1979 was an amazing time for UK post-punk pop. At the end of March, a
fresh new sound entered the British top 20. 'Sultans of Swing', a very
wordy song with lots of driving guitar, a tight rhythm section and some
killer musicianship. Dire Straits, unlikely pop stars led by a balding
29-year-old Geordie who could play guitar brilliantly, had finally
arrived. Six years later, they were, for a time, the biggest band in the
world. Brothers in Arms sold by the truckload, one of the first massive
sellers on CD. Since then, however, their star has fallen. Over exposure
as the safe, boring champions of the CD age, has resulted in Dire
Straits becoming, to many, the embodiment of a certain sort of benign,
homogenised music. Mark Knopfler, their singer, guitarist, producer and
songwriter, became a caricature of the middle-aged rocker in the minds
of many. Their music remains stubbornly unfashionable, but retains its
huge fanbase. Dire Straits On Track revisits, re-evaluates and
contextualises the band's six studio albums and two live albums, as well
as EPs and archive releases. Seven ex-members of Dire Straits have been
interviewed for this book, providing fresh perspective and insight. The
band made a lot of good music. It's time we remembered why.