25264-1 Brothers In Arms
Produced by Mark Knopfler and Neil Dorfsman
Released on May 1985
UK CHART POSITION #1 . . . VOTED #51 in Q MAGAZINE'S 100 GREATEST BRITISH ALBUMS (2000) . . . US CHART POSITION #1 . . . 9x PLATINUM RECORD
Find it at GEMM
25264-1 cover w. sticker/shrinkwrap  

O ne of those albums everybody owns, like Synchronicity or Steve Miller Band’s Greatest Hits. It was a remarkable bit of music-making at the time, combining social consciousness with memorable hooks and a certain working-class swagger. At this stage in his career, Mark Knopfler’s facileness with a lyric or a guitar lick were unmatched. Likewise, the rest of the Straits knew when to add the right commentary or support their leader’s statements with a knowing nod of a backbeat. But the real wonder of Brothers In Arms is that so many people connected with an album this cranky. Of course they loved it in the UK, their psychology steeped in melancholia, but US pop audiences usually avoid anything too dark. Perhaps the album’s bright spots masked the brooding currents below the surface, as “Money For Nothing” and “Walk of Life” were ostensibly upbeat tracks. Though I wouldn’t call Brothers In Arms a concept album, there is a theme at work throughout. Mark Knopfler mopes out of the gate lamenting separation from his love (“So Far Away”), lashing out at the hand that feeds him (“Money For Nothing”), and deflating his own accomplishments (“Walk of Life”). As an opening trio, these tracks are unimpeachable. Unfortunately, “Your Latest Trick” plays away from the band’s strengths and “Why Worry” is a premature lullaby (it would have worked better at the end of the record). Throughout the first side, the album production builds a palpable sense of suspense and anticipation which the band cashes in on with their next four songs. It’s here that the brothers-in-arms theme comes into play (unless you want to make the case that Knopfler is painting a musician/soldier comparison). The reggae-tinged “Ride Across The River” and the bracing “The Man’s Too Strong” (where Bob Dylan is most strongly evoked) illustrate the evils of war, and Knopfler finds that music is no salvation for the world’s problems on “One World.” The album closes on a decidedly downbeat note with “Brothers In Arms,” and it’s here that I realized how much this album reminded me of Pink Floyd. The two bands have very different styles and yet the use of atmosphere and gruff vocals, tart guitar licks and sharp social satire, could claim Floyd as an antecedent. If you haven’t listened to this in a while (after playing it to death), here’s a brother you might want to get in touch with again.

25264-1 back cover 25264-1 lyric sleeve
25264-1 back cover (shrinkwrapped) 25264-1 lyric sleeve

TRACK LISTING

  1. SO FAR AWAY    3:59
  2. MONEY FOR NOTHING    7:04
  3. WALK OF LIFE    4:07
  4. YOUR LATEST TRICK    4:46
  5. WHY WORRY    5:22
  6. RIDE ACROSS THE RIVER    6:57
  7. THE MAN'S TOO STRONG    4:36
  8. ONE WORLD    3:36
  9. BROTHERS IN ARMS    6:56

    All songs written by Mark Knopfler

CREDITS

ALAN CLARK -- keyboards
GUY FLETCHER -- keyboards & vocals
OMAR HAKIM -- drums
JOHN ILLSLEY -- bass & vocals
MARK KNOPFLER -- guitars & vocals
TERRY WILLIAMS -- drums
Michael Brecker --
Randy Brecker --
Malcolm Duncan --
Neil Jason --
Tony Levin --
Jimmy Maelen --
Mike Mainieri --
Dave Plews --
Jack Sonni --
Sting --
Neil Dorfsman -- engineer
Sutton Cooper -- sleeve
Deborah Feingold -- photography
Thomas Steyer -- painting

return to DIRE STRAITS discography

REGION RELEASE DATE LABEL MEDIA ID NUMBER FEATURES
UK May 1985 Vertigo LP/CD/CS VERH/VERHC 25 lyric sleeve
US May 1985 Warner Bros. LP/CD/CS 25264 lyric sleeve
AUS'L/GER/NET 1985 Phonogram LP/CS 824 499 lyric sleeve
CAN 1985? Vertigo LP VOG1-3357 lyric insert
JPN   Vertigo CD PHCR-4291 digital remaster
UK July 5, 1996 Vertigo CD 824 499 digital remaster
US September 19, 2000 Warner Bros. CD 47773 digital remaster

 

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