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Sultans of Swing: The Very Best of Dire Straits
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Barnes and Noble
Sultans of Swing: The Very Best of Dire Straits
Current price: $15.99
Barnes and Noble
Sultans of Swing: The Very Best of Dire Straits
Current price: $15.99
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Exactly ten years after
Dire Straits
' first compilation,
Money for Nothing
, appeared in the stores, their second,
Sultans of Swing: The Very Best of Dire Straits
, was released. A decade is a significant span of time, and the average band would have produced enough material for an entirely different collection, one that shared no similarities with its predecessor.
is not the average band, however, and during those ten years, they released exactly two albums -- 1991's
On Every Street
, their first studio album since
Brothers in Arms
in 1985, and 1993's
On the Night
, a live album culled from tapes of the record's supporting tour. Not quite enough new material for a new greatest-hits album, but it had been years since
had released an album of any sort (a compilation of BBC sessions snuck into the stores in 1995) -- hence the birth of
Sultans of Swing
. Unsurprisingly, it covers much of the same ground as
, containing all the essentials ("Sultans of Swing," "Romeo and Juliet," "Tunnel of Love," "Private Investigations," "Twisting by the Pool," "Money for Nothing," "Brothers in Arms," "Walk of Life"), with the exception of "Telegraph Road," which was left on the earlier compilation. A live "Love Over Gold," "Lady Writer," and "So Far Away" replace "Down to the Waterline," "Where Do You Think You're Going," and a live "Portobello Belle," which is really just a trade-off, since they're all equal in quality. Then there are the three hits from
("Calling Elvis," "Heavy Fuel," "On Every Street"), all of which are pleasant re-creations of the
sound; a live version of "Your Latest Trick" from
, and, inexplicably,
Mark Knopfler
's "Wild Theme (Theme from Local Hero)." Fine tunes all, but none of them are reason enough to replace
with
. But for casual fans or curious listeners looking for an introduction/sampler, it's the better choice, simply because it covers more ground and contains more music while remaining quite listenable and entertaining. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine
Dire Straits
' first compilation,
Money for Nothing
, appeared in the stores, their second,
Sultans of Swing: The Very Best of Dire Straits
, was released. A decade is a significant span of time, and the average band would have produced enough material for an entirely different collection, one that shared no similarities with its predecessor.
is not the average band, however, and during those ten years, they released exactly two albums -- 1991's
On Every Street
, their first studio album since
Brothers in Arms
in 1985, and 1993's
On the Night
, a live album culled from tapes of the record's supporting tour. Not quite enough new material for a new greatest-hits album, but it had been years since
had released an album of any sort (a compilation of BBC sessions snuck into the stores in 1995) -- hence the birth of
Sultans of Swing
. Unsurprisingly, it covers much of the same ground as
, containing all the essentials ("Sultans of Swing," "Romeo and Juliet," "Tunnel of Love," "Private Investigations," "Twisting by the Pool," "Money for Nothing," "Brothers in Arms," "Walk of Life"), with the exception of "Telegraph Road," which was left on the earlier compilation. A live "Love Over Gold," "Lady Writer," and "So Far Away" replace "Down to the Waterline," "Where Do You Think You're Going," and a live "Portobello Belle," which is really just a trade-off, since they're all equal in quality. Then there are the three hits from
("Calling Elvis," "Heavy Fuel," "On Every Street"), all of which are pleasant re-creations of the
sound; a live version of "Your Latest Trick" from
, and, inexplicably,
Mark Knopfler
's "Wild Theme (Theme from Local Hero)." Fine tunes all, but none of them are reason enough to replace
with
. But for casual fans or curious listeners looking for an introduction/sampler, it's the better choice, simply because it covers more ground and contains more music while remaining quite listenable and entertaining. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine