I tried learning this on guitar Using Mark's finger picking style instead of a pick Guess what happened ? I got a blister on my finger & a blister on my thumb !
@kingcassius25864 ай бұрын
I don't care that this comment is only 3 days old. It should still have a thousand 'thumbs up/likes' by now.
@lorrie28784 ай бұрын
I am a, or was, a huge Sting fan. I have everything Sting and it was so exciting for me to here him on this awesome song!
@jameskinchen21484 ай бұрын
@@kingcassius2586Only one thumb.
@raymitchell97364 ай бұрын
LOL... Ohhhh you didn't! That's so funny it made my day! Thanks!!!
@jimrebr4 ай бұрын
Yep, when I was learning how to finger pick songs on guitar, I got blisters, but I had already gotten blisters when I learned to play violin. 🎻
@regenitech4 ай бұрын
I'm happy to have played a small part in this music video. I was one of the original software engineers on the Bosch FGS 4000 responsible for the animation editor. I moved to Paris in 1987 from Salt Lake City where the FGS 4000 was invented and continued to work on the animation editor. From time to time I visited London where Ian Pearson and Gavin Blair were working on the animation for Money For Nothing. The blocky extruded characters in Money For Nothing were about the best a modeler could do at the time so I began working on the Hyperspace Modeler that allowed artists with no 3D modeling experience to create freeform organic models. The rest is history 😊
@mikeblair25944 ай бұрын
Just a cog in the machine that keeps us all happy. Good on ya mate
@louisesteenkamp91364 ай бұрын
How fantastic!
@HocusPocus69694 ай бұрын
Love it!
@CyberSystemOverload4 ай бұрын
Wow, fantastic, thanks for sharing this! The vid made such an impact on me as a teen!
@NelsonStJames4 ай бұрын
It's takes all those small parts to create the magic. Regardless to what they say about the animation not looking like much today; it's the way I will always remember the video, and the only way I'd want to see it.
@robertodesimone28234 ай бұрын
The publisher wanting a percentage for a melody, against the author will; for a song titled Money for nothing... Case in point!
@stopthephilosophicalzombie90174 ай бұрын
She should have done another version with the melody to Have a Cigar.
@jimroland28604 ай бұрын
Incidentally I don't see them claiming over the same tune in Nelly Furtado's Maneater (repeatedly in the choruses!)
@Mr_Bouda4 ай бұрын
that same company made ReBoot and Beast Wars!
@Zoe-c9z4 ай бұрын
Who needs a melody, I concur😅🎉please notify the authorities😅
@Zoe-c9z4 ай бұрын
@@stopthephilosophicalzombie9017UR gonna go FAR
@davecummings74774 ай бұрын
No mention of the badass drum solo at the beginning with the epic keyboards that build up the ultimate crescendo AT THE BEGINNING OF THE SONG. Usually that happens in the middle or near the end. It was genius to put it on the front and then go dead silent for that guitar. Incredible!!
@redphillips39244 ай бұрын
Genius, indeed!
@williammorris13844 ай бұрын
And the ONLY part of Terry Williams’s drumming, that was included on the whole album! The rest of Money for nothing and all the other songs on Brothers in arms , is actually Omar Hakim, completed in 2 days!
@davecummings74774 ай бұрын
@williammorris1384 Yep. I believe you are correct.
@themaestro59464 ай бұрын
lol. Thanks high school band teacher
@bugvswindshield4 ай бұрын
This was, and is, one of my stereo room tuning songs. So good.
@Nahash5150Ай бұрын
I was helping farmer Bill in southern Illinois loading hay out to pasture for the horses from his pickup truck. This song came on and he scrambled to turned it all the way up. I remember seeing all the dust in the air as the music played against the colorful evening sky, and the horses didn't mind at all. Working hard and listening to the radio, and a song that seemed to merge the spirit of the Midwest and the limelight.
@Mrmumps-tb4no4 ай бұрын
To anyone who doesn’t know, better help were caught selling their customers data, don’t use them
@Herfinnur4 ай бұрын
Among other things
@davidhartley944 ай бұрын
I've removed the ad and cancelled the sponsorship, thanks for the comment.
@Mrmumps-tb4no4 ай бұрын
@@davidhartley94 that’s cool I’m glad you didn’t just ignore it
@rossforrest4 ай бұрын
@@davidhartley94thank you, many creators don’t care.
@samwilson28054 ай бұрын
@@davidhartley94 I really respect this. They seem to be one of the most common sponsors and I see so many creators ignore or even delete comments talking about betterhelp's bad practices. Class act.
@MaxStax14 ай бұрын
When this song came out i was actually working at an appliance store as a appliance repairman. One of my jobs was to deliver and install microwave ovens, the above stove type, and deliver TV's when they sold them. Needless to say i loved this song!
@TEXASLOYAL4 ай бұрын
Similar here, I worked for a rental company, in our stock room, we were always moving refrigerators and color tv's
@MelindadelosSantos4 ай бұрын
Word!😄
@deanoverlie2244 ай бұрын
" INSTALL " microwave ovens ? I'm an old fart . Used them since they 1st came out . Had many in my time . Never " installed " a single one - just plugged them in . Sorta like ' installing ' a floor- lamp .
@andreasu.35464 ай бұрын
@@deanoverlie224 Installed microwave ovens come in custom kitchens.
@MaxStax14 ай бұрын
@@deanoverlie224 Those are counter top microwaves. The kind i was talking about that we installed are above the range microwaves. They are a combination microwave, vent hood exhaust fan and light. You have to install a mounting bracket into the studs in the back wall, then cut a hole for the vent duct. Also drill holes for the mounting bolts that go through the cabinet above to hold it in place. We also had to tap into the electric and install an electrical outlet that you could plug it into in the cabinet above. Most homeowners didn't want to mess with all that.
@krisoko4 ай бұрын
Don't disrespect the graphics in the video - they're iconic, they have character, and were made 30 years before the blocky graphics of minecraft were a thing.
@EtienneLawnga4 ай бұрын
The cheesy quality of the graphics is perfect. They add a faint sarcastic element that complements the lyrics. Forty years later they still hold up
@suzizuki4 ай бұрын
it was 1 of the few most perfect in continuity of design as it reflects the "factory" mind not the "ceo" mind
@glyph20114 ай бұрын
This , so much this. I wholeheartedly concur with your comment 👍👍👍👍
@lindabb6214 ай бұрын
EXACTLY!
@stan58484 ай бұрын
It's almost 40 years
@danstephensen90324 ай бұрын
I’m just a drummer who has performed for 60 years. Money 4 NUTHIN’ has been one of my ALL TIME tunes to play. I play in 4 bands and 2 of them have it on their Set List. Always a Pleasure. Thanks MARK🥁🎸🥁🎸🏆🏆🏆🏆🏆
@themadmallard4 ай бұрын
working drummer, too?
@danstephensen90324 ай бұрын
@@themadmallard still booking on a regular basis. It’s in the Blood. 🤣🤣🥁🎸
@themadmallard4 ай бұрын
@@danstephensen9032 Respect to the grind. ~~
@addyhizler66754 ай бұрын
Playing for the love of music. *tip of the hat
@UncleRidgley4 ай бұрын
Wow, "just a drummer " me too since 1987. I play some guitar also. If most people knew what it was like being a drummer that statement would not be thrown around. I just don't like hearing that because We know that a band is only as good as their drummer
@mlelder722 ай бұрын
Great tune, love hearing more of the story and love the Sting collaboration!
@michaelg.2944 ай бұрын
Can you imagine being that guy who worked in the appliance store, one day hearing and seeing Money For Nothing while at work, and realizing "Wait a tick, that sounds like something I'd say!"
@JohnPreston8884 ай бұрын
On one hand, I would be pleased that a pragmatic look at life became a hit record. On the other, Mark Knopfler describing me as a "bonehead" would be f**kin' insulting, and borderline defamation...
@alwa69544 ай бұрын
Yeah, and he's still making little more than minimum wage while the guy with the earing and the makeup is making a million dollars off his words.
@demoman1596sh4 ай бұрын
@@JohnPreston888I think it’s more of a “typical” look at life than a “pragmatic” one. Dude tosses out a ton of stereotypes during the song which are certainly common even today forty years later, but not always all that true or reasonable.
@dreece20004 ай бұрын
Dude I thought the same thing. I bet he is fucking really pissed . Since he now sees that the guy that he was bitching too about the banging on the bongles like a chimpanzee. Is now not working on MTV using his sayings. Double fucked
@marvin_james4 ай бұрын
@@JohnPreston888 I can imagine that person going: "Mark Knopfler called me a bonehead... THAT IS SO AWESOME!"
@LeviBulger4 ай бұрын
You missed a pretty massive part of the accidental guitar tone. The reason they thought it sounded so great was because they didn't realize there was a wah pedal in the chain that was inadvertently turned on and in a partially cocked position. It gave it a very mid-forward tone much like what Billy Gibbons would sometimes have. Without that, you don't get anywhere near the guitar tone as it was otherwise set up. When they said they couldn't replicate it afterwards, that was why. They hadn't realized for quite some time later that there was a wah pedal turned on. In fact they had already broken down all the equipment and finished recording the whole album before realizing the wah was in the mix of that particular song.
@steveshadforth87924 ай бұрын
Exactly he’s spouting the same mic placement bullshit, what a clown.
@davep82214 ай бұрын
Thanks. I saw a video with Mark mentioning that. But I've never been able to find it again, and *everyone* else told this same story. Finally, they *have* to let me out of my padded cell!
@andrewmize8234 ай бұрын
Thank you for pointing that out! I read that in a guitar magazine sometime around 1995, and you're the first person I've seen bring it up.
@davidkopec94424 ай бұрын
Correct. Frank Zappa used that same technique for years.
@mitchellmtb72024 ай бұрын
Nothing accidental about out of phase pickups.
@Zacabeb4 ай бұрын
Of note regarding the CGI in Money for Nothing video is that the Bosch FGS-4000 video graphics system used could produce more complex graphics (though obviously still extremely primitive by today's standards) and the boxy style seemed to be a deliberate aesthetic choice. I think that because of its extreme simplicity it's aged incredibly well compared to much other CGI.
@jamesslick47904 ай бұрын
It predicted "Minecraft" graphics LOL.
@Paul_Grace4 ай бұрын
The video was done at Rushes, Old Compton St, London, where I worked. The Bosch FGS was still in our storeroom until the mid 1990's until we gave it away to a college.
@The_SOB_II4 ай бұрын
I'm looking at the demo for the FGS-4000 and it's not really noticeably better... haven't found anything else from it yet
@alanhilder18834 ай бұрын
I came down here to say that the "Primitive" graphics seemed to me to be deliberate, It was staying with the mocking of music videos. You go here first.
@billkeithchannel4 ай бұрын
Minecraft Aficionado: This
@cidmontenegro82254 ай бұрын
It's always great when someone hears something you already know and has an appreciation for it. It's like watching modern reactions to a song you loved 20 years ago and heard '1 thousand' times. It makes you relive the feelings you had when you first heard it and the song, or story, is fresh again. So good.
@mikewazowski3504 ай бұрын
"Mtv is not what it once was..." is an understatement. To have been a part of that generation where Mtv and even Vh1 were actually about music was an exciting time. We used to have music video parties on the weekends. People would tape on VHS, their favorite or popular videos. You could get 8 hrs of videos on tape, then setup multiple VHS players in several rooms. Everything else would be a normal party, but you wouldn't need anyone to DJ.
@terrygray74654 ай бұрын
But as the MTV network execs have famously said, VIEWERS STOPPED WATCHING just after the 80's heyday. They had to pivot to animation (Beavis and Butthead, Liquid Television), reality (Real World, Road Rules) and TRL just to keep the lights on. Other than Yo' MTV Raps and Headbangers Ball, no one was watching. We grew up and moved on, but we love to say that MTV changed. They did because our generation graduated college, got jobs and started families.
@JP-xd6fm4 ай бұрын
I'm from '85 and I think I have clocked waaay more VH1 hours than Mtv's ... I remember in Vh1 watching Hotel California from the eagles and so many great classics.
@knirbnosaj11584 ай бұрын
Ashes to ashes, funk to funky, we know Major Tom's a junkie...
@basketballjones67824 ай бұрын
@@terrygray7465 Except we stopped watching BECAUSE of that crap - they just got upset because they saw typical fluctuations of their ratings as "OHMYGOD! everyone is tuning out!" because they had some consultant tell them that's what was happening. Our whole MTV generation would have never permanently switched it off had they not gone in the shitter with whatever crap they continue with today.
@terrygray74654 ай бұрын
@@basketballjones6782 I've spent my career working in television, largely due to watching MTV as a kid, and I can assure you that no one (in my 30+ years in the game) walks away from a winning formula. It's advertiser driven. If people aren't buying the products in the ads, network revenue goes down. That's what happened. It was also the beginning of the media cooperate merger era as well. They turned to the alternatives out of desperation - some worked, some didn't. If you noticed, TRL worked like gangbusters for years - until THAT audience grew up and left. It's all cyclical. We can argue if it was a chicken/egg thing, but ultimately, it was a money thing.
@ForgottenTasmania4 ай бұрын
The song was an anthem for people selling HiFi in the 80s. And the thrill of that guitar riff played loud sold a lot of systems. Fond memories.
@p_e_t_e4 ай бұрын
check farther down in the comments. there's a former hi fi store owner who was not fond of the song! 😀
@frackjags4 ай бұрын
That and Blue Monday.
@originalsusser4 ай бұрын
@p_e_t_e I'd moved on by the mid 80s from selling hi fi into more lucrative selling, but I fully agree that pumping 'Money for Nothing' through a top qual stereo of the day would sell units. Funny enough my vinyl copy of Brothers in Arms is a Direct to Disc master recording that sounds just as good through my Linn Sondek, Naim amp & Dyna Audio speakers as any cd could dream of
@originalsusser4 ай бұрын
@@frackjagsand New Order too
@mareker4 ай бұрын
Money for nothing
@johnnyho87654 ай бұрын
The whole album is a masterpiece
@unprofound4 ай бұрын
It really is.
@martinportelance1384 ай бұрын
I was some kind of audiophile back in the mid eighties when it came out, and I can tell you *every* audio shop or departement had this album on hand to showcase their sound systems. It was one of the very first 'DDD' album, entirely digital. We do know that analog sounds better today, but at the time digital was quite the revolution.
@glyph20114 ай бұрын
It really is. 👍
@gregoryk71144 ай бұрын
Completely agree. I took my mother's cassette and could not stop playing it when I was a kid. I remember going to my sister room when she was not here so I can use her piano and found the descending notes in "Why Worry?" :)
@haplessasshole96154 ай бұрын
@@martinportelance138 Interesting. It was in the mid-80s when I heard the state-of-the-art CD played over state-of-the-art equipment by a friend who worked in a stereo store. It made me decide to buy a turntable. I have exceptional hearing (even at 68), and digital just sounded wrong to me. The tech is better now, so the "wrongness" (and I'll be danged if I know how to describe it) is reduced, but I think it'll always be there. Oh, and I still have the turntable I bought -- Sony made great ones. It still works like a champ. And, after years of wishing for it but always having other places to put my money, I finally got _Brothers in Arms_ on vinyl. Lordy, but I love blasting "Money for Nothing" over my husband's 60s-era floor speakers!
@KRAZEEIZATION4 ай бұрын
Mark loved the sound of the Eliminator album by ZZ Top from 1983. The distortion on Money For Nothing was influenced by Gimme All Your Lovin’. Unmentioned here is the fact that in the studio the cocked Wah pedal was the crux of the sound.
@wazza33racer4 ай бұрын
The guitar riff, when it comes on the radio......is so precise,and has so much energy, it almost takes the paint off the walls. Its razor sharp and very unique.
@williammorris13844 ай бұрын
Couldn’t agree more! Excellent observation! 👍
@susanh17114 күн бұрын
so true i cant get it out of my head for weeks after hearing it. so so cool.
@eeedee12984 ай бұрын
One of my favourite tracks ever!!! Brilliant... So Brilliant!!!!.. and Sting on it is another great touch!
@originalsusser4 ай бұрын
Great scoping of the greatest hit of the mid 80s. I was a fan of the Police & Sultans of Swing, but Money for Nothing was a mind blower
@jonathanhill97484 ай бұрын
The iconic album cover was another accident. There was a bad storm during the time they were recording that did some damage to the building. After it passed, the sky was spectacular. Knopfler was carrying the National resonator guitar near the swimming pool and held it up to the sky for their photographer, who was snapping the view. The result was so good, they made it the album cover. A few attempts were made to reshoot it better, but nothing worked as well as the first quickly snapped shot. That’s how John Isley told it.
@ylekiote999994 ай бұрын
That was the Brothers in Arms cover.
@Dibbdroid4 ай бұрын
@@ylekiote99999 the album with Money for Nothing on it
@VivAnand4 ай бұрын
@@ylekiote99999that’s the very album that Money for Nothing was first on.
@johnbutera58053 ай бұрын
AWESOME!!! 😃
@johnbutera58053 ай бұрын
I looooove that chrome resonator... so I went out and bought one!! Very, very unique sound!! 👌
@Besmertnic4 ай бұрын
I lived in Montserrat in 2008, I met George Martin and visited what was left of Air studio after the volcano. I was there planning an aquaponic project, Sir George wanted me to convert the swimming pool into a fish pond. I didn't know this song was recorded there, beautiful place, tragic what the volcano did, the studio was basically a shell when I was there. A lot of great music was made there; Synchronicity, Steel Wheels, Too Low for Zero...
@Besmertnic4 ай бұрын
The conversion of the pool wasn't the project I was there for, we met at one of the few remaining restaurants, got to talking, and he invited me to tour the studio and talk about converting the pool, which was no longer working due to the ash.
@noblejonson4 ай бұрын
I've visited a few times, I got up as close as the steel fence surrounding Air, but it was sad to see a derelict building where so many great albums were made. Montserrat is a paradise
@chuckwagon65654 ай бұрын
My parents are from Montserrat and I used to spend summers there. My neighbors older brother worked at air Studios and gave him a bunch of albums that influenced my musical tastes including albums by America and George Harrison amongst others.
@jasonmccloud31253 ай бұрын
OMG! I was a kid when this came out! It was the coolest video for ever! Love the band and this song!!
@balaji-kartha3 ай бұрын
For someone who was 28 in ‘86, your analysis was great to hear. These guys are heroes!
@Abbecskin4 ай бұрын
As a highly impressionable kid in his senior year in 1985 when Brothers in Arms came out on cassette and the cassette was the very first clear cassette I'd ever seen, I think I burned through four or five of them replaying it over and over again and my mom's 1979 Mustang. Just because of that clear cassette and that awesome guitar riff!
@Soren_Skarsgard4 ай бұрын
My dad bought the first CD player that came to town. It was a Philips portable. With that, he also bought the first CD - Brothers in Arms. That was the first ever CD I've listened to. With headphones. I was blown away.
@BrianStDenis-pj1tq4 ай бұрын
When I bought my first CD player, there were two brands, Phillips and Sony. I think I paid over $300 for the lower end Sony, while higher end units were near $1000. I think CD player prices have come down a bit.
@Soren_Skarsgard4 ай бұрын
@@BrianStDenis-pj1tq Philips (single L, yeah) and Sony made it happen and patented it, so yeah. Now, buckle up and hang tight, my American friend, cause here we go: My Philips CD player model was D6800, with a small jack audio out, and 2 (A + B) headphones outs. I've taped A LOT of Cr02s, back then. 1989 is the year, I guess, and Split (I know) Croatia, then Yugoslavia, is the location. We have pre-war YU dinars, then temporary HR dinars, then HR kunas, aand Deutsch Marks as a reference. The D6800 portable was the same price as the standalone low-tier deck unit, I'm guessing about 1000 DM (Deutschmarks), which was about 1 mid-range monthly salary in Croatia. You, Yanks, had higher standard, and cheaper tech always. Now, the fun fact part: in 1985. (I was too young to know or care), Dire Straits appear in my town Split, with 12 semi trucks, and stay here for a month to prepare for their upcommig world tour, and have their first gig here.
@Soren_Skarsgard4 ай бұрын
@@BrianStDenis-pj1tq Philips (single L, yeah) and Sony made it happen and patented it, so yeah. Now, buckle up and hang tight, my American friend, cause here we go: My Philips CD player model was D6800, with a small jack audio out, and 2 (A + B) headphones outs. I've taped A LOT of Cr02s, back then. 1989 is the year, I guess, and Split (I know) Croatia, then Yugoslavia, is the location. We have pre-war YU dinars, then temporary HR dinars, then HR kunas, aand Deutsch Marks as a reference. The D6800 portable was the same price as the standalone low-tier deck unit, I'm guessing about 1000 DM (Deutschmarks), which was about 1 mid-range monthly salary in Croatia. You, Yanks, had higher standard, and cheaper tech always. Now, the fun fact part: in 1985. (I was too young to know or care), Dire Straits appear in my town Split, with 12 semi trucks, and stay here for a month to prepare for their upcommig world tour, and have their first gig here.
@Soren_Skarsgard4 ай бұрын
@@BrianStDenis-pj1tq Philips (single L, yeah) and Sony made it happen and patented it, so yeah. Now, buckle up and hang tight, my American friend, cause here we go: My Philips CD player model was D6800, with a small jack audio out, and 2 (A + B) headphones outs. I've taped A LOT of Cr02s, back then. 1989 is the year, I guess, and Split (I know) Croatia, then Yugoslavia, is the location. We have pre-war YU dinars, then temporary HR dinars, then HR kunas, aand Deutsch Marks as a reference. The D6800 portable was the same price as the standalone low-tier deck unit, I'm guessing about 1000 DM (Deutschmarks), which was about 1 mid-range monthly salary in Croatia. You, Yanks, had higher standard, and cheaper tech always. Now, the fun fact part: in 1985. (I was too young to know or care), Dire Straits appear in my town Split, with 12 semi trucks, and stay here for a month to prepare for their upcommig world tour, and have their first gig here.
@Soren_Skarsgard4 ай бұрын
@@BrianStDenis-pj1tq Philips (single L, yeah) and Sony made it happen and patented it, so yeah. Now, buckle up and hang tight, my American friend, cause here we go: My Philips CD player model was D6800, with a small jack audio out, and 2 (A + B) headphones outs. I've taped A LOT of Cr02s, back then. 1989 is the year, I guess, and Split (I know) Croatia, then Yugoslavia, is the location. We have pre-war YU dinars, then temporary HR dinars, then HR kunas, aand Deutsch Marks as a reference. The D6800 portable was the same price as the standalone low-tier deck unit, I'm guessing about 1000 DM (Deutschmarks), which was about 1 mid-range monthly salary in Croatia. You, Yanks, had higher standard, and cheaper tech always. Now, the fun fact part: in 1985. (I was too young to know or care), Dire Straits appear in my town Split, with 12 semi trucks, and stay here for a month to prepare for their upcommig world tour, and have their first gig here.
@imacmill4 ай бұрын
Back in the 80s, I created Halloween costumes of the two guys in the MFN video. Spruce framing with colored bristol board, and cloth joints. My girlfriend wore the short guy suit, and I wore the tall guy. We went to a nightclub on Halloween night and won first place in the costume competition...$200, not chump change for a late-teens guy working as a short-order cook at the time. Great memories! EDIT: I added a short clip on my KZbin channel that shows the costumes. First video I've ever added to my YT channel...no audio 😊
@tigergreg84 ай бұрын
That's very cool, great story. 👍
@malthus1014 ай бұрын
cool story!
@imacmill4 ай бұрын
@@malthus101 I'm thinking I'm gonna add a photo to my YT channel with the 'receipts'.
@imacmill4 ай бұрын
@@malthus101 Short video added to my channel. I hope it works.
@5000rgb4 ай бұрын
Those costumes are awesome!
@SewerTapes4 ай бұрын
When I was 17, one of my friends tried to tell me Money for Nothing's guitar riff is one of the best in Rock history. Now that I'm 44, and my taste in music is no longer limited to only metal, I totally agree with him. This song fu-king rocks. I also happen to love the primitive CGI and have been losing my mind trying to get a similar look from Blender.
@rdrrr2 ай бұрын
I think the "Lady Writer" riff is severely underrated.
@SewerTapes2 ай бұрын
@@rdrrr The first little bit of Lady Writer makes me think of a ska version of Sultans of Swing.
@andymoore51183 ай бұрын
Animations for Money for Nothing done on a system by Quantel Paintbox. The company was based in a fancy Manor House in Kenley. At 17 years old, in 1985 I put on my suit and went into the building and someone shook my hand at the entrance and led me up to a room that had the full Quantel Paintbox system. They showed me all the different effects and latest features and ran a few of the demos they were working on. About an hour went by. "What do you think?" they asked me. "Amazing" "Are you thinking of buying one?.. which company do you work for again?" "eh? I'm here for the gardening job" Oh how they didn't laugh. I was led to the gardener and got the job, probably the best job I ever had, racing around the place on sit on lawnmowers. Not much of a story about Dire Straights though :)
@ferenclucas28424 ай бұрын
The computer animation is fantastic wouldn't change it
@NelsonStJames4 ай бұрын
Exactly. Considering how the majority of animation today looks so generic, The videos animation now makes it look unique.
@LookeeLou______4 ай бұрын
I was a stoner at that time period. It made us say "Whoa"
@tonybroken63534 ай бұрын
the guitar sound is from a cocked wah pedal. I never realised " i want my MTV" had the "don't stand so close to me" melody, that's clever. Money for Nothing is a classic for sure.
@aquabot2 ай бұрын
Yes, everybody should know it comes from a cocked wah, by now. But apparently some people prefer to believe the fairy tale...
@ArchieBC4 ай бұрын
I never caught the melody for Don’t Stand So Close To Me! What, 38, 39 years later? Great video!
@dariusanderton37604 ай бұрын
I definitely noticed it back when the song was new.
@compugasm4 ай бұрын
And they still use Stings vocals in the MTV commercials.
@RiverWilliamson3 ай бұрын
I've heard both songs dozens of times, and it never hit me. Then again, I can barely carry a tune in a bucket
@RalphKramden-q4t3 ай бұрын
I want my.... I want my MTV...... Don't stand so...Don't stand so close to me.....
@RalphKramden-q4t3 ай бұрын
@@compugasm I actually miss those glory days of MTV. They've been gone a LONG time.
@greenthumb82664 ай бұрын
Thank you so much for posting this video. Love Dire Straits, and The Police~ Sting, right up there with Jethro Tull, Cat Stevens, Fleetwood Mac, Bob Dylan, the Beatles, Pink Floyd, good days, when music was full of body and soul.
@ericleon64823 ай бұрын
I'm 57 so I was there when it came out, I own it and play it often ever since. One of those records that will be great forever, the song though, while a hit, it turned out grossly overplayed through the decades. The best song is by far Your Latest Trick, but didn't get as much attention. Love it anyways and is ranked number 97 in my list of The 120 Best Rock Albums of the XX Century. Cheers!
@mikosoft4 ай бұрын
There's one more story about this song (and the whole Brothers in Arms album for that matter), the drummer you hear is not the Dire Straits drummer Terry WIlliams, it's Sting's drummer Omar Hakim. He rerecorded every track from the album on Knopfler's request as he didn't like Terry's takes. But there is one surviving piece of Williams' drumming on the album and it's actually the intro drum fills on Money for Nothing.
@gabrieldotterweich73884 ай бұрын
I miss Pick Withers
@Lozzie744 ай бұрын
How did Terry take this?
@foto214 ай бұрын
You know what, that's why it sounds like China Girl by Bowie. Same groove, similar fills.
@mikosoft4 ай бұрын
@@Lozzie74 according to internet he was also not happy with his takes so I guess not so badly
@callingchristiano4 ай бұрын
@@gabrieldotterweich7388top drummer, lot of taste
@worksbydandeprez4 ай бұрын
I've heard comments from people who hadn't been born yet when this song came out wondering "where they got that unusual animation" or simply, "That's so cute." I guess only those of us who there look at it now and notice how drastically different it is. If you don't know how limited computer animation was back then you would assume that all the options of today were available then and that the style was deliberately chosen.
@ctbadger4 ай бұрын
As a 17 year old at the time the animation blew me away. It was really novel and we’d never seen anything like it.
@57WillysCJ4 ай бұрын
They need to watch some Max Headroom from the same year. Actually I am surprised someone hasn't revised him for modern comentary.
@anthonypeterson4284 ай бұрын
Limited but stylistically effective.
@ValdemarDeMatos4 ай бұрын
Not only the 3D. The painting of those bright color strokes over the video image were also a novelty.
@originalsusser4 ай бұрын
@57WillysCJ Max Headroom may do a comeback, worst sh!t has. But he was a product of his time & would be difficult to do today with any relevance to today's world
@McHale724 ай бұрын
Brothers in Arms was NOT one of the first CD's released. They'd been out for three years (1985 vs 1982). It *WAS* one of the first (if not the first) CD's to be pure digital - DDD. It was recorded and mixed in pure digital. Most audio CD's at that point were AAD (analog recorded, analog mixed, digital release) with a few being ADD.
@svenlabots18694 ай бұрын
All true, plus, the reason why Brothers in arms got so much fuzz on cd, is that it became the first million seller on cd. Manufacturer Phillips regretted immediately that they hadn't patented the cd format as a whole. They never thought the cd would become so successful.
@mateuszorlinski73344 ай бұрын
@@svenlabots1869 The no-patent thing was their idea from the beginning, they wanted as many HiFi manufacturers and music labels to opt-in
@PeterGrew4 ай бұрын
Brothers in Arms was used as part of Philips CD Player campaign with the DDD argument and was often bundled free with the player (I got it with my Philips CD-304). The path from initial idea to the CD took approx 25 years. David Paul Gregg invented the optical storage in the late 50s and James Russell how to put digital signals on optical storage in the 60s so Sony and Philips licensed the patents when they developed the CD format.
@mateuszorlinski73344 ай бұрын
@@PeterGrew Don't forget LaserVision, that's what put Philips on the route towards Compact Disc. And the thing about owning half the phonographing industry popably helped too.
@MiloJonesKidd4 ай бұрын
It was one of the first rock DVDs that was DDD. There were many classical DVDs out that were digitaly recorded and mastered before Brothers in Arms.
@NestLeo86Ай бұрын
Thank you for such a great video! Interesting storues, nice colorgrading, editing - great job!
@davefordavefor2 ай бұрын
Great video. I love this song. Thanks for giving all the cool background of it’s genesis.
@wyatt-rocks4 ай бұрын
In my top 10 songs of all time. I got the cassette tape in 1985 when I was 10 years old and listened to this album 5000 times.. a massive inspiration for my own music career. The 80s were King.
@Cartier_specialist4 ай бұрын
My favorite line from the lyrics on this song is: "maybe get a blister on your little finger, maybe get a blister on your thumb" that's pure gold there.
@DilbiWilber4 ай бұрын
my favorite line has mysteriously come up missing?
@danmang9234 ай бұрын
I thought he said “tongue”.
@nkronert4 ай бұрын
And I thought he was singing about a pistol on his thumb, which I thought was a bit strange, but whatever 😊
@ctt79714 ай бұрын
What about ‘that little faggot is a millionaire…..’ Imagine THAT line being written 2024
@JohnPreston8884 ай бұрын
Yeah, great line. Out of context, it seems pretty mundane, but it fits the meter perfectly, and perfectly emphasises the contrasts.
@trashyraccoon26154 ай бұрын
Not really about “salesmen”, the song is from the point of view of the installation guys.
@@BWater-yq3jx I remember when I realized that later in life, too. “That ain’t workin” is such a clever lyric
@RandomButBeautiful4 ай бұрын
yes, they assumed it was easy street and had no idea of the insane workload, Dire straits did 248 gigs in one year on the brothers in arms tour, unimaginable.
@trashyraccoon26154 ай бұрын
@@RandomButBeautiful ok that’s literally insane wow
@marksea644 ай бұрын
Thank you for that vital correction. Thanks to your efforts, there is one less outrageous inaccuracy on the Internet. Not all heroes wear capes.
@heatice773 ай бұрын
I love the song, thanks for sharing…interesting, good for him…there is nothing like creative freedom.
@ppgwhereeverett44124 ай бұрын
I'm seventy years old and raised in Los Angeles. MTV was novel at the time, but so was the Beatles on Ed Sullivan, at the time ! The place we are Compared to the place we were ! An amazing musical trip from One Track recording to MTV. And now......Great Video !!
@TheKitchenerLeslie4 ай бұрын
Weird Al Yankovic parodied the song and video in his movie UHF in 1989. The song is called Money for Nothing/Beverly Hillbillies. Mark Knopfler gave him permission, but only if he were allowed to play on it. When you hear it, you'll know it's him.
@herseem4 ай бұрын
I was going to say, that bit of the story was completely omitted.
@swish0074 ай бұрын
I heard that Yankovic asked Mark to play it because he couldn't find anyone that could get it right and Mark said yes. By the time that Mark recorded the guitar part for Yankovic's version, Dire Straits had been touring a while and Mark had refined the riff quite a bit. You can hear a difference in the Yankovic version.. still sounds like him, but definitely sounds like he'd played it a million times hah. I first heard the Yankovic version as a kid before hearing the original so I always preferred that version of the riff but I could understand why people would disagree. There's a sweet little vibrato though in the yankovic version that's more pronounced and I always loved
@herseem4 ай бұрын
@@swish007 I thick it was the other way round. Mark said he would only give his blessing if he was allowed to play the guitar part himself. I prefer it straight in the original without the wobble
@andyto6294 ай бұрын
@@herseemthat’s what I had heard out of Al’s mouth
@herseem4 ай бұрын
@@andyto629 ok, you win!
@fraa888grindr64 ай бұрын
My first jobs after high school (1985) were delivering furniture by day and washing down a fish processing line by night. I played the hell out of this song via cassette & cd. It was a great song and a great time to be alive.
@123mathtutorabc44 ай бұрын
100 years in the future, kids will be asking "what's mtv" while they jam out to Money for Nothing
@LilyGazou4 ай бұрын
Money won’t exist
@123mathtutorabc44 ай бұрын
@@LilyGazou are the chicks are still free?
@lorrie28784 ай бұрын
@@123mathtutorabc4 i bet my grandchildren don't know.
@lorrie28784 ай бұрын
@@123mathtutorabc4 if you play and sing well enough...
@tomowenpianochannel4 ай бұрын
LOL
@vaskylark4 ай бұрын
This was a such a huge hit at the time and the video was cutting edge for sure! I remember seeing it for the first time and everyone was talking about it. Dire Straits were massively huge when MOney for Nothing came out. To this day it has one of the catchiest, coolest guitar licks of all time.
@stvbrsn3 ай бұрын
2:03 the fact they they had no big hits between their debut with “Sultans” and this says more about audience tastes (or lack thereof) than it does about the quality of their music. “Skateaway,” from that in-between period, is one of my favorite pop rock songs of all time. Great video, too. So Mark couldn’t have been totally against videos.
@pauldavies17103 ай бұрын
Big hits were irrelevant. The quality was all over those albums. Who would bother buying singles when the albums were so perfect you had to buy them anyway.
@redsidebiker3 ай бұрын
Skateaway, absolute top shout there butt.
@prismatic_eye2 ай бұрын
Yes but... Tunnel of Love and Romeo and Juliet were sure hits. I remember well. I also love Skateaway, by the way.
@tigerflicks59582 ай бұрын
To be specific you mean American audiences because although in the US Brothers In Arms is considered a ‘come back’ album, in the rest of the world it was just their next album. Love Over Gold and Making Movies were huge at the time.
@Wakeywhodat4 ай бұрын
We were the class of 1984 and a very close friend lost his life when this song first hit. We were all piled in a car, headed to his mother’s house when this song came on and I’ll never forget it. RIP Tony. Our 40th HS graduation ceremony is in September and the band better be able to play it or we’re going to spin a CD 😂
@williammorris13844 ай бұрын
Sorry to hear that:( Nice way to mark Tony’s 40th anniversary 👍
@zoltanmizsei85154 ай бұрын
And one additional story - from the Hungarian point of view - regarding the music video itself: The two additional music videos in the video (at 1::50 and 3::00 in the official music video) were taken in Budapest while Dire Straits were touring in Hungary. The director, Steve Barron - knowing that Knopfler isn't into music videos at all - traveled to Budapest to convince Mark about the concept of the music video. According to reports, Mark was not at all impressed with Barrett traveling so much for him. So here is how it happened that the first ever Hungarian pop band having been shown on MTV (in the later award winning Dire Straits video) was the pop group "Első Emelet" ("First Floor" in English). In the other video (Ian Pearson Band) you see a Hungarian model-actress and yes, the fictional band was named after one of the CGI artists of this masterpiece.
@carlcushmanhybels81594 ай бұрын
Thanks for your revealing story. And Mark Knopfler as you probably know is part Hungarian (His parents left Hungary for England.)
@madacsg4 ай бұрын
Yes, thank you! These should be mentioned in the video! Ezt vártam, hogy végre megemlítse a beágyazott videót, és az Első Emeletet, de csak nem jött össze neki...
@erikkibler34664 ай бұрын
I love the pauses in the guitar riff at the beginning.it really demonstrates how important those rests are and how dynamic they can make a song.Mark is super creative and I love it😊
@KaiPonte3 ай бұрын
Thank you for this great video. Money For Nothing was one of my favorite songs from that year (along with Brothers in Arms) and I was fascinated by the computer processing needed to make the workers.
@kelleykelley224 ай бұрын
Your channel is wonderful. I deliver for Amazon & spent much of my day listening to your channel. Your voice is pleasant, you aren’t a bot & I learned things I never knew & musically I know a lot, im old AF. Keep up the great content. I appreciate you 💪🏼🤘🏼
@ChescoYT4 ай бұрын
1986 was a MONSTER of classic hits!!!
@aleisterseverusgrey37784 ай бұрын
And movies!
@box1u4 ай бұрын
all the 80's where full of really fantastic music. Not sure what happened to today's music. but glad I lived through that decade .🤘
@philsurtees4 ай бұрын
@@box1u The 80's was the *WORST* decade for music *BY FAR.*
@bobnewby91294 ай бұрын
@@philsurtees Worse than 2010 to the present? No way.
@thecustommuffler4 ай бұрын
Jan 1, 1986, on that day I shipped out for basic training in New Jersey. I left New Orleans with a Levis blue jean jacket just incase it was cold.
@gregjameson21414 ай бұрын
You can add to this story the fact that Mark Knopfler really loved what ZZTOP did with their guitar sound, but Mark didn't know how they did it. So Mark contacted ZZTOP and asked them, but they didn't want to share their secret, and they did not let Mark know how they did it
@RandomButBeautiful4 ай бұрын
hehe!! Yeah Billy's guitar tone was off the charts and probably took a ton of experimentation to get that secret sauce, why would he just give that to the competition?
@jk-764 ай бұрын
Black Face Twin and a TS808
@keithklassen53204 ай бұрын
@@jk-76Lol, that's it boys, pack up and go home! Surely tho there's a lot more to it than that.
@poindextertunes4 ай бұрын
@@RandomButBeautifulgatekeeping is so cringy
@RandomButBeautiful4 ай бұрын
@@poindextertunes The only thing that is cringy is acting entitled: Free handouts are for children, not adults. Gatekeeping would be saying 'You can't have a guitar'. By telling someone to get their own sound rather than lazily copying his, he's absolutely not preventing him from doing anything. Anyway Billy Gibbons is a legend and a blues man pays his dues in road miles, Mark should know this and it's pretty disappointing he would even ask for such a trade secret tbh, hoping the story isn't true.
@freewheelburning88344 ай бұрын
I think the vintage animation is very artistic and humorous
@MDonovan3 ай бұрын
A HA!
@kurtmeister83082 ай бұрын
That Drum Solo ROCKED. What a spectacular song and fantastic story!
@elmadi73914 ай бұрын
I still have the CD & one my favourite to play in my hifi sound system, the recording was so clear. I do not know the story behind until I watch your video today. Thank you for sharing 🙏🇺🇸
@mattstopa94364 ай бұрын
Just as an aside the video was incredible for it's time. The 3d was fantastic for it's time
@simongregory31144 ай бұрын
I'd really like to know if the 2 sales guys ever found out they were the inspiration for the song. It's quite possible they did. That would be a cool thing to realise. Maybe they'd want a writing credit too!
@indieshack44762 ай бұрын
Very nice video David, well constructed!
@MrSunDevil234 ай бұрын
First CD i bought was Brothers In Arms in 1985 when CDs just came out. I had an Onkyo receiver and just got a Sony CD player with Klipsch speakers. The sound blew me away-and the neighbors. Hahahah. Love Dire Straits and Sting (with and without the Police). Good video!!
@flashgordon6670Ай бұрын
I absolutely loved the music video as a small child and I still do. I wish they still made videos, with chunky computer game style graphics. My brothers and I used to do somersaults and go absolutely mental, every time this came on the telly, every Saturday morning. It did used to freak me out a bit though, it’s so surreal and I had no idea what cgi was. I thought the chunky graphics people were real people and the instruments were magical.
@orendungan34554 ай бұрын
MFN was the song that turned me on to Dire Straits. Great hook, great rhythm, amusing lyrics, and still not even in their top 5 songs, at least to these old ears. Check out the re-issue of a bunch of their live recordings that just came out. On The Night now has a full 2-disc run time, if you're into that sort of thing. Sting was super busy, or just in a lot of places in 1985. He guest starred with this song, he did a song with Phil Collins on No Jacket Required, and with Arcadia (Duran Duran side project) on So Red The Rose.
@rachelar4 ай бұрын
So Red the Rose, The Promise good one
@adriantallent85574 ай бұрын
Sting is one of those guys who owes some measure of his notoriety to being literally everywhere back then. Such a great music scene!
@SteveSingsThings4 ай бұрын
Artists getting stupidly rich imitating real life Joes mocking artists getting stupidly rich. That's the way ya do it! Mark told ironic stories that people could relate to. Sultans of Swing is another example. Poking fun at the dive bar music scene while simultaneously paying tribute to the spirit of playing live music just for the love of it. Brilliant.
@Lozzie744 ай бұрын
*Sultans of Swing. There was more than one sultan and there was nothing possessive.
@wordup8974 ай бұрын
@Lozzie74 womp womp
@jfv654 ай бұрын
Sultans of Swing was my first ever own LP-record. Before that i got Rumours on cassette. Some pretty epic music was made in those years.
@BillPeschel4 ай бұрын
I love the way he mixed the descriptions. "Brown baggies and their platform soles / they don't give a damn about any trumpet playing band." He wasn't aiming at any one group (brown baggies when I went to college were the frat boys who favored kahki shorts. They wouldn't have been caught dead in platform shoes).
@SteveSingsThings3 ай бұрын
@@Lozzie74 An apostrophe catastrophe! Have no idea how that got in there. I must have been possessed.
@ProctorSilex4 ай бұрын
8:23 The video still looks awesome. I never thought of it as a technical issue but a style.
@bswihart121 күн бұрын
I had a fella explaining how he tuned his equalizer to this song and it was perfect, so I decided to do the same thing and it was perfection. I’m so glad I grew up during the MTV video rage and there was so many good videos!
@The_Pariah4 ай бұрын
Genuinely entertaining video with a lot of fun facts and not a lot of filler or bs. Good content is getting harder and harder to find. This is good content.
@deanwishart99814 ай бұрын
I was 24 when this single & this record came out… it was huge in Australia, played every party over and over again, and the animation looked so cutting edge and cool in a video
@daz46274 ай бұрын
96FM in Perth flogged this song to death... and none of us minded a single bit!! 🙂
@originalsusser4 ай бұрын
From a fellow Aussie I concur. There were hits that were huge often during the 80s but this one stood out as the 'Greatest'. Others came after, maybe bigger, but none had the impact of THIS song on pop culture. It truly was a world wide hit of the type that cannot be done today
@wordup8974 ай бұрын
I was 19 and will never forget hearing it for first time on the radio, sting's unique voice then that fkn awesome guitar riff followed by the drums! I can still feel it.
@TheAdultInTheRoom744 ай бұрын
They’re not salesmen! They’re the delivery guys. I mean Jesus, it’s right in the lyrics!
@finished62674 ай бұрын
it's blatantly obvious in the video too.
@DejayClayton4 ай бұрын
That's the way you do it.
@ianbauer47033 ай бұрын
"That ain't workin'!"
@karatefella4 ай бұрын
Money For Nothing is one of my favourite records. I never realised until now that "I want my MTV" is the same tune as "Don't Stand So Close To Me" !
@scotconnolly8802 ай бұрын
Sting
@karatefella2 ай бұрын
@@scotconnolly880 er...yeah
@TheC.O.-VISIT19 күн бұрын
Money For Nothing the song and the video are quintessential 80s, absolutely classic 80s in every sense.
@michaelbrittain74454 ай бұрын
Brilliant, informative video! No self-important jabbering & personal promotion/ego cruising! What a rarity! Well done, sir! Knopfler DOES do those character songs so well, as you pointed out - ESPECIALLY in his solo career. Thank you for a quality video.
@1234Waco4 ай бұрын
I don't think it is about 2 salesmen selling microwaves and fridges. It is about 2 guys that work for a big store and have to move, deliver & install these appliances.
@falsemcnuggethope2 ай бұрын
And they work so they can buy chicks for money
@nutsackmania2 ай бұрын
LOOK AT THEM YO YOS
@suran396Ай бұрын
Exactly
@traveller23784 ай бұрын
Funny, Shane gillis was just talking about this song during his recent podcast. Talking specifically about the lyrics. A nice the coincidence of life here. Thanks!
@ChescoYT4 ай бұрын
all these decades and i never knew Sting was on the track loooool
@two-sense4 ай бұрын
Same. How strange.
@ianbauer47033 ай бұрын
Huh?!
@lostbuffalo1964 ай бұрын
Very informative. I'm 76, and have always liked the music of this song. Now with your explanation of how some of the lyrics were formed, it's very cool. Thanks
@CBitsTech2 ай бұрын
Great video. My all-time favourite music track. I almost forgot that Sting sings that line, but it's the line I find myself singing more than any other. Sting is probably my favourite artist. If I was stuck on a desert island and could choose only one song to listen to forever, Money For Nothing would be it.
@007ndc4 ай бұрын
Gen X kid born 1964. Summer of 85 was epic. When CDs first came out we realized that there were a few albums that must be bought on CD: Brothers in Arms, Avalon by Roxy Music and Aja by Steely Dan, and with good reason
@noserly4 ай бұрын
GenX starts in ‘65. You’re a boomer.
@Youtube.Commen-tater4 ай бұрын
@@noserlyJonses aren't boomers
@scottbeck77624 ай бұрын
@@noserly let's compromise ....BoomX
@TheNedH4 ай бұрын
Just a small, nitpick note: "I want my MTV" wasn't so much the network's slogan. It was their marketing push in the days when MTV was relatively new and not all cable providers had it in their line-up of available channels. The pitch was, basically, "Call your cable operator and tell them 'I WANT MY MTV!'."
@garrettstupperware37544 ай бұрын
Is there a "how this song was made" story that doesn't include Sting somehow getting royalties? lol
@laurasimon-sulzer79664 ай бұрын
What a GREAT video. Full of I do, fun and history. Real specialist. And clear.
@morenofranco92353 ай бұрын
Still a great song after all these years. Thanks for trip, David.
@liammcooper2 ай бұрын
Mark Knopfler's a master of turning these quotidian stories into songs: Money for Nothing, Sultans of Swing, and the later song "Basil" are all direct from his experiences.
@lepacs144 ай бұрын
I heard better help is a scam.
@Mrmumps-tb4no4 ай бұрын
They also got caught selling data, don’t use them
@sagi_tech_n_stuff4 ай бұрын
It is, a major scam
@sleepydragonzarinthal35334 ай бұрын
I heard some birds chirping this morning
@sonovabeach86034 ай бұрын
I heard life’s a scam!
@F.o.s.t.e.r.4 ай бұрын
They also endorsed conversion therapy
@tonyrauls19414 ай бұрын
My dude picking up that the riff was a banjo style riff is rad
@jamesslick47904 ай бұрын
👍👍
@EtienneLawnga4 ай бұрын
Makes you wonder if bluegrass and country music might be tolerable if they ran it through a distortion pedal.
@TheLettersJ4 ай бұрын
@@EtienneLawnga could be something new. You could try it.
@RideAcrossTheRiver3 ай бұрын
@@EtienneLawnga Makes you wonder if death metal would be tolerable if they ran it through spoons and acoustics.
@PScooter633 ай бұрын
@@TheLettersJ Bela Fleck & the Flecktones did exactly that about 1991.
@markofish617615 сағат бұрын
You are a gifted, thoughtful presenter. Thanks for a very watchable piece of TV
@GlenwoodMedia4 ай бұрын
Glad you're on the mend, Rick. As a pro musician I enjoy all the aspects of your channel, but it was the "what makes this song great" that drew me in. Keep those coming...but love the interviews too.
@atomicsmith4 ай бұрын
Dire Straits was such a great band, but everything sting touched in that time turned to gold. Except Dune maybe…
@paulf28984 ай бұрын
He played a good part in dune,same in quadrophenia and brimstone and treacle 😂
@peterherrera75664 ай бұрын
@@paulf2898 Lock, Stock, And Two Smoking Barrels.
@ModularMemories4 ай бұрын
That was the first year I had cable and MTV. This song was on all the time!
@youtubeguy224 ай бұрын
No doubt. That's why it says "heavy rotation" on the microwave in the video
@powerdither73094 ай бұрын
Both sting and knoffler humble boys from north of England...both defining unique talent. They are unassuming and modest, both of them, and how much richer is the world for their vision.
@johnnyxmusic4 ай бұрын
I’m not sure anyone has ever called sting modest. Not that he needs to be. If he wants to be arrogant, he’s earned it. He is a fantastic musician as composer, player, singer, and performer.
@RebeccaTurner-ny1xx4 ай бұрын
"unassuming and modest" to a video in which Knopfler describes the domestic appliance salesman from which he took part of the song's lyric as a "bonehead".
@powerdither73094 ай бұрын
@RebeccaTurner-ny1xx I can only assume that you come from a long line of appliance salesmen, and feel the need to stand up for their much maligned profession. How culturally insensitive of knoffler to use that most egregious term "bonehead" to such a beloved profession. I'm sure the world stands behind you and your cause of keeping the term bonehead from degrading the dignity of all salesmen of any white goods. Keep up the good fight.
@poindextertunes4 ай бұрын
@@powerdither7309yeah lets shxt on the common man lmao
@reshpeck4 ай бұрын
@@RebeccaTurner-ny1xxPerhaps it was the words the "salesmen" (they were deliverymen) used that warrants their being called boneheads. Quite charitable of Knopfler, actually. You should look up the original lyrics, which are now heavily edited on the radio and KZbin; the presenter in this video just sidesteps that whole modern controversy entirely.
@jesselong52052 ай бұрын
I really like how you present the video - the looking directly at us, the half smile, the tone. Good job.
@AlysonArchibequeDavis-kv1bx4 ай бұрын
Great music history learning. That guitar playing! 🔥🎸
@DM-kv9kj4 ай бұрын
Nobody ever points out that none of these masterful riffs, songs and musicians themselves overanalyzed and obsessed over the music that came before them like this. They weren't just copycats and obsessed with the same old things that had already been done. Same with Hollywood, all the brilliantly original and great films still worshipped to this day were so great and still set the standard because there were actual artists and passionate craftspeople working tirelessly to get original visions through the studio. Now the industry 100% controls everything with software technology and has no need for real artists, just corporate dogbody types who'll do what they're told to do according to "the data"...which obviously will only ever tell us that what will sell best is stuff that's already been done...
@MrmelodyUs4 ай бұрын
This song was in great part- #RIPPEDOFF!!! #Sting and #KNOPFLER are jackasses. More details to anyone who wishes to know...
@mikeyerian25624 ай бұрын
When I was 10, I air guitared this every day
@drosophilamelanogaster39574 ай бұрын
Eastern Block 1988. I saw a guy air guitar-ing this riff and I was mesmerized. I'm 52 ad I still have this vivid memory.
@jaethomasmusic4 ай бұрын
I don't know how I, as a musician, never realized that melody was from "Don't Stand So Close To Me" - ok boys, time to pack it up. I have 25 guitars for sale. All must go. Also im ripping my vocal cords out. I'll get me coat.
@keithmccabe40403 ай бұрын
This song is iconic and thank you for putting together this commentary. Well done David.
@ChiefGorillaChef3 ай бұрын
What a cool video! I loved learning about how this iconic song was recorded. Thank you so much for showing yourself recording the lines. I'm very glad to know that this wasn't just some AI computer generated video, like most are these days. Love it! Great job!