogram on 5 March and goes Top 10 in the UK. They hit the road for 41 gigs in 43 days around Britain through April and May. The significant Knopfler verdict on the whole Hillbillies excursion repeated in interview after interview is, "I'm absolutely in love with music". By now, Mark has used Nashville pedal steel guitar ace, Paul Franklin and `steals' him for Dire Straits. Mark finishes an album of duets with
Chet Atkins called "Neck and Neck", released
November 1990 (UK Number 29 and Number 1 in the UK
Country chart, multiplying Atkin's usual British sales by
a factor of 6) and concludes other sideline recording
work with Buddy Guy and Brendan Croker before - after a 5
year hiatus - he and John Illsley decide it's time to get
back to Dire Straits. Mark and John play with Clapton's
band at the Knebworth Festival benefit for Music Therapy,
Mark spends the summer in America writing and comes up
with 15 new songs from which the album will be
chosen. NOVEMBER 1990 - MAY 1991 Dire Straits record their sixth album, "On Every Street" with engineers Bill Schnee and Chuck Ainlay at Air Studios in London with production credited to Mark Knopfler and Dire Straits and mixed by Neil Dorfsman. Bob Clearmountain mixes one track
"Heavy Fuel". 23 AUGUST 1991 ..... SOMETIME IN 1993 Dire Straits begin their world tour with five dates at The Point in Dublin, expecting 250-300 more to follow over the next 2 years, with audiences adding up to maybe 7 million. The 1986 tour line-up is considerably
changed and augmented. While Knopfler, Illsley, Fletcher
and Clark are now officially designated Dire Straits, the
nine-piece line-up now also features Chris White (sax),
Paul Franklin (pedal steel), Danny Cummings (percussion),
Phil Palmer (guitar) and Chris Whitten (drums).
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