The Alchemy Live performance of this song is pretty magical, too. Nice to see Dire Straits being appreciated for their immense talent and musical legacy.
@@babylemonade2868 Nah, alchemy is good, but this is just that little bit better. Especially what Williams does in the end with the 4/4 bass kick and the 2/2 crash symbals. Amazing
Reminds me of when on the dodgems in Spanish City against my Uncle (one of many lol) haha Me I was conceived in Newcastle. The Toons in the Champions League as well (their kinda anthem tune being written by Mark as well lol, I mean the toon's one not the champions league) for the 1st time in 20 years, be f'ing amazing if they ever got the treble in 5 years or so, lol I drank half a bottle of whisky because they got into that haha! If you dont know when Newcastle United, the tune for Local Hero that Mark wrote is played in Newcastle United Football Club (aka Toon Army lol) on match days.
At the risk of being a Knopfler Nerd, last year I was heading up north so went to the site of the Spanish City just to see the site of this song. Some of the lyrics of the chorus, the “girl you look so pretty to me just like you always did” part, are embedded into the pavement stones along the seafront outside it. As a lover of this for four decades and counting it was magical to be honest.
It got its name when the football stadium left leaving all the Spanish placards around the pitch you had to pay to watch the match then the fair moved in, and the Spanish City was born,
Going down to that very slot this morning! He was interviewed on that spot by Brian Johnson of AC/DC and judging by his reaction he didn't know those lyrics were inscribed there! He's the most humble guy.
Dire Straits come from a time when the world was not short of truly world class bands / musicians ! However, they are one of a very small number of bands who really have their own ‘sound’. No other band sounds like Dire Straits, when you hear the start of any of their songs you know instantly who it is. Wonderful band 🫡
I could listen to a Knopfler outro on repeat for hours. Most non-musicians don't realize how difficult it is to find the right musicians to "find a groove" with and create something special. When it's working, everyone knows it and it doesn't need to be spoken of. I very much enjoy your analysis-driven commentary mixed with a bit of "fan-boy" as well.
I like the subtle riffs Knopfler always slips into the live performances. Did anyone else notice before the song starts @6:09 he plays 'Stop, in the name of love, before you break my heart'? Then laughs... Brilliant.
Thank you for this! I was trying to place that song. I knew the song, just couldn't remember the title. Dire Straits had great stage presence. The band came at just the right time for me. I graduated high school in 1982. Dire Straits was the soundtrack of my life in the 1980s.
I saw them live in '85 at the Showering Pavillion in Shepton Mallet. Exactly the same arrangement as this. It was an amazing night I'll never forget, and I'll never see anything like it again.
I love that he plays little cameos, Stop in the name of love, and Don't let me be misunderstood, so casually in the intro. Evoking memories of his childhood as a preamble to the song. The Tube, from which this recording was made, was a rock show hosted by Jools Holland. If my memory serves me, in an interview shown as part of the show he was asked about his playing style and technique and said "I've got a decent touch". How understated and humble can you get.
Of all the pieces of music on the planet that have been written, this is mine! I want this in my ears when I die. I am 70 years of age, been listening to Mark most of my life. Thanks for sharing this work of art with us. Love it!
Having been brought up in Whitley Bay and spending lots of time in the Spanish City as a child this is a very emotional song for me. It is a wonderful song with a guitar outro that is otherworldly. Within the last few years some of the lyrics to the song were inscribed near to the Spanish City for posterity. Love the channel and your reactions Doug.
I was in Whitely bay last week, and wondering where the quote was from. Figured out the Dire Straits connection, but didn't know which song. Serendipity in action. 😊.
I grew up a bit further south near Durham. We used to go on school trips to Whitley Bay...and The Spanish City. I'm proud to say I've been to that very shooting gallery Mark sings about. I get a lump in my throat every time I hear this song.
My grandmother used to go to the Spanish City as a kid, I think everyone in the area did. This song always brings so much joy & great memories back for her.
I come from a place called Wallsend near Newcastle in the north east of england. It’s only 2 miles from Cullercoats and 3 miles from Whitley Bay both seaside resorts and both mentioned in the song and places I used to frequent in my formative late teens to mid 20s. The Spanish City was an amazing domed complex full of fairground rides and booths. As a child I’d play on the beach in the sand and swim in the sea or when older go ice skating at Whitley Bay and out in the pubs and clubs in the evenings and listen to this new band called Dire Straits. I’m now 61 and the memories are all still strong and happy. Every time I hear this track I become engulfed in a happy nostalgia Whicker I’ll keep forever.
As Douglas Adams said about Dire Straits, and The Tune of Love in particular, "Mark Knopfler has an extraordinary ability to make a Schechter Custom Stratocaster hoot and sing like the angels on a Saturday night, exhausted from being good all week and needing a stiff drink"
You did not catch on that he played "Stop in the name of love" and "Don't let me be misunderstood" in the intro? This was also Marks fathers favorite song, he never played it live again after his father died
Another nod to Mark's life in Newcastle Upon Tyne with "Don't Let Me Be Misunderstood". It was recorded by another group of Geordie boys - The Animals.
My brother introduced me to Dire Straits in the late seventies, I also recall seeing a documentary on TV with them in it around the same time. Anyway, I followed them into the eighties and also recognised the 'nod' to The Animals and Diana Ross in this tune, hardly surprising because they were typical tunes played at fairground rides in the seventies. Just so beautifully put together by Mark and the boys. I do miss the eighties, musically that is.
Just the best live band for me they were brilliant in every incarnation. Always love to see someone appreciating them. I live it when someone notices he’s playing lead and rhythm at the same time and just how damn clean his playing is that’s his signature no one else makes a guitar sound like that.
When they renovated the Spanish City in the tiles around the entrance they had the words of "Tunnel of Love" embossed in them. Every day they open the start by playing this. Newcastle United Football Club use Marks Going Home Theme from the film Local Hero he wrote when the teams come out.
Mark's playing is unique and amazing, but Terry Williams' drumming is tight AF, it always stands out to me with DS performances and nobody seems to mention it.
@@frankslade33 Totally agree. Picks drum pattern was the perfect representation of those greasy gears and oily wheels of the fairground. Good though it is live I don't think they got close to the studio version.
Saw Straits on their first US tour in ‘79… magical! Saw them again in ‘83…. Even more amazing! Met Knopfler and Illsley at a vintage guitar show. Both were kind and gracious talking about their musical equipment. A class act.
I played this song so many times while at University, hearing about the Spanish City and Cullercoats and Whitley Bay. Little did I dream that within three years later I would be starting my first teaching job and living very near the Spanish City.
Another fact for you Doug. Brothers In Arms was basically the first main album designed wholly for CD. It was recorded digitally for the CD format. When it was released in 1985, if you had a new CD player, you had this album. I knew you'd love Tunnel of Love. Now that you've heard this, 'Sultans, 'Telegraph and Brothers In Arms, we need to line you up with Private Investigations :)
Can confirm, was gifted a CD player and Brothers In Arms was the first CD purchased. Previously we had a Love Over Gold tape copy that was played a thousand times in the car, so when this CD came out it was like a brand new world opened up.
This is a masterpiece of a song, and an incredible performance. The studio version is also great, but this recording was different class. The build up of the solo at the end is sublime.
I’m 73 now and was there on the day. Saw them twice in Glasgow Scotland & Manchester England. Still my favourite band of all time. Favourite songs Sultans of Swing, Brothers in Arms. Oh don’t forget Telegraph Road. ❤ I think that they were the first band on MTV. ?
Trivia: Dire Straits were the first band to have an album digitally recorded (Brothers in arms) in a studio. They were also the first band to sell 1 million copies of an album released on CD, also BIA's.
They were the first video on MTV Europe with "Money for nothing" in 1987. "Video killed the radio star" by the Buggles was first in the US in 1981. (I love Dire Straits!)
I don’t know what was more fun, listening to a beautiful song I’ve never heard before, or watching a brilliant musician deciphering it and truly enjoying the music. Brilliant!
I live less than a mile from Spanish City but I never knew it from the period Mark wrote of in this song. It was derelict for a long time but was renovated a few years back and it looks wonderful. Lots of regeneration in this area and it's often listed on best places to live and visit in the UK these days. I can vouch that it's a great place to live and bring up my son.
I was at the 2nd night of this live tour. The 1983 Alchemy Live version was stunning. This for me knocked it out of the park. Fantastic review as always Doug. Thankyou buddy Neil UK
I recorded this concert on VHS tape when it was played on Channel 4 in the UK, Channel 4 was very much in it’s infancy at the time, I’d guess this would have been 86 or 87, I was mortified when my sister recorded over the tail end of the show, Tunnel of love was before an encore which included Brothers in arms and the show closes with Local Hero featuring Hank Marvin. I still have the recording somewhere and have watched this particular track literally hundreds of times, I’d go as far as to say it is one of the best live performances I’ve ever seen by any band! The other stand out tune from this set is Sultans of swing…..look that up too. Great to finally find a reaction to this amazing performance, it’s been a part of my life for 35 odd years.
@stevehughes1834. You may already know this. When Mark Knopfler was young, one of his guitar heroes was another Geordie boy, Hank B. Marvin. How fitting that the whole thing goes "full circle" and they get to play live together. A fitting tribute to Hank from Mark and a golden snapshot in time for the fans. Stay safe and well.
Same thing happened to me! I recorded this concert in 1986 from the Spanish TV. I saw it thousand of times until the old VHS tape was partially erased by my little Sister. Thank god we have UA-cam now 😅
Hi Doug, thank you so much for featuring this epic DS song. It's been my all-time favorite since I first heard it when Making Movies came out back in 1980, I can honestly tell you I wore that album out! I've been a DS MK fan since I first heard Sultans back in 78. I saw DS live on the Brothers in Arms tour and then again on the On Every Street tour. I've seen MK five or six times through the years after DS broke up. His music means so much to me, especially TOL. I'm not partial to any one rendition but my favorite has always been on the Live Alchemy album. One quick fact, I read somewhere that MK doesn't play TOL live anymore since his Dad passed away some years ago as it was his Dad's favorite song. Anyhow thanks again for featuring it! I really enjoyed your reaction and commentary.
I've seen Mark Knopfler live 6 times since 2001 on his tours...'Tunnel of Love' is the one song I wish I could have seen him play, but never have. Thanks to UA-cam for all these old concert films...
My late mother was born in Newcastle. I bought this record on cassette when I was 17 (I was hooked on Dire Straits from their eponymous first album onwards). When I played this song at home, my mum’s face lit up, and she said she’d been to the Spanish City many times when she was a child.
My dad always had dire straits playing out loud on a weekend so grew up loving it.This song reminds me of my first young love having met a Greek girl on the island of Corfu when I was 16 so there after whenever I played this track or heard it always reminds me of her.Love your channel!
From the 1985 Brothers in Arms tour live at Wembley Arena. Remember watching it at the time shown on the Tube music program on channel 4. Uk. Taped it and have watched it a zillion times since. Magnificent and brings tears to my eyes every time 🙂
Thank you. One of the more enjoyable reactions to this song. Your respect for Mark's distinctive style is spot on. Best breakdown of the epic solo I've heard. 🤟😁
I remember getting out of this concert (not this particular one, but another one of the tour) totally on cloud nine... and I get a burst of dopamine everytime I think of it.
I saw this tour -- such a great memory! Thanks for the musical analysis-- however he did it this song has strong EMOTIONAL power! I think that's why you got so many requests...
Making Movies is one of my all-time favorite albums - heard it first in '84 when a radio station was playing a "perfect album side." Am I the only one who noticed (ahem, while Doug was talking - lol) a few bars of Stop In The Name Of Love at 6' 10"??
A truly great band, I believe Mark was born in Glasgow. I lived in Whitley Bay for a short time back end of the seventies and know and remember Spanish City quite well! I hear this track and I’m transported back, the smells, noise, laughter, the girls the taste in the air, bloody marvellous.
Thanks for featuring this. I'd never seen/heard this version. Your comments were right on target: playing lead and rhythm, finger picking with so much soul, and the band being right in the pocket.
The 2nd time I lived in Toronto, On. I heard that Stevie Ray Vaughn was coming there. So, I called up Ticket Master and asked for a ticket to see Stevie. The girl said that he was opening for Dire Straits. I said that's even better. Great concert!
the song you did not mention at the beginning that jumps out to me is Romeo & Juliet. Somewhat short and understated (for Dire Straits, that is), but that is part of it's charm. Lovely, lovely song (with the best use of a dobro I have ever heard, it really makes this song so special).
As a teenager playing guitar in Music School I one day discovered DS thru a friends parents who played Sultans of Swing at home. And I was hooked. Mark even played with fingers, like me! Tunnel of Love was always one of my favorites because it was the first time I could feel how a solo just prolonged the lyrics and story. I could feel the desperation of loosing track of the girl and he slowly start to panic and search for her. At least that's how I interpreted it back then :) After this my view of playing solos took a 180 and I cared more for the feeling rather than technique or speed. They just came years later anyways from practice.
Hi Doug glad you like Dire straits , I went to see Mark in Manchester in 2000/2001 on the sailing to philadelphia tour , he was amazing , played some of the sailing album then did most of the dire straits back catalogue , was on stage for 4 hours straight ,no support act . AMAZING
Check out his solo live stuff (Speedway to Nazareth, Done With Bonaparte), as well as the Real Live Roadrunning with Emmylou Harris. His NYC Beacon Theatre show in 2019 was amazing.
Thanks Doug. I've loved that track from the moment I first heard it - it's light and shade, it's epic and the solos on the both the album version and the live version are among his very best (which let's face it, isn't too shabby). One of Mark's trademarks - he does it so often - is veering off into an instrumental melody, every bit as composed and arranged as the song itself. I don't know too many writers who do that but he majors in it. You talk of building a song up, checkout Mark 20-30 years later with his regular band and Emmylou Harris doing "Speedway to Nazareth." Incredible cohesion in that band.
I used to go on the rides at Spanish City as a kid when visiting family in Whitley Bay, so this song always makes me smile (and I also think the Alchemy version is THE definitive version)
@@tonyjefferson3502 that's nice. I did a coastal walk a couple of years ago from Blyth to Tynemouth and was really happy to see that the Spanish City buildings are still there, they look terrific
I see you’ve watched Telegraph Road from Alchemy and this song is the song just before they do Telegraph Road. What makes that whole concert video so awesome is that they are playing their hearts out from beginning to end. The level of intensity each band member brings to that particular performance is just magic. I think the video of that concert is one of the most awesome videos of its kind available. This good, but the original Alchemy line up (the one you see in Sultans of Swing and Telegrapah Road) just had a special energy to them.
This brings back memories I had the Alchemy concert on cassette, almost wore it out playing it in the car, then later I got my first SACD and it was Alchemy, what. a. concert. Thanks for brining back the memories Doug.
Knopfler is a genius. The rythmn section of this band is one of the best of all time. Isley is the perfect bassist for Mark. He just knows EXACTLY how much is needed.
Dire Straits were the first band that I can say I genuinely liked. My uncle had their tapes playing in the car, so listening to this always takes me back to that time. Listening to this to this day, still gives me goose bumps because it's just perfection.
First time coming across your channel. I am now a subscriber. Great reaction, love the detail you went into and am SO glad you chose this live performance. It’s one of my all time favorites. The album version is great but this is on a whole other level. Great job and look forward to seeing more of your videos now!!
I just noticed this, at 6:10 , in your video, (it's at about 2:20 in the video_ Mark pays tribute to the The Supremes singing "Stop! In The Name Of Love" How fun is that hidden treasure.
I recorded this gig on VHS video when it aired on Channel4 in the UK. Must have played that video over 100 times. I can remeber very live nuance of every song, over 37 years later. ToL wasn't the last song by the way. This was the break before the encore. Fittingly the last song was Going Home, for which Hank Marvin of The Shadows fame was rolled out on stage to perform alongside the band. Mark always mentioned Hank and his red Stratocaster as being one of his earliest influences to play guitar.
You picked up on the line "In the screaming ring of faces". Such an evocative line and one of the best ever which gives me the picture of the rider on the "Racer" going round and seeing all the other kids on the perimeter waiting for their turn or perhaps just people watching when, . . . he sees her amongst them "standing in the light". Another great line is "In the roar of dust and diesel". You can almost smell it, never mind hear it!.
I heard this live version on a Friday or was it a Sunday night on my local rock station in 1989. I taped it on cassette. A huge Dire Straits fan. The most underrated rock group here in the USA, in my opinion. They usually only play the amazing Sultans of Swing or Walk of Life tunes.
Thanks for the enthusiasm!! I was born in May 1980, must have heard this song when I was 6 months old maybe, must have grown on me, the rather unknown album from Dire Straits "Making Movies" is only 6 songs, but it is amazing, including of course Romeo and Juliet and Solid Rock, but also a song that really incarnates the title of the album, which is Skateaway: sounds like a movie in itself, special love for this one.
The last song of this show was an encore, and the the famous theme tune to the movie Local Hero, an instrumental called Going Home. Knopfler wrote the song but for the soundtrack it was performed by the legendary Shadows frontman Hank B Marvin. There is a video here on UA-cam where Marvin joins Mark and Dire Straits on stage to play them out, both playing matching red Fender Strats! A pure treat.
The Alchemy Live performance of this song is pretty magical, too. Nice to see Dire Straits being appreciated for their immense talent and musical legacy.
And amazingly this was the opener on Alchemy, not the closer
@@ilera2007 do you mean in the actual concert? As Once Upon a Time in the West is the first track on the album
The best version is the alchemy version for sure. He should do sultans of swing from alchemy as well
@@babylemonade2868 Nah, alchemy is good, but this is just that little bit better. Especially what Williams does in the end with the 4/4 bass kick and the 2/2 crash symbals. Amazing
@@ilera2007 It was neither the opener in Alchemy nor the closer in this concert but both performances were amazing.
My favourite dire straits song. Nobody talks about the piano work. Powerful and brilliant!
Yes two of the best .
The scales he plays in the end always make vibes my spine
Those arpeggios!
Reminds me of when on the dodgems in Spanish City against my Uncle (one of many lol) haha
Me I was conceived in Newcastle.
The Toons in the Champions League as well (their kinda anthem tune being written by Mark as well lol, I mean the toon's one not the champions league) for the 1st time in 20 years, be f'ing amazing if they ever got the treble in 5 years or so, lol I drank half a bottle of whisky because they got into that haha!
If you dont know when Newcastle United, the tune for Local Hero that Mark wrote is played in Newcastle United Football Club (aka Toon Army lol) on match days.
I talk about it !! It's brilliant !!!!!
At the risk of being a Knopfler Nerd, last year I was heading up north so went to the site of the Spanish City just to see the site of this song. Some of the lyrics of the chorus, the “girl you look so pretty to me just like you always did” part, are embedded into the pavement stones along the seafront outside it. As a lover of this for four decades and counting it was magical to be honest.
Very cool.
It got its name when the football stadium left leaving all the Spanish placards around the pitch you had to pay to watch the match then the fair moved in, and the Spanish City was born,
Nothing wrong with being a Knpfler nerd, it just shows that you have a great taste in music😉👍
Going down to that very slot this morning! He was interviewed on that spot by Brian Johnson of AC/DC and judging by his reaction he didn't know those lyrics were inscribed there! He's the most humble guy.
Love to read of this. Thanks for posting., from a fellow Knopfler Nerd 😊😊
Dire Straits come from a time when the world was not short of truly world class bands / musicians ! However, they are one of a very small number of bands who really have their own ‘sound’. No other band sounds like Dire Straits, when you hear the start of any of their songs you know instantly who it is. Wonderful band 🫡
In my humble opinion, the finest technical band of all time, with THE FINEST GUITARIST THIS PLANET WILL EVER SEE
I need to question that. Stevie Ray Vaughn was another exceptional guitarist, give him a listen if you dare
I could listen to a Knopfler outro on repeat for hours. Most non-musicians don't realize how difficult it is to find the right musicians to "find a groove" with and create something special. When it's working, everyone knows it and it doesn't need to be spoken of. I very much enjoy your analysis-driven commentary mixed with a bit of "fan-boy" as well.
This song goes around in my head constantly. I’m not complaining 😂
I love the live performances I watch them all the time. Amazing.
You nailed it! Of all the many music commentators on the net, I find Doug the most informative and enjoyable, all delivered with warm, down home vibe.
The closing solo of this version is a true work of art.
I like the subtle riffs Knopfler always slips into the live performances. Did anyone else notice before the song starts @6:09 he plays 'Stop, in the name of love, before you break my heart'? Then laughs... Brilliant.
Thank you for this! I was trying to place that song. I knew the song, just couldn't remember the title.
Dire Straits had great stage presence. The band came at just the right time for me. I graduated high school in 1982. Dire Straits was the soundtrack of my life in the 1980s.
Mark Knopfler is the GOAT of guitarists of his time..............no one did it better, IMO.
Absolutely
I saw them live in '85 at the Showering Pavillion in Shepton Mallet. Exactly the same arrangement as this. It was an amazing night I'll never forget, and I'll never see anything like it again.
This is the very best version of Tunnel Of Love.
Thank you
I love that he plays little cameos, Stop in the name of love, and Don't let me be misunderstood, so casually in the intro. Evoking memories of his childhood as a preamble to the song. The Tube, from which this recording was made, was a rock show hosted by Jools Holland. If my memory serves me, in an interview shown as part of the show he was asked about his playing style and technique and said "I've got a decent touch". How understated and humble can you get.
Of all the pieces of music on the planet that have been written, this is mine! I want this in my ears when I die. I am 70 years of age, been listening to Mark most of my life. Thanks for sharing this work of art with us. Love it!
👍
Having been brought up in Whitley Bay and spending lots of time in the Spanish City as a child this is a very emotional song for me. It is a wonderful song with a guitar outro that is otherworldly.
Within the last few years some of the lyrics to the song were inscribed near to the Spanish City for posterity.
Love the channel and your reactions Doug.
spent many hours in the spanish city, just round the corner from my old school, park road juniors. Great memories.
I was in Whitely bay last week, and wondering where the quote was from. Figured out the Dire Straits connection, but didn't know which song. Serendipity in action. 😊.
@@simoncutts8570 Yeah, but Coquet Park rules!
I’m a Blyth lad (where Mark grew up) and I used to cycle to the Spanish City. Amazing memories and an amazing song.
I grew up a bit further south near Durham. We used to go on school trips to Whitley Bay...and The Spanish City. I'm proud to say I've been to that very shooting gallery Mark sings about.
I get a lump in my throat every time I hear this song.
My grandmother used to go to the Spanish City as a kid, I think everyone in the area did. This song always brings so much joy & great memories back for her.
I come from a place called Wallsend near Newcastle in the north east of england. It’s only 2 miles from Cullercoats and 3 miles from Whitley Bay both seaside resorts and both mentioned in the song and places I used to frequent in my formative late teens to mid 20s. The Spanish City was an amazing domed complex full of fairground rides and booths.
As a child I’d play on the beach in the sand and swim in the sea or when older go ice skating at Whitley Bay and out in the pubs and clubs in the evenings and listen to this new band called Dire Straits.
I’m now 61 and the memories are all still strong and happy. Every time I hear this track I become engulfed in a happy nostalgia Whicker I’ll keep forever.
The whole album Makin Movies is full of songs that just leave you feeling, amazingly good. IMHO it is their best.❤️🎸
As Douglas Adams said about Dire Straits, and The Tune of Love in particular, "Mark Knopfler has an extraordinary ability to make a Schechter Custom
Stratocaster hoot and sing like the angels on a Saturday night, exhausted from being good all week and needing a stiff drink"
Said it before, I'll say it again...this is by far the best rendition of this song ever. Ever. Evvvvvver.
I totally agree! It is THE BEST!!!
Alchemy is 27% superior
Sydney is the superior version
You did not catch on that he played "Stop in the name of love" and "Don't let me be misunderstood" in the intro?
This was also Marks fathers favorite song, he never played it live again after his father died
Another nod to Mark's life in Newcastle Upon Tyne with "Don't Let Me Be Misunderstood". It was recorded by another group of Geordie boys - The Animals.
Yes! Definitely
Stop in the Name of Love in the intro.
Absolutely did, yes! I thought I was the only one that noticed.
My brother introduced me to Dire Straits in the late seventies, I also recall seeing a documentary on TV with them in it around the same time. Anyway, I followed them into the eighties and also recognised the 'nod' to The Animals and Diana Ross in this tune, hardly surprising because they were typical tunes played at fairground rides in the seventies. Just so beautifully put together by Mark and the boys. I do miss the eighties, musically that is.
Just the best live band for me they were brilliant in every incarnation. Always love to see someone appreciating them. I live it when someone notices he’s playing lead and rhythm at the same time and just how damn clean his playing is that’s his signature no one else makes a guitar sound like that.
..or make it look so easy!
When they renovated the Spanish City in the tiles around the entrance they had the words of "Tunnel of Love" embossed in them. Every day they open the start by playing this. Newcastle United Football Club use Marks Going Home Theme from the film Local Hero he wrote when the teams come out.
Going Home is a superb instrumental track 😊
Mark's playing is unique and amazing, but Terry Williams' drumming is tight AF, it always stands out to me with DS performances and nobody seems to mention it.
I agree with you, but the original drummer Pick Withers and Chad Cromwell also worth mentioning, both of them imo extraordinary....
@@fartab Yeah Pick Withers had a groove that I never hear in the later live versions. He was awesome.
@@frankslade33 Totally agree. Picks drum pattern was the perfect representation of those greasy gears and oily wheels of the fairground. Good though it is live I don't think they got close to the studio version.
Terry is my favourite DS drummer ❤❤
Terry Williams´ drumming on Sultans (Alcemy live verion ) is out of this world
I'd cry when the piano is entrering during the guitar solo. Beautiful.
Saw Straits on their first US tour in ‘79… magical! Saw them again in ‘83…. Even more amazing! Met Knopfler and Illsley at a vintage guitar show. Both were kind and gracious talking about their musical equipment. A class act.
Love Ilsley bass and backing vocals.
I played this song so many times while at University, hearing about the Spanish City and Cullercoats and Whitley Bay. Little did I dream that within three years later I would be starting my first teaching job and living very near the Spanish City.
Terry Williams, incredible drummer.
Twisting By The Pool showcases his talents.
What a masterpiece, always makes my eyes watery
This such a beautiful and emotional song. Thanks for sharing and commenting on it.
Another fact for you Doug. Brothers In Arms was basically the first main album designed wholly for CD. It was recorded digitally for the CD format. When it was released in 1985, if you had a new CD player, you had this album. I knew you'd love Tunnel of Love. Now that you've heard this, 'Sultans, 'Telegraph and Brothers In Arms, we need to line you up with Private Investigations :)
Money For Nothing was the 1st song I heard on CD. I was in a stereo shop looking to buy speakers and the salesman played it for me.
Can confirm, was gifted a CD player and Brothers In Arms was the first CD purchased. Previously we had a Love Over Gold tape copy that was played a thousand times in the car, so when this CD came out it was like a brand new world opened up.
I'll add my vote for Private Investigations 🙂
Private Investigations is a stunning piece. Less really is more in that track. Can't speak highly enough about it.
Private Investigations is a must. On Valentine's Day 2024 he should do Romeo & Juliet (Maybe sooner, but it would be fitting)
This is a masterpiece of a song, and an incredible performance. The studio version is also great, but this recording was different class. The build up of the solo at the end is sublime.
I’m 73 now and was there on the day. Saw them twice in Glasgow Scotland & Manchester England. Still my favourite band of all time. Favourite songs Sultans of Swing, Brothers in Arms. Oh don’t forget Telegraph Road. ❤
I think that they were the first band on MTV. ?
Trivia: Dire Straits were the first band to have an album digitally recorded (Brothers in arms) in a studio. They were also the first band to sell 1 million copies of an album released on CD, also BIA's.
Lucky you! ❤🎉
I believe the first song played on MTV was The Buggles - Video Killed The Radio Star.
They were the first video on MTV Europe with "Money for nothing" in 1987.
"Video killed the radio star" by the Buggles was first in the US in 1981.
(I love Dire Straits!)
I don’t know what was more fun, listening to a beautiful song I’ve never heard before, or watching a brilliant musician deciphering it and truly enjoying the music. Brilliant!
I live less than a mile from Spanish City but I never knew it from the period Mark wrote of in this song. It was derelict for a long time but was renovated a few years back and it looks wonderful. Lots of regeneration in this area and it's often listed on best places to live and visit in the UK these days. I can vouch that it's a great place to live and bring up my son.
I was at the 2nd night of this live tour. The 1983 Alchemy Live version was stunning. This for me knocked it out of the park.
Fantastic review as always Doug. Thankyou buddy
Neil UK
The correct answer to the question "which live version of a Dire Straits songs should I listen to?" is always "the version from Alchemy" :)
My Favorite DS song. Outside of Floyd and the Stones, their Brothers in Arms show was the best live show I ever saw.
My absolute favourite DS song and a great version. Knopfler such a virtuoso, only matched by Gilmour in his ability to 'talk' through his guitar.
Mark basically went out and put together a Brit E Street Band during this time. They were one of the best live outfits going. Glad you enjoyed it.
Roy Bittan of The E Street Band played keyboards on the Making Movies studio album, so you're right about that!
Definitely! And those lyrics are Boss-evocative style. Beautiful.
I recorded this concert on VHS tape when it was played on Channel 4 in the UK, Channel 4 was very much in it’s infancy at the time, I’d guess this would have been 86 or 87, I was mortified when my sister recorded over the tail end of the show, Tunnel of love was before an encore which included Brothers in arms and the show closes with Local Hero featuring Hank Marvin. I still have the recording somewhere and have watched this particular track literally hundreds of times, I’d go as far as to say it is one of the best live performances I’ve ever seen by any band! The other stand out tune from this set is Sultans of swing…..look that up too. Great to finally find a reaction to this amazing performance, it’s been a part of my life for 35 odd years.
@stevehughes1834. You may already know this. When Mark Knopfler was young, one of his guitar heroes was another Geordie boy, Hank B. Marvin. How fitting that the whole thing goes "full circle" and they get to play live together. A fitting tribute to Hank from Mark and a golden snapshot in time for the fans. Stay safe and well.
Same thing happened to me! I recorded this concert in 1986 from the Spanish TV. I saw it thousand of times until the old VHS tape was partially erased by my little Sister. Thank god we have UA-cam now 😅
Hi Doug, thank you so much for featuring this epic DS song. It's been my all-time favorite since I first heard it when Making Movies came out back in 1980, I can honestly tell you I wore that album out! I've been a DS MK fan since I first heard Sultans back in 78. I saw DS live on the Brothers in Arms tour and then again on the On Every Street tour. I've seen MK five or six times through the years after DS broke up. His music means so much to me, especially TOL. I'm not partial to any one rendition but my favorite has always been on the Live Alchemy album. One quick fact, I read somewhere that MK doesn't play TOL live anymore since his Dad passed away some years ago as it was his Dad's favorite song. Anyhow thanks again for featuring it! I really enjoyed your reaction and commentary.
Not heard this version before. Fantastic!
I've seen Mark Knopfler live 6 times since 2001 on his tours...'Tunnel of Love' is the one song I wish I could have seen him play, but never have. Thanks to UA-cam for all these old concert films...
My late mother was born in Newcastle. I bought this record on cassette when I was 17 (I was hooked on Dire Straits from their eponymous first album onwards). When I played this song at home, my mum’s face lit up, and she said she’d been to the Spanish City many times when she was a child.
Never get tired of this masterpiece
My dad always had dire straits playing out loud on a weekend so grew up loving it.This song reminds me of my first young love having met a Greek girl on the island of Corfu when I was 16 so there after whenever I played this track or heard it always reminds me of her.Love your channel!
From the 1985 Brothers in Arms tour live at Wembley Arena. Remember watching it at the time shown on the Tube music program on channel 4. Uk. Taped it and have watched it a zillion times since. Magnificent and brings tears to my eyes every time 🙂
Thank you. One of the more enjoyable reactions to this song. Your respect for Mark's distinctive style is spot on. Best breakdown of the epic solo I've heard. 🤟😁
My favorite band and my favorite song of all time.
I remember getting out of this concert (not this particular one, but another one of the tour) totally on cloud nine... and I get a burst of dopamine everytime I think of it.
Love watching your reactions 😊 It's like you're actually inside the music as you commentate on its composition. Cheers from Melbourne Australia 🇦🇺
I saw this tour -- such a great memory!
Thanks for the musical analysis-- however he did it this song has strong EMOTIONAL power!
I think that's why you got so many requests...
Oh man, this is a classic!
I was at that concert in 1985
Making Movies is one of my all-time favorite albums - heard it first in '84 when a radio station was playing a "perfect album side."
Am I the only one who noticed (ahem, while Doug was talking - lol) a few bars of Stop In The Name Of Love at 6' 10"??
Also nice how MK cites "in the name of love" in the intro🎉
The live versions are the only ones to listen to!
My favorite Dire Straights song is Romeo and Juliet. Live version. Might be from the same performance.
A truly great band, I believe Mark was born in Glasgow. I lived in Whitley Bay for a short time back end of the seventies and know and remember Spanish City quite well! I hear this track and I’m transported back, the smells, noise, laughter, the girls the taste in the air, bloody marvellous.
Thanks for featuring this. I'd never seen/heard this version. Your comments were right on target: playing lead and rhythm, finger picking with so much soul, and the band being right in the pocket.
The 2nd time I lived in Toronto, On. I heard that Stevie Ray Vaughn was coming there. So, I called up Ticket Master and asked for a ticket to see Stevie. The girl said that he was opening for Dire Straits. I said that's even better. Great concert!
Wow. SRV and MK in the same night
I’ve been playing this for thirty five years…..love it
Be thank full he came among us and played like a god, Mark I salute you.
Along with his briliant guitar work and composition, Mark is a master story teller too.
Mark is such a truly unique player, and writer. He’s such a hero that I’m building a guitar In tribute to him.
the song you did not mention at the beginning that jumps out to me is Romeo & Juliet. Somewhat short and understated (for Dire Straits, that is), but that is part of it's charm. Lovely, lovely song (with the best use of a dobro I have ever heard, it really makes this song so special).
Truly awesome - one the best, if not the best, all time rock performances.
As a teenager playing guitar in Music School I one day discovered DS thru a friends parents who played Sultans of Swing at home. And I was hooked. Mark even played with fingers, like me!
Tunnel of Love was always one of my favorites because it was the first time I could feel how a solo just prolonged the lyrics and story. I could feel the desperation of loosing track of the girl and he slowly start to panic and search for her.
At least that's how I interpreted it back then :)
After this my view of playing solos took a 180 and I cared more for the feeling rather than technique or speed. They just came years later anyways from practice.
Hi Doug glad you like Dire straits , I went to see Mark in Manchester in 2000/2001 on the sailing to philadelphia tour , he was amazing , played some of the sailing album then did most of the dire straits back catalogue , was on stage for 4 hours straight ,no support act . AMAZING
What can I say? Wonderful stuff..thankyou so much...your commentary is so natural ,informative..a joy to watch thankyou 🎸
I like what you said about the creative process, especially those moments when it just flows out from some place which is not you.
Check out his solo live stuff (Speedway to Nazareth, Done With Bonaparte), as well as the Real Live Roadrunning with Emmylou Harris. His NYC Beacon Theatre show in 2019 was amazing.
Thanks Doug. I've loved that track from the moment I first heard it - it's light and shade, it's epic and the solos on the both the album version and the live version are among his very best (which let's face it, isn't too shabby). One of Mark's trademarks - he does it so often - is veering off into an instrumental melody, every bit as composed and arranged as the song itself. I don't know too many writers who do that but he majors in it. You talk of building a song up, checkout Mark 20-30 years later with his regular band and Emmylou Harris doing "Speedway to Nazareth." Incredible cohesion in that band.
Making Movies is probably my most oft played DS record...
I used to go on the rides at Spanish City as a kid when visiting family in Whitley Bay, so this song always makes me smile (and I also think the Alchemy version is THE definitive version)
Spanish City now has the Lyrics cut into the steps when it was been renovated
@@tonyjefferson3502 that's nice. I did a coastal walk a couple of years ago from Blyth to Tynemouth and was really happy to see that the Spanish City buildings are still there, they look terrific
Mark knows his chords, I believe. I love their music. 👍🫶
Mark was writing songs for other people He wrote the song Private Dancer for Tina Turner,
I see you’ve watched Telegraph Road from Alchemy and this song is the song just before they do Telegraph Road. What makes that whole concert video so awesome is that they are playing their hearts out from beginning to end. The level of intensity each band member brings to that particular performance is just magic. I think the video of that concert is one of the most awesome videos of its kind available. This good, but the original Alchemy line up (the one you see in Sultans of Swing and Telegrapah Road) just had a special energy to them.
Keep up your reviews Doug ,they are excellent .
So happy that I have seen them live
This brings back memories I had the Alchemy concert on cassette, almost wore it out playing it in the car, then later I got my first SACD and it was Alchemy, what. a. concert. Thanks for brining back the memories Doug.
This song also featured in An Officer and a Gentleman movie
I love your take on these songs Doug, much more in depth than most people.
The one he did in sydney 86 was another guitar solo masterpiece as he tweeked a little and sounded as good
Knopfler is a genius. The rythmn section of this band is one of the best of all time. Isley is the perfect bassist for Mark. He just knows EXACTLY how much is needed.
This is my favorite song of all time.
Dire Straits were the first band that I can say I genuinely liked. My uncle had their tapes playing in the car, so listening to this always takes me back to that time. Listening to this to this day, still gives me goose bumps because it's just perfection.
Omg, those transitions 😍 Powerful beauty 🕎
Every time I hear this song, tears come to my eyes. Simply beautiful!!!
First time coming across your channel. I am now a subscriber. Great reaction, love the detail you went into and am SO glad you chose this live performance. It’s one of my all time favorites. The album version is great but this is on a whole other level. Great job and look forward to seeing more of your videos now!!
Best live version of this ever.
Utterly superb.
I just noticed this, at 6:10 , in your video, (it's at about 2:20 in the video_ Mark pays tribute to the The Supremes singing "Stop! In The Name Of Love"
How fun is that hidden treasure.
I recorded this gig on VHS video when it aired on Channel4 in the UK. Must have played that video over 100 times. I can remeber very live nuance of every song, over 37 years later.
ToL wasn't the last song by the way. This was the break before the encore. Fittingly the last song was Going Home, for which Hank Marvin of The Shadows fame was rolled out on stage to perform alongside the band. Mark always mentioned Hank and his red Stratocaster as being one of his earliest influences to play guitar.
Masterclass in pacing and building up a solo to stay interesting for 5 minutes.
I was at Wembley 4th July 1985, watching The Boss and we could hear Straits playing at the Arena, what an incredible experience!
You picked up on the line "In the screaming ring of faces". Such an evocative line and one of the best ever which gives me the picture of the rider on the "Racer" going round and seeing all the other kids on the perimeter waiting for their turn or perhaps just people watching when, . . . he sees her amongst them "standing in the light". Another great line is "In the roar of dust and diesel". You can almost smell it, never mind hear it!.
I heard this live version on a Friday or was it a Sunday night on my local rock station in 1989. I taped it on cassette. A huge Dire Straits fan. The most underrated rock group here in the USA, in my opinion. They usually only play the amazing Sultans of Swing or Walk of Life tunes.
Thanks for the enthusiasm!! I was born in May 1980, must have heard this song when I was 6 months old maybe, must have grown on me, the rather unknown album from Dire Straits "Making Movies" is only 6 songs, but it is amazing, including of course Romeo and Juliet and Solid Rock, but also a song that really incarnates the title of the album, which is Skateaway: sounds like a movie in itself, special love for this one.
One of the best live solos ever
Whenever i feel down, i would just switch on his sultan and tunnel solos, listen again and again and u know what my mood picks up and feels so anew
One of the greatest performances in history.
The encore was Mark Knopfler's theme to the film 'Local Hero', with guest guitarist Hank Marvin.
The last song of this show was an encore, and the the famous theme tune to the movie Local Hero, an instrumental called Going Home. Knopfler wrote the song but for the soundtrack it was performed by the legendary Shadows frontman Hank B Marvin.
There is a video here on UA-cam where Marvin joins Mark and Dire Straits on stage to play them out, both playing matching red Fender Strats! A pure treat.