The Studio Albums 2009 – 2018 Mark Knopfler

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Album-Release:
2022

HRA-Release:
07.10.2022

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  • 1 Border Reiver 04:34
  • 2 Hard Shoulder 04:34
  • 3 You Can't Beat The House 03:25
  • 4 Before Gas And TV 05:50
  • 5 Monteleone 03:38
  • 6 Cleaning My Gun 04:43
  • 7 The Car Was The One 03:56
  • 8 Remembrance Day 05:06
  • 9 Get Lucky 04:34
  • 10 So Far From The Clyde 05:59
  • 11 Piper To The End 05:45
  • 12 Redbud Tree 03:18
  • 13 Haul Away 04:01
  • 14 Don't Forget Your Hat 05:14
  • 15 Privateering 06:18
  • 16 Miss You Blues 04:17
  • 17 Corned Beef City (Remastered 2022) 03:28
  • 18 Go, Love 04:52
  • 19 Hot Or What 04:53
  • 20 Yon Two Crows 04:26
  • 21 Seattle 04:16
  • 22 Kingdom Of Gold 05:22
  • 23 Got To Have Something 04:00
  • 24 Radio City Serenade 05:13
  • 25 I Used To Could 03:36
  • 26 Gator Blood 04:14
  • 27 Bluebird 03:26
  • 28 Dream Of The Drowned Submariner 04:57
  • 29 Blood And Water 05:18
  • 30 Today Is Okay 04:45
  • 31 After The Beanstalk 03:54
  • 32 Laughs And Jokes And Drinks And Smokes 06:40
  • 33 Basil 05:45
  • 34 River Towns 06:17
  • 35 Skydiver 04:38
  • 36 Mighty Man 05:55
  • 37 Broken Bones 05:30
  • 38 Long Cool Girl 05:06
  • 39 Lights Of Taormina 06:09
  • 40 Silver Eagle 05:02
  • 41 Beryl 03:11
  • 42 Wherever I Go 06:25
  • 43 Trapper Man 06:01
  • 44 Back On The Dance Floor 05:31
  • 45 Nobody’s Child 04:17
  • 46 Nobody Does That 05:15
  • 47 Good On You Son 05:38
  • 48 Floating Away 05:03
  • 49 One Song At A Time 06:16
  • 50 Heavy Up 06:00
  • 51 Slow Learner 04:31
  • 52 Just A Boy Away From Home 05:11
  • 53 My Bacon Roll 05:36
  • 54 When You Leave 04:13
  • 55 Matchstick Man 02:52
  • 56 Early Bird 05:36
  • 57 Time In The Sun 02:52
  • 58 Pulling Down The Ride 02:40
  • 59 Home Boy 03:15
  • 60 Good As Gold 03:25
  • 61 Occupation Blues 04:22
  • 62 River of Grog 03:42
  • 63 Follow The Ribbon 08:07
  • 64 Your Perfect Song 02:56
  • 65 .38 Special 02:47
  • 66 My Heart Has Never Changed 03:49
  • 67 Terminal Of Tribute To 05:52
  • 68 Heart Of Oak 01:44
  • 69 Time Will End All Sorrow 02:59
  • 70 Oklahoma Ponies 05:20
  • 71 Rear View Mirror 02:28
  • 72 Pale Imitation 03:58
  • 73 Drovers’ Road 05:05
  • 74 Every Heart In The Room 04:31
  • 75 Don’t Suck Me In 05:17
  • 76 Sky And Water 04:31
  • 77 Back In The Day 05:49
  • 78 Precious Voice From Heaven 05:54
  • Total Runtime 06:05:53

Info for The Studio Albums 2009 – 2018



Mark Knopfler - The Studio Albums 2009-2018, gathering together the second half of his solo songbook with his more recent studio albums, to add to last year's '96 – 2007 collection. The box will include Get Lucky (2009), Privateering (2012), Tracker (2015), and his latest release Down The Road Wherever (2018) plus a collection of studio b-sides and bonus tracks and two previously unreleased songs – "Back In The Day" and "Precious Voice From Heaven." The audio quality has been overseen by the original mastering engineer Bob Ludwig at Gateway Mastering.

"The Mark Knopfler songbook, since the Dire Straits years, is literally and pleasingly all over the map, and yet without any sense of an album being a miscellany – being merely the next thing Mark Knopfler comes up with. Cohesion seems instinctual to him, both as a writer and a guitar player. He has his subjects, as any writer luckily will – youth and aging (often his own), the working grind, the demi-monde, the louche, wandering life of the road, women and love, history, literature, The North of England, Geordie issues. All of these preoccupations get fused into songs – melodies, stories (always stories), settings, characters, dictions, breathtaking guitar virtuosity burning hot from within – which seem always to come round to being about seeking grace; a real-time, minor key, on-the-ground grace. And also frequently about not finding it." (Richard Ford)

Mark Knopfler, singer-songwriter, record producer, and composer, is one of the most successful musicians the UK has ever produced and is often cited as one of the greatest guitarists of all time. He first came to prominence in the 80s as the leader of Dire Straits, who created many of the signature songs of the era including "Sultans Of Swing," "Money For Nothing," "Romeo And Juliet," and "Walk Of Life." Dire Straits last toured in 1992 and Mark set off on a new path as a solo artist. In the ensuing years, Knopfler has released nine solo albums of sophisticated rootsy rock and has continued to sell out tours across the globe with his band, delighting audiences wherever he goes. Over the years, Mark has written the music for several films, including Local Hero, Cal, The Princess Bride, Last Exit To Brooklyn, and Wag The Dog, and has played and recorded with many artists, including Bob Dylan, Van Morrison, Tina Turner, Randy Newman, and the late Chet Atkins.

Mark Knopfler

Digitally remastered



Mark Knopfler
The most meticulous and gifted of craftsmen, Mark Knopfler is known to one and all as the genius guitarist, singer and writer whose new take on country, folk and British roots launched the meteoric rise of Dire Straits – and kept them at the top of the pile when music tastes changed. Knopfler’s vision never faltered. He wasn’t new wave and he was only briefly pub rock. His star was set much higher and his solo career since 1983 has given us gem after gem, from the opening salvo of his first film soundtrack, Local Hero, through to glorious solo entries like Privateering and 2018’s Down The Road Wherever.

Digging Deeper

Solo albums and classic soundtrack work run parallel in Mark’s life and he has also graced scores of other artists with his instantly recognisable, trademark guitar work. Scott Walker, Bob Dylan, Tina Turner, Sting, Chet Atkins, Van Morrison, Cliff Richard, Steely Dan, Randy Newman and Eric Clapton have all benefited from his quiet and graceful presence. His finger style expertise has him ranked high on Rolling Stone’s list of all-time great players and he is a four-time Grammy winner with so many other prizes to his name that we’ll just mention his honorary doctorates from UK based universities; his 2018 induction into the Hall Of Fame at the Scottish Music Awards (and Living Legend title at the same event); and the fact he even has a dinosaur named after him by palaeontologists who were listening to Dire Straits when they discovered a new species. Mark is no dinosaur, though. He is a forward-thinking, rapidly moving artist who matures by the year to the extent that his reputation simply soars above the commonplace.

Screenplaying: early soundtracks (1983-1989)

With everything Dire Straits turning multi-platinum it was only natural that Knofpler would seek to broaden his horizons, and he delighted us with his debut soundtrack, the music for Local Hero. The heady blend of Celtic music, folk, pop and jazz was the perfect accompaniment to Bill Forsyth’s much-loved movie. Joined by Gerry Rafferty on one track and by specialist sidemen throughout, the score embodies the magical mood of this classic film and won Knopfler a BAFTA.

Having then produced albums for Bob Dylan and Aztec Camera, Mark’s next venture was 1984’s Cal, an exceptionally lovely and haunting score that incorporates Dire Straits and again provides the ideal instrumental backdrop to an idyllic film. Comfort And Joy followed the same year, another suite set to a Bill Forsyth, film while The Princess Bride (1987) – for Rob Reiner’s quirkily romantic venture – is a significant example of classic British film music in that era. The song ‘Storybook Love’, with lyrics by former Mink DeVille frontman Willy DeVille, received an Academy Award nomination.

The five-star music for Last Exit To Brooklyn (1989) is fully orchestrated bliss: ambitious and memorable from intro to finale. After this Mark took a sojourn while his side project, The Notting Hillbillies, recharged his creative batteries to return fully juiced and primed for a Nashville dream ticket with Chet Atkins, Neck And Neck. Then came a well-deserved compilation called Screenplaying, which cherry-picked his magnificent compositions thus far.

Golden heart: early solo albums (and more soundtracks) (1996-1999)

Oddly, it wasn’t until 1996 that Mark released what one might call his debut solo album proper. It proved to be worth the wait. Golden Heart conquered charts worldwide as the man himself recovered from the decision to end Dire Straits for the time being following a gruelling 15-month world tour to support their On Every Street album. Two years in preparation, Golden Heart evidently did the trick, because he was soon back on the road to support his new role. Guest players were of the highest calibre – as was to be expected – and included American giants like Paul Franklin (pedal steel guitar), Don Potter’s acoustic guitar and Sonny Landreth’s National steel. One can hear all that fusion of folk and US roots bubbling forth; it’s a heady brew that veers from pure country to the most exact traditional fare.

The deeply sardonic Wag The Dog movie found Knopfler back in composer guise, concocting a smart bedrock for Barry Levinson’s highly acclaimed political satire. Still using the ensemble he referred to as the 96-ers, Mark’s Metroland score (for Philip Saville’s evocative flick) was a gorgeous confection of original songs that transport the listener from 30s Paris to a near-contemporary London. To that end he tackled pieces by his beloved Django Reinhardt and the Hot Club De France. ‘Sultans Of Swing’ also crops up, as do borrowed tracks from Elvis Costello, Françoise Hardy and The Stranglers, helping to complete an authentic masterpiece.

More shots at glory (2000-2009)

Consistency is a valuable commodity in Knopfler’s work and his relationship with producer Chuck Ainlay is never better felt than on his second solo album, the silky Sailing To Philadelphia (2000), Featuring such guests as Van Morrison, Gillian Welch and David Rawlings, and the brass expertise of Jim Horn and Wayne Jackson. The title track itself is a duet with James Taylor that sets the scene on songs inspired by Thomas Pynchon’s novel Mason & Dixon, about the two men who effectively created an imaginary border between the north and south in the US.

A Shot At Glory and The Ragpicker’s Dream (both 2002) continued to mine Knopfler’s own political concerns. It’s significant that he always chooses to add his musical tone to films he’s comfortable with and then graces those dark-room experiences with shuffles, honky tonk, ballads and often tense and taut pieces that enrich the audience’s appreciation even without them knowing – the consummate skill of the soundtracker.

Shangri-La (2004) was his fourth solo outing and included the beautiful and elegiac ‘The Trawlerman’s Song’ among tracks that referred to a bad motorcycle accident Knopfler had suffered before recording took place. Even so, this is a joyous and pleasantly skew-whiff set that mixes such pieces as ‘Boom, Like That’ (inspired by the founder of McDonald’s, the entrepreneur Ray Kroc) with cleverly nostalgic items like ‘Song For Sonny Liston’, ‘Back To Tupelo’ and ‘Donegan’s Gone’, wherein country abuts skiffle and the listener is transported to a delightful place. An abridged version of this album comes with The Trawlerman’s Song EP (2005) which combines the title piece with live-in-the-studio versions of other favourites, recorded in one take at Shangri-La Studios, Malibu.

The Private Investigations: Best Of Dire Straits & Mark Knopfler was branded to suit all parties before a very important release, All The Roadrunning (2006), a collaborative effort between Mark and the legendary country singer Emmylou Harris. The result of a long-time collaboration between the pair, this extravaganza was seven years in the making and included rich and mature work from both artists with an exemplary country cast and some of Knopflers’s finest songwriting to date in the shape of ‘I Digging Up Diamonds’, ‘Beyond My Wildest Dreams’ and the title cut. Emmylou offers ‘Belle Starr’ and ‘Love and Happiness’, and the whole thing was just that. A live memento of their ensuing tour, Real Live Roadrunning, ensued.

By contrast there is a darker edge to Kill To Get Crimson, whose noir-esque title recalls a period in English history, the late 50s, when time seemed to stand still between the austerity of the recent war and the imminent explosion of youth culture. Another very desirable disc that we’re discovering ourselves with renewed satisfaction. Get Lucky (2009) – dig that Anglo-American teenage title – contains phenomenal songwriting and fresh insights into other chunks of life and seems to make the transition from the monochromatic 50s to the more garish colours of the 60s – if not the swinging type of 60s. Knopfler recalls some early youth in Glasgow and the North East and entertains with songs about gambling, poverty and British roots in general. Remarkable stuff.

Down the road wherever… (2012 to the present day)

The 20 original songs on 2012’s Privateering were wrapped around a meticulously clean and seductive sound that was completed just after a tour with Bob Dylan. As fine a slab of work as Knopfler has ever produced, its superbly intricate folk playing, unleashed rhythms and rock’n’roll are essential, and feature stellar support from harmonica man Kim Wilson (Fabulous Thunderbirds) and the ever-present A-team of Guy Fletcher, Richard Bennett and Chuck Ainlay.

Voraciously creative, and always working on his next masterwork by the time each new one appears, Knopfler supported Privateering with his usual extensive tour before unveiling 2015’s Tracker. A dozen new songs (with half a dozen more on the deluxe edition), were bejewelled with folk, blues, jazz and country influences, encased in Celtic tradition and Knopfler’s usual travelling-man wisdom on such tracks as ‘River Towns’ and ‘Lights Of Taormina’. Ruth Moody lent her plaintive vocals to ‘Wherever I Go’ and Knopfler doffed a cap to writer Beryl Bainbridge on ‘Beryl’.

His next soundtrack commission, for Hugh Hudson’s Altamira, landed in 2016. Then, fresher than people half his age could expect to be after embarking on yet another huge tour, late 2018 brought us Down The Road Wherever, a further reassertion that Knopfler has no intention to go gently down some nostalgic path. The album explored new territory with its addition of a mean horn section including Graeme Blevins (saxophone) and Tom Walsh on trumpet. Imelda May added delightful colour to the slinky ‘Back On The Dancefloor’ while Knopfler’s dark and understated humour was to the fore on ‘My Bacon Roll’ and ‘Heavy Up’. Gorgeous narratives such as ‘Just A Boy Away From Home’ and the autobiographical ‘Matchstick Man’ were further billboards for his highly literate, filmic eloquence. In March 2019, a new musical production of Local Hero, staged in Edinburgh, marked the unveiling of another slew of Knopfler compositions, as he challenged himself in yet another new medium to uniform acclaim.

A modern master with an ear for the past and a driven itch to stay contemporary – that is Mark Knopfler. One of the finest guitarists of his time – or of all time – an incredibly underrated songwriter and a singer with emotional depth, he is a true artist. Any and all of the above albums are recommended. The man’s repertoire is an addictive experience. Enjoy. (Words: Max Bell and Paul Sexton)

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