Classical Composer REACTION/ANALYSIS to Telegraph Road (Dire Straits) | The Daily Doug (Episode 433)

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  • Опубліковано 19 лип 2022
  • #direstraits #direstraitsreaction #telegraphroad
    In this edition of #thedailydoug, I'm returning to music from Dire Straits and their song Telegraph Road. I'm making use of the live concert footage from their Alchemy tour in 1983. The music is amazing, with nuanced chord progressions, textural changes and tempo changes, and amazing jams and solos. But, the story behind the song and its lyrics are also worthy of our attention. I hope you enjoy!
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 788

  • @joepalmer3795
    @joepalmer3795 Рік тому +404

    I consider Telegraph Road to be the ultimate Dire Straits song. While I'd never want to be a gatekeeper I believe that if you don't like TR you don't actually DS. Everything DS did well they did in this amazingly in this song. Amazing deep lyrics, amazing instruments, amazing solos, absolute control of mood and feel.

    • @JohnBrooking4
      @JohnBrooking4 Рік тому +23

      I love the sense of history, and the human pathos at the end: “I’ve seen desperation explode into pain, and I don’t wanna see it again…” 😭

    • @ronyrontana9735
      @ronyrontana9735 Рік тому

      So I have to agree with you or I'm not a DS fan? Fook off.

    • @markvignati6413
      @markvignati6413 Рік тому +9

      @@JohnBrooking4 Yes - and then tying it back to something concrete - "From all these signs saying 'sorry but we're closed'." Brilliant player, brilliant songwriter, AND a poet.

    • @quizzy840
      @quizzy840 Рік тому +8

      My favourite song by any artist. Tour de force.

    • @davidlehman2514
      @davidlehman2514 Рік тому +3

      Certainly his finest moment as a composer and he’s had some mighty fine moments.

  • @garanceadrosehn9691
    @garanceadrosehn9691 Рік тому +124

    I've always loved the line _"... six lanes of traffic, three lanes moving slow."_ Great imagery, at least in my own mind!

    • @parachutejjs
      @parachutejjs Рік тому +16

      I’m always torn if that line or if “Then came the churches, then came the schools, then came the lawyers, then came the rules” is the greatest lyric ever.
      Let’s call it a tie.

    • @sergeinester6261
      @sergeinester6261 Рік тому +9

      And those birds tapping out their Telegraph Code

    • @JohnBrooking4
      @JohnBrooking4 Рік тому +7

      “They can always fly away from this rain and this cold…”

    • @toreaunefjellstad
      @toreaunefjellstad Рік тому +2

      And then the music slows down as well.
      EDIT: And then Doug calls it out as well. :P

    • @sergeinester6261
      @sergeinester6261 Рік тому

      And the guitar soars and swoops

  • @mhstrawn5217
    @mhstrawn5217 Рік тому +72

    Best Dire Straits song in their entire catalog and a relatively unappreciated epic classic.

    • @zocsy6364
      @zocsy6364 11 місяців тому +5

      not just the best DS song, but the best song ever recorded in music history!

    • @eduartkoruni9119
      @eduartkoruni9119 3 місяці тому

      😍@@zocsy6364 inevitably you're so damn Right!

  • @randyharbaugh7819
    @randyharbaugh7819 Рік тому +82

    When Mark added Alan Clark as a full time member on keys the band completely changed, in a good way.

    • @alexanderbespalov9659
      @alexanderbespalov9659 Рік тому +1

      The starting lineup also has its own romance. But I agree that the keys of Clark and Guy, percussion, etc. - it added scale.

    • @colingoode3702
      @colingoode3702 Рік тому +7

      @@alexanderbespalov9659 No disrespect to Pick Withers for his early drumming years with DS but when Terry Williams was added it gave them a much harder edge which I loved. DS were my favourite band from my 70's / 80's youth & continue to be my go to band for a feelgood vibe when I'm feeling low. Far better than the manufactured bands of today.

    • @ossivuohtoniemi5318
      @ossivuohtoniemi5318 Рік тому +9

      This is the song where Alan Clark really made his input as a briliant and extremily emotional keyboard player. Just listen to the solo after ”three lanes moving slow”, it really is one of the most beatiful intros ever leading to a dialogie between guitar and piano.

    • @RideAcrossTheRiver
      @RideAcrossTheRiver 5 місяців тому

      Too bad Knopfler abadoned that after 1983.

    • @corriefraser
      @corriefraser Місяць тому

      Alan's voicings inversions and bach like arrangement made this song

  • @allyourmoney
    @allyourmoney Рік тому +90

    It's so nice to see a reaction to a Dire Straits song that isn't Sultan of Swing. *That's a great song live but c'mon, people:* Dire Straits has put out some absolutely EPIC songs over the years! Things like Private Investigations, Tunnel of Love & The Man's Too Strong. And some very soothing, hypnotic tunes like Wild West End & Water of Love. Let's explore that stuff!

    • @rog2224
      @rog2224 Рік тому +3

      i concur.

    • @andrestimmermanis7346
      @andrestimmermanis7346 Рік тому +11

      The Man’s Too Strong…..underrated masterpiece.

    • @axelBr1
      @axelBr1 Рік тому +3

      Going Home

    • @robbaskerville253
      @robbaskerville253 Рік тому +8

      Am I the only person who loves Lady Writer? It has some of Mark's tastiest licks ever.

    • @andrestimmermanis7346
      @andrestimmermanis7346 Рік тому +1

      @@robbaskerville253 Definitely not….one of my favourites too. I agree on the licks and the performance on YT is almost contemptuously good.

  • @tommack9395
    @tommack9395 Рік тому +48

    'Telegraph Road' is an anthem if not a magnum opus... lyrically and musically it's a story of life and humanity.

  • @matthiaskopp9305
    @matthiaskopp9305 Рік тому +173

    I've said it here already: Alchemy is the best live album of the 80s

    • @TheEternalWayfarer
      @TheEternalWayfarer Рік тому +4

      To me, it's in the top 3 live albums of rock music
      Alchemy, Made in Japan and one out of The Who's Live at Leeds and Hawkwind's Space Ritual

    • @robbaskerville253
      @robbaskerville253 Рік тому +7

      Alchemy, Delicate Sound of Thunder, Live after Death ??????? Please don't make me choose!!!!!

    • @sobrietyisoverrated
      @sobrietyisoverrated Рік тому +2

      Unequivocal. A musical exclamation point. As important to musical history as any live performance before or since… The Allman Brothers live at the Fillmore, SRV at Austin City Limits, Hendrix playing the National Anthem at Woodstock… and The Alchemy performance by Dire Straits. Personally, I include Tedeschi Trucks live at Red Rocks but not too many people are familiar with them. ✌🏼

    • @Metal_Auditor
      @Metal_Auditor Рік тому +2

      @@sobrietyisoverrated I'd love to hear Doug get into some Tedeschi Trucks Band. I watched Rick Beato's interview of Derek the other day, and he's such a brilliant musician.

    • @joaquinlezcano2372
      @joaquinlezcano2372 Рік тому +5

      Is hard when is the same decade that features "The name of this band is Talking Heads". But I agree. Mark and the whole band was at their peak that night

  • @juanignacioquesada
    @juanignacioquesada Рік тому +152

    My favorite DS track ever. The original version is great, but the Alchemy version is superb!

    • @haileene703
      @haileene703 Рік тому +2

      Same for me. I am now not truely listening actively listening to Dire Straits, and yet, I have listened to this song so often that I could still sing 80% of the music, be it drums, piano or guitar. I love this song

    • @Paul_Halicki
      @Paul_Halicki Рік тому +3

      Same and... today I learned that the Telegraph Road of the song was the one I lived near in two different houses thirty miles apart. So I like it even more.

    • @61guitbox
      @61guitbox Рік тому +4

      the Alchemy version is my fav along with Private Investigation

    • @allangrant2713
      @allangrant2713 Рік тому

      THEE GREATEST Dire Straits song ever, that all those years ago, the song that sold me on the band, I saw them in Edinburgh and guess what they never played it GUTTED X 1 MILLION

    • @agross12345
      @agross12345 Рік тому

      Personally, I prefer later post-DS versions, e.g. ua-cam.com/video/Bo4vL513cBU/v-deo.html

  • @gregoryburne5251
    @gregoryburne5251 Рік тому +24

    Alchemy: One of THE best live performances of all time.

  • @davehall8584
    @davehall8584 Рік тому +106

    I always think Mark was not recognised for his great lyrics...he was such a super storyteller...in the classic folk tradition....and of course...a guitar virtuoso...this song neatly illustrates his genius..

    • @ekstradycja
      @ekstradycja Рік тому +8

      One correction: he still is

    • @ppvd4692
      @ppvd4692 Рік тому +4

      Don't worry, many of us totally recognise Mark for the brilliant storyteller as well as guitar god that he is

    • @davidelliott5843
      @davidelliott5843 Рік тому +2

      The radio schedules (almost) never play DR. Probably too long but shame on them for ignoring its genius.
      By the way, got the same stressor’s discussed, the road could so easily have been Great North Road (A1) of Eastern England, especially in the North East where Mark grew up.

    • @davehall8584
      @davehall8584 Рік тому +1

      @@davidelliott5843 yes! it could be that same road! "Southbound Again" as the song goes!

    • @hilogreg5216
      @hilogreg5216 Рік тому +2

      @@davidelliott5843 Actually in and interview MK said he was in the front seat of a tour bus in Michigan and saw the name on the highway they were traveling on... Telegraph Rd; wrote the song using imagery from the book he was reading at the time.

  • @jennywren7822
    @jennywren7822 Рік тому +20

    We mustn't forget Mr Knopfler wrote the words and music, arranged it, then sang and played his guitar as only he can.
    Every thing in this MASTERPIECE came from him alone.
    The mans a GENIUS.
    Long may he reign 😊...

  • @carlnorrbom
    @carlnorrbom Рік тому +66

    Can we also acknowledge and appreciate how flawless DR were in a live setting.

    • @LieutenantGarber
      @LieutenantGarber Рік тому +11

      Agreed. Mark has previously commented that there isn't a single overdub / correction on the whole of Alchemy, it is totally as-played. Amazing.

    • @hayleyedwards6437
      @hayleyedwards6437 10 місяців тому +2

      100% agree -- I saw them 3 times live and each time absolute perfection!

    • @jeffvanderwerf3391
      @jeffvanderwerf3391 9 місяців тому +1

      Some bands are simply better live. DR is certainly one of those.
      I am always suspicious of bands that don't sounds as good live. I won't mention names :-)

  • @BeechHouse
    @BeechHouse Рік тому +19

    I grew up in Toledo Ohio. Telegraph Road, also known as US-24, ran from Toledo up through Monroe and Detroit Michigan where it terminates into I-75 after North Detroit.
    For me, Telegraph Road embodied shattered dreams and escape. I tried to join the military back in 1980, fresh out of high school. Because of a bike accident when I was younger, I was told I couldn't join. I had based my entire future on being in the military.
    Telegraph Road became my escape. Living in Toledo and the greater Northwest Ohio area was a dead-end. No future for me there....
    I used to drive the length of Telegraph road. It was something to do and an escape from the mind-numbing boredom I faced living in Toledo. It was on Telegraph Road that I would make a fateful decision that changed the course of my life forever.
    Fast-forward 40 years.... I'm looking at a nice retirement in a few months, thanks to the head-space and thought-provoking miles that Telegraph Road gave me. It gave me a way out and a path forward into a successful career.
    Thanks to Telegraph Road, my golden years will be rich and fulfilling. Can you imagine my happiness when Dire Straits wrote a song about that empty, lonely
    road? Such a fitting tribute...... :-)

    • @petebanham4916
      @petebanham4916 10 днів тому

      You lived it, we dream of it over here!. Good Luck to you Mate.

  • @simonweedy4683
    @simonweedy4683 Рік тому +76

    I was the nerdy kid in school listening to Dire Straits on my Sony Walkman while the cool kids were into hip hop. That suited me just fine - and still does. My favourite live album ever.

  • @nantague
    @nantague Рік тому +19

    The structure of this song fascinates: the story of the birth, growth, and decline of a trail that became a major road of a major industrial city. It begins with a simple melody nearly Appalachian, Mark's resonator guitar with dulcimer-like overtones. Then the music builds and broadens as the road and city build. Then you get the apex and nadir in one simple phrase: "six lanes of traffic, three moving slow.." Then, notice: the music actually stops for a few seconds (the crowd, still clapping, doesn't notice). When the music begins again, with the keyboard, it is subdued, melancholy. When Mark comes back in with lyrics, it's very personal -- what's happening to him. And the music becomes more desperate and angry. By the end he is almost resigned, but then defiant. Just brilliant writing, musically and vocally.

  • @beardog6569
    @beardog6569 Рік тому +48

    I’ve been listening to this since I was a child in the back of my father’s car. Even as a six year old, I couldn’t help but cry. I didn’t understand the song, but Mark is such a brilliant composer that he can tell a story with sound alone.
    Almost 40 years later and I’m still captivated by this song and performance.
    Modern music can’t touch this. It’s not just nostalgia. Who else can do this, and do audiences have the patience to listen to 14 minute songs?

  • @rmcellig
    @rmcellig Рік тому +68

    I was so fortunate to see them live back then. I'm a HUGE dire straits fan. Telegraph road always reminded me that this sounded like something Springsteen would do. Love it!!!! 😀♥️♥️

    • @TheAsphyx666
      @TheAsphyx666 Рік тому +3

      Yeah, I always got a strong Springsteen vibe off it as well.

    • @XavierMcV
      @XavierMcV Рік тому +2

      I was just thinking the same thing while listening to it.

    • @robertakerman3570
      @robertakerman3570 Рік тому +3

      @@TheAsphyx666 I was thinking: such a distinctive voice-closest thing in My mind is Dylan.

    • @777jones
      @777jones Рік тому

      Tunnel of Love versus Water of Love 🤔

    • @davidlehman2514
      @davidlehman2514 Рік тому +2

      I love 70s/80s Bruce, but he couldn’t touch this. Maybe lyrically and with Roy Bittan’s piano playing, but certainly not the guitar playing...

  • @comzetsaint8611
    @comzetsaint8611 Рік тому +45

    DS are great in concerts... But studio version of Telegraph Road is perfect!!! Piano.... Guitar... OMG!!

    • @tbjfsu
      @tbjfsu Рік тому +2

      A treat for audiophiles, for sure.

    • @JohnBrooking4
      @JohnBrooking4 Рік тому +2

      Definitely some of the best acoustic keyboard work anywhere in the rock world.

    • @harvey66616
      @harvey66616 Рік тому +8

      Absolutely! I don't mind this live version, but the studio puts the piano much more prominently in the mix. You can barely hear the piano embellishments here. The song still works without them, but _with_ them, it's "kicked up a notch", to put it mildly. Studio version definitely wins this comparison.

    • @miketonner3094
      @miketonner3094 Рік тому

      I agree.......see my comment.

    • @broton69
      @broton69 Рік тому

      agreed! As great as it is live, the studio version is better IMO

  • @hifibrony
    @hifibrony 2 місяці тому +4

    MK's concluding solo is one of the greatest ragings against the dying of the light that any musician has ever created.

  • @keithhider2170
    @keithhider2170 Рік тому +34

    Oh, Doug, you should have listened to the studio version. The opening is so atmospheric and beautiful and the guitar solos are sublime. Go listen now and compare and contrast. You should also listen to Private Investigations.

    • @marcondespaulo
      @marcondespaulo Рік тому +6

      Private Investigations, seconded.

    • @redboyjan
      @redboyjan 2 місяці тому

      The studio tracks and the live versions have their own magic

  • @davidkaplan2745
    @davidkaplan2745 Рік тому +63

    Mark used to write for a newspaper, he really knows how to tell a story.

    • @ericleins4081
      @ericleins4081 Рік тому +3

      I grew up a few blocks from Telegraph Road in the 60s. Always been a favorite. Have seen DS/Knopfler a few times. Always a great show!

    • @Paul_Halicki
      @Paul_Halicki Рік тому +4

      @@ericleins4081 in the 1990s I lived 3 miles from the north end of Telegraph Road, on Walton Ave. in Auburn Hills, then moved 30 miles to Dearborn to a house that was only a half mile from Telegraph Road. It never occurred to me that the Telegraph Road in the song was the one in Detroit. Cool, huh?

    • @allenhuling598
      @allenhuling598 Рік тому +3

      Completely agree, David, Mark is a fantastic story teller! In my late 50s now, and listen to lots of music.....to this day MK is still my all-time favorite lyricist! Cheers!

    • @vk3fbab
      @vk3fbab Рік тому +5

      It flows through all of his music. Started with sultans, where he happened across a band of the same name and tells the story. A lot of songs on communique have the journalistic influence. Then Romeo and Juliet a song about his own relationship has it. Private investigations is also very directly telling a story. Perhaps the most famous one is money for nothing. Listening to the guys in the electrical store watching MTV. Notepad in hand having the song unfold in front of him. Such a great style and I'm sure I've missed many other great stories he's written.

    • @AndrewJLeslie
      @AndrewJLeslie Рік тому +1

      He used to play in a band called "Brewer's Droop", he really knows the regret of a minor chord.

  • @editmanify
    @editmanify Рік тому +17

    The Alchemy version is by far and away the most emotive, and the end is just a thing to be savored. Just emotion pouring out. Also, whoever did the sound mixing & recording at that show was an absolute genius. It actually made my father buy a CD player. The Sony CDP-101 in the 80's, just so he could hear it clearly. This was the only album we had on CD for a while.

    • @sebastianguttler1745
      @sebastianguttler1745 9 місяців тому +1

      I grew up with classical music until 15 when i took a working record player home from scrap and searching for a suitable record in the library with no idea of rock music i judged the book by it's cover and took home Telegraph Road. An Eye opener! Two years later i bought my first CD player, and because money ran out, for some time Telegraph Road was the only compact disc, i spend endless hours listening to this album!

    • @redboyjan
      @redboyjan 2 місяці тому

      My copy for the car was on the best tapes I could get my hands on to record off CD!

  • @racinnut77
    @racinnut77 Рік тому +29

    Couldn't click on this fast enough to see your reaction to this great song. Thank you for this. The great Terry Williams is the drummer. Pick Withers left by this time.

    • @johnf6288
      @johnf6288 Рік тому +3

      yep good catch, this guy really changed the band for the better

    • @circulation69
      @circulation69 Рік тому +2

      Having known Terry Williams' previous work with Man, it's difficult to think of anybody better to have replaced Pick.

  • @gregoryburne5251
    @gregoryburne5251 Рік тому +9

    When I listen to the lyrics, it often brings tears to my eyes. I suppose it’s bc I’m 52 now and the way Mark captures historical moments is incredible. It makes me realise just how different these gifted musicians are to regular folk like me. They truly have the ability to tap into the magic of the universe. It’s almost as if they discover these songs as opposed to creating them. Make no mistake, only the gifted can discover such beauty and convey it via their instruments that they’ve mastered.

  • @cindywalton192
    @cindywalton192 3 місяці тому +5

    It is some of the most powerful and phenomenal story telling ever…I am a 70’s girl, Mark is my favourite guitarist, and this song goes along with Dr. Seuss and the Lorax, powerful stories for everyone!! Developing isn’t always the best!!

  • @Ifyoudonttakeitucantfakeit
    @Ifyoudonttakeitucantfakeit Рік тому +8

    Once again British music leading the World.

    • @acteon54
      @acteon54 2 місяці тому

      British musician dude. But american music.

  • @alabhaois
    @alabhaois 11 місяців тому +10

    What’s also amazing is that Mark Knopfler can’t read music. He’s also left-handed but plays guitar right-handed. He’s absolutely brilliant. 👍👍👍👍👍

  • @petervenkman69
    @petervenkman69 Рік тому +21

    This is one of my favourite songs ever, glad you did a reaction to it. Mark Knopfler describes his music generally as a mixture of rock and where the Tyne meets the Delta. Tyne being a river in the North East of England near the Scottish Border where he grew up, and by the Delta he meant the Mississippi Delta... by that he means a combination of British Folk/Celtic and Blues/American Folk and more recently Country music as well.

    • @melanierhianna
      @melanierhianna Рік тому +2

      There's something about the North East, you hvae Mark Knopfler, Sting and Chris Rea...

    • @petervenkman69
      @petervenkman69 Рік тому

      @@melanierhianna You aren't wrong... Jimmy Nail, Brian Johnson, Alan Price....

    • @petervenkman69
      @petervenkman69 Рік тому

      @@melanierhianna In fairness Mark isn't really from Tyneside, his mother was... he was from Glasgow, but he moved to Newcastle when he 7 and does consider himself a Geordie.

  • @brunomeral7885
    @brunomeral7885 Рік тому +15

    I don't know how many time I had listened to this song (the whole album, if I'm honest) on headphone in my bunk aboard, and being immediately transported in an other place... and it works everytime.

  • @Nosnerwal
    @Nosnerwal Рік тому +19

    "Love Over Gold" was one of my first 3 CDs when they first came out. I had rented a CD player in case they didn't catch on!

    • @tomshirey3487
      @tomshirey3487 Рік тому +2

      It was the very first CD I purchased back in the early-mid '80s when I could finally afford a CD player. I was looking for albums that had great dynamics because digital recordings were supposed to have a wider dynamic range. The first music store I went to didn't have "wish you were here", but they did have "love over gold", so it was my very first one.
      I was a very disappointed teenager when I discovered that I could hear tape hiss from the original recordings in the quiet parts. Apparently lots of early cds were rushed to market from inferior master tapes.

    • @vinsgraphics
      @vinsgraphics Рік тому +1

      Monster album… right after TR you get Private Investigations, which is a masterpiece as well. I enjoy it all, especially the last three minutes of “It Never Rains,” an outro that stands equal with any of MK’s master solos.

  • @Paul_Halicki
    @Paul_Halicki Рік тому +3

    I never realized was "THE" Telegraph Road in Detroit. We lived 3 miles from the north end of Telegraph Road, then a I lost my job and found another further south. We bought a house closer to my new job, and that house was only a half mile from Telegraph Road.... but nearly 30 miles from our old house. So his impression of the road being a long, linear-developed road is spot-on... "like a rolling river." For most of its length it's perfectly straight, part of the very regular grid of roads on 1 mile spacing in and around Detroit.

    • @Paul_Halicki
      @Paul_Halicki Рік тому

      I always identified with several of verses; I've lived them, when I lived near Telegraph Road. The verse about driving home in the freeze? Yeah, lived it. The verse about getting laid off? Yeah lived it. The "race between the lights"? Yeah.... and got a ticket doing it on Telegraph Road. "Sorry but we're closed".... I was going to say it was a predictor of the auto industry's collapse, but really it's the story of the boom-and-bust cycle of any major city dependent on a single industry. Just making the connection to Detroit's Telegraph Road makes this song even more relevant to me. And oh by the way... I was living there in the 1990s when the radio call-in show was broadcast.

  • @michaellakey8255
    @michaellakey8255 3 місяці тому +4

    Form is temporary and class is permanent!!! These guys are class bagged up by the ton #majestic

  • @Pfanta76
    @Pfanta76 Рік тому +12

    "You had your head on my shoulder, you had your hand in my hair
    , now you act a little colder like you don't seem to care."
    This gets me every freakin time and I dont know why.
    btw: I consider Sailing to Philadelphia to be a later released prequel of this masterpiece. Mark, a poet who's also pretty good with the axe. ;D

    • @thecook
      @thecook Рік тому +2

      That line always gets me too…at the same time nostalgic and bitterly sad. This might be the only song that gives me goosebumps AND brings a tear every time I hear it

  • @Rabmac1UK
    @Rabmac1UK Рік тому +4

    Mark is becoming a folk type. Once he left Dire Straits, his solo career was so very interesting, coming even closer to Folk.
    'Je Suis Desolee, and Journey to Philidelphia' all are wonderful as well. The man is Legend.

  • @WhiskeyLore
    @WhiskeyLore Рік тому +3

    Written about Telegraph Road in my hometown Detroit

  • @pedrocollado935
    @pedrocollado935 6 місяців тому +2

    This. Is. Dire. Straits... and this is a masterpiece... I think last part is absolutely improvisation... they could be doing and doing it... but then decided to end... "this was enough"...

  • @blackisblack22
    @blackisblack22 3 місяці тому +1

    I usually feel bothered by the comments superimposed on the video but your voice is so intonated and pleasant that I did not feel discomfort at any time. Thanks for the analysis.

  • @jasperdevries1726
    @jasperdevries1726 Рік тому +7

    Terry Williams is on the live recording, Pick Withers had moved on by then. While Mark didn't always get what he wanted from Terry in the studio (he was infamously replaced by Omar Hakim for most of Brothers in Arms), Alchemy leaves no doubt that he was a monster live - in a good sense.

    • @joex9865
      @joex9865 Рік тому

      Omar is amazing

    • @grahamhowes6904
      @grahamhowes6904 Рік тому

      Wasn’t Terry once with Welsh band the highly underrated MAN?

    • @primalengland
      @primalengland 6 місяців тому +1

      @@grahamhowes6904Yes, and he was good to himself at least once a day.

    • @SecularTranshumanist
      @SecularTranshumanist 3 місяці тому +1

      Terry Williams was just the best Dire Straits ever had.

  • @Swindonboy56
    @Swindonboy56 Рік тому +2

    It is interesting how Brits visiting the USA notice things that inspire music, literature and art. The vast open spaces and sheer speed of development are alien to us but fascinating too. When I hear Telegraph Road I always think my first visits there in the 1980s.

  • @L.A.Tex_Norway
    @L.A.Tex_Norway 7 місяців тому +3

    This song is so emotional and beautiful.

  • @Wahian1
    @Wahian1 Рік тому +3

    The “beautiful guitar” in the opening is Mark’s 1937 National Style O resonator he bought off an old friend in 1978. Of course, it features on their song Romeo and Juliet in open G tuning; capo on third fret, and also on the cover of their Brothers In Arms album.

  • @mrticka
    @mrticka 8 місяців тому +1

    That guitar is called Dobro (DOpiera BROthers), invented by Dopyer brothers, sons of immigrant from Slovakia.

  • @charlesyateschalfant
    @charlesyateschalfant Рік тому +8

    I saw them live 6 times, and Knopfler solo once. They were superb. This is one of their best numbers.
    Mark is a true poet in the sense but also a guitar virtuoso.

  • @hankreardon6998
    @hankreardon6998 Рік тому +6

    My all time favorite song hands down. If you haven't heard it on an ultra high fidelity sound system you haven't heard it at its best.

  • @APthefirst
    @APthefirst Рік тому +7

    Just want to add another vote for favorite track of all time. Also, The drummer on this one isn't Pick withers, it's the awesome Terry Williams.

  • @kearfy
    @kearfy 13 днів тому

    17:10 "I don't know what they got".... Pure brilliance is what they have!

  • @jacobzimmermann59
    @jacobzimmermann59 10 місяців тому +4

    I love that this is one of the rare rock songs that includes a piano solo

    • @magsteel9891
      @magsteel9891 6 місяців тому

      Layla is another great. Piano solo, then accompanied by slide guitar courtesy of Dwayne Allman

    • @corriefraser
      @corriefraser Місяць тому

      Try Springsteen thunder road jungleland etc

  • @jimmywho4721
    @jimmywho4721 Рік тому +14

    So glad you listened and shared this one with us Doug. TR is and has been a long time favorite of mine.

  • @Cloxxki
    @Cloxxki 7 місяців тому +1

    For me this song is about how it all falls together so nicely. The rhyme, the hook, the melody, it's a divine many-dimensional fit.
    If it's inspired by a Nobel winning book, the sing might well be a greater masterpiece. The author would be proud.

  • @blacksheepbehavior6921
    @blacksheepbehavior6921 Рік тому +4

    HI Doug!
    In my opinion, TR is the best song Mark Knopfler ever written. I listened to it thousand times when I went back from school. Was the first thing I did after closing the door. Run to the turntable and put the "Love over gold" LP . Your choice of taking the live recording for your reaction, I think it was wrong, but interesting. The greatness of the studio version deserves to be listened and analyzed, because of the quality of their production. Sounds really haunting and need to be listened a few times to catch all on it.
    Thanks for your videos, I really apreciate them.

  • @billmorris8358
    @billmorris8358 5 місяців тому +3

    Correction….the drummer is Terry Williams! Pik Withers was the bands original drummer.

    • @hifibrony
      @hifibrony 2 місяці тому

      Bingo. Terry previously played in Rockpile with Dave Edmunds & Nick Lowe and in the Welsh jam band Man.

  • @MrStarchild3001
    @MrStarchild3001 Рік тому +7

    Iconic! Complete pleasure to listen to even after 30+ years. OMG... this band.

  • @johnpbh
    @johnpbh Рік тому +3

    I was lucky enough to have seen them on this tour. You could have heard a pin drop when they got to each of the quiet moments in this track. Brilliant song, brilliant band and brilliant story. Thanks for the reaction. Keep on Rocking,.

  • @markbucher7609
    @markbucher7609 Місяць тому

    My favorite Dire Straights song. I was stationed in West Germany when this album broke. I'd just bought my first serious stereo system and was totally blown away when I heard this on a quality system. Knophler is a genius on the guitar and as a writer.

  • @WassPogoreloff
    @WassPogoreloff Рік тому +2

    This is outstanding!
    30+ years explained why I love this stuff.

  • @Wolverines77
    @Wolverines77 5 місяців тому +1

    Man, I will never get tired of listening to Mark spin his masterful stories. I was born in Western Michigan back in '68. Dad enlisted in the Air Force 3 years later. Mom and I just moved back to a small town about 20 miles west of Pontiac. I delivered at least 200 trailers worth of automotive parts all over the Detroit metro area when I was driving long-haul 18 wheelers form 91-01. I wish Mark would do a version of this song with Bob Seger. This song perfectly grabs the soul and history of Detroit. Bob Seger, imo, is the true voice of Michigan (for R&R).

  • @chron1s
    @chron1s Рік тому +6

    Hey Doug Mark worked as a reporterfor The yorkshire post newspaper here in leeds England ,Telegraph road is outstanding ...Genesis do a very similar song called Driving the last spike ..well worth a listen y'all ..regards Chris over the water in blighty ....

  • @VicenteSansaloni
    @VicenteSansaloni Рік тому +3

    This is one of my favorite Dire Straits songs. Tunnel of Love and Brothers in arms are other two great songs.
    I always love the lyrics an thee story this song tells us, but the music itself is sensational.
    And I missed in this video that despite to talk about the chords, no take attention at the guitar solo, that has some memorables moments and some sounds like violins.
    The guitar solo is incredible.

  • @delorangeade
    @delorangeade Рік тому +17

    The Dm F progression seems to be common to most of my favourite Mark Knopfler songs. I always got a strong Bruce Springsteen vibe from this, with the keyboards, the storytelling and that it was written about America. I always preferred Tunnel of Love, where Mark is singing about the place where he grew up. It seems more meaningful, more personal and less generic. Telegraph Road is still a great song though.

    • @sonnyhenriksen9398
      @sonnyhenriksen9398 Рік тому +2

      Always thought that. The Springsteen vibe.

    • @timwebber9277
      @timwebber9277 Рік тому +1

      Yeah, that would be the 'Spanish City', which was a kind of seaside fairground place very close to where Mark grew up. You can almost smell the diesel of the generators powering the rides while you listen to 'Tunnel of Love'. Truly epic.

    • @delorangeade
      @delorangeade Рік тому +1

      @@timwebber9277 There's a video where he is talking about it with Brian Johnson of AC/DC, but Tunnel of Love is my favourite Dire Straits song for exactly the reason you describe.

    • @Pulsar77
      @Pulsar77 Рік тому +1

      Yes, this song is to Dire Straits what Jungleland is to Bruce Springsteen. Incredible storytelling.

    • @RideAcrossTheRiver
      @RideAcrossTheRiver Рік тому

      @@Pulsar77 The song ends with two mushroom cloud blasts. Bruce never thought of that

  • @scottwheeler2494
    @scottwheeler2494 Рік тому +9

    The Alchemy album is one of the great live recordings. I loved Dire Straits and Marks later stuff like Sailing to Philadelphia but nothing compares to his Dire Straits stuff. The first album was a game changer in the age of disco. It saved my 16 year old ears. The Brothers in Arms made me buy a CD player in early 80s dollars - it was the profit from many ounces of weed for my poor broke college student ass 😉. I still listen to the albums decades later. Wish I could say the same about new recordings these days - how many have even close to this level of complexity in a rock and roll song? How many could hold your interest for 14 minutes?

  • @jobbus22
    @jobbus22 Рік тому +6

    You have to listen "Making movies" album (1980) from Dire Straits, or at least the first song from it, titled "Tunnel of love". It starts with "The Carousel Waltz" by Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstein II".

    • @catmus1506
      @catmus1506 Рік тому +2

      Making Movies and Hand in Hand are such beautiful songs. Love that album.

  • @ClassicVibes_69
    @ClassicVibes_69 Рік тому +6

    Hey Doug, thanks for breaking this one down and sharing your comments to this wonderful song. I’ve been a huge Dire Straits fan for all of my life, Mark being the sole reason to get into guitar playing myself. This song accompanies me throughout my years and every single time it gives me goosebumps. Last time playing this one in the car I actually drove by my own house since the song wasn’t finished yet. I really think that dIRE sTRAITS where as their best as a band around the time of this recording. Obviously there so much more that followed after that coming from Mark Knoplfers urge to produce such great songs. Every one of them paints a little picture and has a nice story to it, which you see happening in front of you, similar to Telegraph Road. Mark is not only a fantastic 🎸 player with an unique style, more over he’s a great song writer with a very authentic voice as well. You might wanna check out Mark’s solo albums for that. Thanks again and all best from The Netherlands 🇳🇱 Michael

  • @paulroberts8542
    @paulroberts8542 Рік тому +5

    I've seen several comparisons in the past between the "Love over gold" album and Pink Floyd's "Wish you were here". Certainly this track makes me think the lyrics match Roger Water's incredible talent for telling a story and capturing emotion and David Gilmour's virtuoso guitar playing. Mark Knopfler is simply outstanding.

  • @georgesheffield1580
    @georgesheffield1580 8 місяців тому +4

    With any of Mark's music try the live version first . He is one of those musicians that perform to an audience better than in a lab .

  • @nicometal22
    @nicometal22 Рік тому +4

    Me: Hope that Doug will make an erudite analysis on this very interesting section
    Doug: [Reads the lyrics aloud and does't pay attention to the arrangement whatsoever]

  • @elliotcohen6652
    @elliotcohen6652 5 місяців тому +1

    Just FYI, you name the drummer as Pick Withers. While he was the drummer on the studio version, it was Steve Williams on the Alchemy tour.

  • @sethkaicer319
    @sethkaicer319 Рік тому +2

    Doug convinced me that Dire Straits is a way of life.

  • @MDIman42
    @MDIman42 Рік тому +6

    This song is a gem and so is Mark Knopfler. I haven't heard this is a long time - really enjoyed being reintroduced to it through your reaction. Nice one, Doug!

  • @MsTruthseeker999
    @MsTruthseeker999 Рік тому +5

    This song is a beautiful epic masterpiece and Mark Knopler, the self taught guitarist with his own unique sound is as always superb! Another awesome similar style of song of theirs is Going home.

  • @sgover2002
    @sgover2002 Рік тому +1

    It wasn't Pick Withers on drums for this, it was Terry Williams (.....and look how knackered he is at the end..)

  • @ytgibbo
    @ytgibbo Рік тому +14

    Hey Doug, greetings from England. PLEASE have a look at “The Gunners Dream” or “When The Tigers Broke Free” from Pink Floyd’s “Final Cut” album. Mesmerising. Thanks, love your channel. 🇬🇧👍🏻

  • @garygraham2513
    @garygraham2513 Рік тому +3

    Mark is, and will probably always be, my favorite guitar player. Mind you, next favorite is Really close and REALLY full. Guys like SRV, Stephen Stills, Jimi, Clapton, Peter Green, Peter White, Wes Montgomery... et- al

  • @scotthansen9546
    @scotthansen9546 3 місяці тому +2

    I've always believed the story to be about the growth of a town. All the good and the bad. Small towns had their identity, and when the telegraph gave way to the telegraph road, it invited outsiders to move in, the churches, the schools, the lawyers, and the rules. This changed the identity of the small town, to never be the same again. Sort of a warning, that change isn't all good. We see this today in society where every town gets the same national chain restaurants and stores, and the local places that made any town 'special', are eventually lost.

  • @malcolmspence2869
    @malcolmspence2869 4 місяці тому +1

    The three epics from DS: Sultans, Tunnel of Love and this one. Masterpieces each one. I've never been able to choose a winner. And I've been listening for 4 decades. They are indeed epic, each one.

  • @tarmo9010
    @tarmo9010 8 місяців тому +1

    The most beautiful solo

  • @armandosreis
    @armandosreis Рік тому +2

    I remember, ages ago in my teens, buying the Love over Gold vinyl album. Got home and started to listen and felt very disappointed for the first 10 or 20 seconds. It was not what I was expecting at all. That disappointment soon vanished and this song is right up there among my favourite Dire Straits songs. Magnificent story telling and musicians at the top of their game. Thank you for another good memory.

  • @TheOligoclonalBand
    @TheOligoclonalBand Рік тому +2

    If I could only hear one track for the rest of my life it would be this one. It has everything. I was five when the album and I was obsessed with this live version of TR. Made me want to play the guitar and I still do.

  • @OlliLeino_sportstuff
    @OlliLeino_sportstuff Рік тому +3

    This live performance contains all the wonderful stuff that tends to be lacking in modern live shows. Freedom, improvisation, danger, heart, tempo changes... everything that makes a performance unique. Today most live shows are played to a click and there aren't many ways of just letting it go wild like in this song. As much as I respect virtuosity on stage (e.g. Dream Theater), they are never able to deliver surprises like this. And the thing is, I never seem to get bored listening to this song because I always get a warm feeling inside me, and for a moment the world feels like a better place.

  • @leavnsmallville78
    @leavnsmallville78 Місяць тому

    Thanks for doing this. I've loved this song for a long time and found it to be one of my favorite long-form rock tunes. My degree in Geography draws me to the sad line just before the bridge "six lanes of traffic, three lanes moving slow" as what we geo-nerds refer to as a "zone of discard." My favorite musical moment is the little piano line during the lament "life was just a bet on a race between the lights."

  • @mellotronin54
    @mellotronin54 Рік тому +2

    I think I love your lyrical insight the most you seem to see more in the words than I ever do. Thank you.

  • @jaskarissanen5899
    @jaskarissanen5899 Рік тому +1

    I bought "Love over Gold" in my teens in -83 I think and still clench my fists to white knuckles while listening "Telegraph road".
    I grew up with Dire Straits and for me this is their best song.
    I remember back in the -80's, a guy from my house bought the VHS cassette of Alchemy and I got to watch it. It was a mindblowing experience seeing the band play.
    Good stuff.
    Thanks for the video, great content again. 🤘

  • @kenyonmau7197
    @kenyonmau7197 Рік тому +2

    Best DS track ever! I appreciated all your comments as it went along.

  • @heisenberg470
    @heisenberg470 Рік тому +78

    Dear Doug, I respect you so much as a musician and you have surely great knowledge and sensibility above all for harmony. Still, I see that you put too much emphasis on chords and harmony than in other aspects of music. I have a classical background as well and I studied in the Conservatory in Italy and I remember once I asked to my harmony teacher: "Maestro, when you listen a music do you focus on chords and intervals?" and he answered "no, I forget about it". Once you have analized and you know which is the harmonic structure, in my opinion you have to forget about it and enjoy all the other aspects in music, like melody, rhytms, colors, tymbres, arrangement, technic of the players. Harmony is like a glass, but melody and other aspects are the content in the glass. How is possible not to notice and remark the amazing ability and peculiar technic of Mark Knopfler as a guitarist? He plays great and memorable solos in this song, with amazing musical taste. The whole final part of the song with the last solo you were still noticing the harmonic structure, to the detriment of the emotionality of the song that was reaching its emotional climax with the guitar as prominent role. I hope you will consider this constructive criticism of mine, I still follow you with much appreciation. 😊

    • @Io-Io-Io
      @Io-Io-Io Рік тому +9

      Well said.

    • @yes_head
      @yes_head Рік тому +4

      With Doug's videos you know you're always going to get a verbal tab of each song. 😉

    • @rhalfik
      @rhalfik Рік тому +5

      nailed it

    • @delorangeade
      @delorangeade Рік тому +13

      I disagree. There are loads of people out there giving their emotional reactions to songs, many of them probably not even genuine, and that becomes boring very quickly. This channel offers something different, and it ought to be welcomed for that. Not all of us have a classical music education, so the small amount of harmonic analysis we are given can add to the appreciation of the song, even if it may have been the last thing on the mind of the composer when he was writing it.

    • @heisenberg470
      @heisenberg470 Рік тому +9

      @@delorangeade I don't think we are disagreeing at all. I agree with everything you wrote and I do not see that your words in any way contradict mine. As I wrote I appreciate this channel over others, otherwise I would not follow it. At the same time, among enthusiasts, one can also have different approaches and there is always room for reciprocal growth. Understanding and knowing harmony is certainly good, but it should not become a cage that imprisons the listener: music is a universal language that goes far beyond formal rules. I don't think I have a higher level of preparation than Doug, but I certainly have a broader listening education than he does, because in my case classical studies have in no way generated a limitation or a restriction of musical prospective as happens to many. I love Opera, Classical music, Jazz, Rock and Heavy Metal since I was 10 years old even before I learnt how to play various musical instruments and study at the Conservatory. From classical studies one comes out often very framed, they teach you that harmony and counterpoint are everything in music (the limits of this conception and education are quite evident in Doug's approach). Actually it depends everything on what are you listening; analyzing a song by a rock band like Dire Straits requires a different sensitivity and approach than listening a Choral piece or a Bach composition for organ. At the same time, in order to appreciate a twelve-tone composition or a free jazz piece by Ornette Coleman, one must abandon the classical rules of tonal music. I'm sure there is room for learning and growing even for a Classical Composer, exchanges of opinions and interactions help to expand one's mind and horizons.

  • @vdinh143
    @vdinh143 5 місяців тому +1

    I was 17 when I found this song and it brought me to the world of audio quality. Before this song, to me, sound was sound; a pair of cheapo earbuds was good enough for me. That was no longer the case as I desperately sought to submerge myself deeper and deeper into this song. I am in love with it.

  • @RideAcrossTheRiver
    @RideAcrossTheRiver Рік тому +2

    The fucking finest performance of any band EVER.

  • @caros4734
    @caros4734 2 місяці тому

    I had forgotten how good Dire Straits were. I saw them live in Wembley way back, superb band.

  • @alel-nattar7023
    @alel-nattar7023 5 місяців тому

    I think the song is about the experience of the person who possibly left all this industrialization behind to live in the wilderness based on the teachings of The Growth Of The Soil, but the modernization followed him and brought with it all the things he was trying to escape from. It feels to me like the song sheds a light on the disadvantages of industrialization. I also believe that the outro and the galloping feel of the bass depicts being on the telegraph road running away from it to seek another wilderness and start over.

  • @cindywalton192
    @cindywalton192 5 місяців тому

    Telegraph road and Dr. Seuss’ “the Lorax” for me are synonymous and beautiful to listen and read to children about development and the woes of that industrial development!!!

  • @chriswest1996
    @chriswest1996 Рік тому +2

    Mark Knopfler likes writing stories. Look up "Sailing to Philadelphia" for my favorite post DS example.

  • @Nathan-bp2zx
    @Nathan-bp2zx 10 місяців тому +1

    As a person who lives 20 mins from Telegraph Rd. MI, this is friggin awesome. Telegraph sure does go a long way

  • @catherinehoffpauir6323
    @catherinehoffpauir6323 Місяць тому

    In the last two weeks I have listened to this song many times. Just diving into Dire Straits and Mark Knopfler. I am in love.

  • @MsPoppinjay
    @MsPoppinjay 9 місяців тому +1

    This is my go to concert the DVD is virtually worn out!! And the absolute amazing Terry Williams on drums!!! I throughly recommend you watch this!!

    • @HEDGE1011
      @HEDGE1011 6 місяців тому

      Thanks for mentioning Terry! I have no idea how he was so consistent through the song and the whole set. I’m a big fan of the whole band, but I think Terry gets overlooked sometimes. My VHS copy of Alchemy was worn out, then my DVD was extremely well used, now it’s my BluRay that’s doing the heavy lifting!

  • @johncassetty9893
    @johncassetty9893 Рік тому +2

    Telegraph Road was the alternate route to take when leaving Ohio and going to Detroit and Interstate 75 was backed up for miles. I got to ask Chet Atkins once about what he thought about Mark's playing and he simply said 'meaty'. The ultimate compliment coming from the master of guitar.

    • @cletusbeauregard1972
      @cletusbeauregard1972 Рік тому

      I will be forever certain that the tour bus driver missed his exit. I-275 would've taken them to within 1/2 mile of the venue they played on the Making Movies tour, but they had to take Telegraph instead.

  • @mikeflynn8799
    @mikeflynn8799 Рік тому +2

    The best DS track by far

  • @juanignacioquesada
    @juanignacioquesada Рік тому +5

    Mark Knopfler was very fond on the resonator guitar played here.

  • @sixbladeknife44
    @sixbladeknife44 Рік тому +3

    Mark is such an underrated lyricist and storyteller, sometimes those talents are glossed over a bit because of his prodigious guitar skills. Another great story song worth checking out is “In The Gallery” off the first album.

  • @ferdischolten3132
    @ferdischolten3132 Рік тому +4

    Love over Gold is an album I keep getting back to. It is an absolute gem! From the epic Telegraph Road to Private Investigations, packed with songs reflecting on many aspects of life encapsulated in beautiful music. It is worthty of a masterpiece friday. At least you should also do a reaction to Private investigations, a moody atmospheric song with great musical lines and a very unusual duet between a guitar and a marimba....

  • @fd1930
    @fd1930 Рік тому +2

    Very interesting review, as always, of a great song Doug. So glad you enjoyed it.

  • @John1Brady
    @John1Brady Рік тому +2

    Wow... Thank You! First experienced Knopflers's genius my on a school bus to a sports event my senior year in HS 1978... have heard Telegraph Road countless times in my life but never appreciated or understood the depth till just now... THANK YOU Doug! And YES absolutely wonderful performance!

  • @petemair8193
    @petemair8193 Рік тому +1

    I am so glad you enjoyed this one Doug. It is one of my favourites. Such an awesome song and band.