The Story Behind The Song: Sultans Of Swing by Dire Straits

Via Louder Sound

Inspired by watching a hopeless jazz combo in a deserted pub, a song about a struggling band set Dire Straits on the way from dire straits to superstardom

Mark Knopfler of Dire Straits

The story behind the song: Sultans Of Swing by Dire Straits 

Just after 6pm on July 13, 1985, Dire Straits took to the stage at Wembley Stadium as part of Live Aid, playing to a global TV audience that reached a mind-frying 1.9 billion. In their slot between U2 and Queen, they started with Money For Nothing (joined by Sting), and then came an epic version of the song that made them superstars: Sultans Of Swing.

“It was a very special feeling to be part of something so unique,” recalls bassist John Illsley. “Live Aid was a unique privilege for all of us. It’s become a fabulous memory.”

Dire Straits’ standing as MTV megalords belied the absurdly humble origins of Sultans Of Swing. Singer/guitarist Mark Knopfler had written it in 1977, after ducking into a deserted pub one rainy night and witnessing a lousy jazz band. Undeterred by the lack of both talent and punters, their lead singer finished the set with a mildly enthusiastic, “Goodnight and thank you. We are the Sultans Of Swing.”

Knopfler at least left the pub with the seed of an idea. Returning home to the Deptford council flat he shared with his younger brother David and Illsley, he set about writing a song for the new band they’d just formed.

“We were living on next to nothing and weren’t even able to pay the gas bill,” Illsley says, adding that they weren’t called Dire Straits for nothing. “The first time I heard Mark playing a version of Sultans Of Swing was in that flat, but the song was completely different.”

Even Knopfler thought it lacked spark. But the song took on a smouldering blues groove after he scrabbled enough money together to buy a 1961 Stratocaster.

Illsley recalls: “One day he said to me: ‘Remember that song I was fiddling about with the other day? I’ve completely redone the chord structure.’ He played it, and it sounded pretty good. The whole thing is incredibly simple, it’s the playing that makes it intriguing. It’s that rolling rhythm on the guitar and a very simple bass and drums approach. Then, of course, it’s a story. And let’s face it, all good songs have a story.”

Sultans Of Swing sees Knopfler folding the night’s events into the narrative. As the rain beats down outside, the band are blowin’ Dixieland. Harry’s got a day job, but he’s up there giving it his all. So is Guitar George, who knows all the chords: ‘But it’s strictly rhythm/He doesn’t want to make it cry or sing/If any old guitar is all he can afford/When he gets up under the lights to play his thing.’ Meanwhile, a small group of youths are fooling around in the corner, ‘drunk and dressed in their best brown baggies and their platform soles/They don’t give a damn about any trumpet-playing band/It ain’t what they call rock and roll.’ It’s as damp an evocation of thankless 70s publand as you’re likely to hear.

“The whole thing is incredibly simple; it’s the playing that makes it intriguing. Then it’s a story. And all good songs have a story.”

John Illsley

Still desperately seeking a record deal, in July ’77 Dire Straits booked time at a tiny eight-track studio. They then took the resulting five- song demo, which included Sultans Of Swing, to Radio London DJ Charlie Gillett. “Charlie went absolutely crazy about it,” Illsley remembers. “On air he said: ‘I’m going to play this until somebody picks this band up,’ which I thought was quite a bold thing to do. And thankfully they did. In those days one person at a radio station could really make a difference.”

Now that Sultans Of Swing was on constant rotation, record companies started to take note of this rumbling blues- rock tune about a rotten jazz band. Within two months Dire Straits had been signed by Phonogram. They were then put into Basing Street Studios to record their debut album, under the auspices of producer Muff Winwood and engineer Rhett Davies. But, as Illsley explains, “the problem we had was that we couldn’t get Sultans Of Swing to sound as good as the demo. There was even a time when the demo was being considered as the one that was going to go out as a single.” Eventually, though, they re-recorded it to everyone’s approval.

Released in May ’78, Sultans Of Swing didn’t create much of a stir in Britain. Then things started to move with an almost haphazard momentum. The self-titled album came out in October. Sales ticked very slowly, though it quickly went gold in Holland. “I got this phone call from the record company saying that we’d sold 25,000 albums,” Illsley remembers. “Then it went to the States and took off there. The radio stations started playing Sultans Of Swing like crazy. And because America picked up on it, it came back to the UK and got re-released again, which was really peculiar. It started spreading like wildfire.”

Dire Straits

Dire Straits in 1978, clockwise from top left: John Illsley, Pick Withers, Mark Knopfler and David Knopfler

(Image: © Getty Images)

By early ’79, the single had gone Top 10 on both sides of the Atlantic, as had the album, whose unfussy aesthetic and timeless songcraft, allied to a frontman who sounded like the stop-off point between JJ Cale and Bob Dylan, led to sales of more than seven million. Suddenly Knopfler was being toasted as the greatest home-grown guitarist since Eric Clapton. And even Dylan came calling, enlisting Knopfler and Dire Straits drummer Pick Withers to play on Slow Train Coming.

Dire Straits, of course, went on to become one of the most successful British bands of the 80s. By the time they hung up their guitar straps in 1992, they’d racked up sales of more than 120 million and littered their mantelpiece with Grammys and Brits.

“I suppose you could say that Sultans Of Swing was the one song that started it all off,” muses Illsley. “It had a huge impact. These are the catalysts that move you onward through life. People have said we were lucky, but I say: ‘Well, what does luck mean?’ The fact of the matter is that it was a bloody good song, the band was pretty damn good and we worked bloody hard. And the only way you’re going to get anywhere is by being committed. So if something like that happens to you, it’s fantastic. Boy, was it exciting!”

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28 Comments
Mary Christine
Mary Christine
February 16, 2019 11:17 am

Not my favorite Dire Straits song but Knopfler is my favorite guitarist. On Every Street will always be my favorite.

gryffyn
gryffyn
  Mary Christine
February 16, 2019 1:59 pm

He is my favorite too, and though I would be hard pressed to chose one, I like “Speedway at Nazareth”, which really takes off after Mark quietly sings “…on the Speedway at Nazareth I made no mistake.”

Yancey_Ward
Yancey_Ward
February 16, 2019 11:54 am

I still remember the first time I heard Sultans of Swing on the radio. I was in the 7th grade (1979) on the Sunday before President’s Day- we were getting a big blizzard that day and I spent it reading and listening to the radio- that song played 3 or 4 times that day. I was a Dire Straits fan from that point forward.

James
James
February 16, 2019 11:57 am

While not a huge Straights fan the song “Brothers In Arms” has always been in me favorite song category,just a all around excellent song.

gryffyn
gryffyn
  Administrator
February 16, 2019 1:51 pm

I’ve read that Knopfler wrote this song for a woman who dumped him before he and Dire Straits were filling stadiums and selling millions of albums.

Uncola
Uncola
February 16, 2019 12:54 pm

Very cool. As I’ve commented here before, I often play them for hours at a time, late at night, as I write. Of course, I could play other bands, but, for me, it’s like drinking decaf coffee: Why?

One of my favorite tunes, videos & guitar solos, right here:

gryffyn
gryffyn
  Uncola
February 16, 2019 1:42 pm

Almost 11 minutes of pure magic. You can see they are having a great time with this and that Knopfler shares the stage with his mates. I may go weeks or months without hearing Dire Straits or Knopfler’s solo and shared albums but like you I can listen for hours, late at night.

HollyO
HollyO
February 16, 2019 1:03 pm

On recommendation I downloaded the recent film Bohemian Rhapsody. I enjoyed it tremendously overall—it was charming, and reminded me of the lost dimension we all often refer to on The Platform.

What struck me most clearly was the final scene at Wembley during Live Aid, the sea of faces—one hundred thousand of them—and in that vast multitude I spotted perhaps five or ten brown ones present. In real life it was one of the most un-diverse crowds ever seen and everyone present—nearly two billion worldwide—were there to raise money to rescue, feed, heal and nurture a generation of blacks who would grow up to torture and kill white African farmers by way of thanks, then aim to destroy whatever remained of the white world they could get their hands on.

I could never imagine Chinese, Japanese, Jews—any other race or culture—deploying an event that all-encompassing in order to benefit another race, only white/Caucasian/Anglo-Saxons would have the gumption to try and the pathological altruism to follow through. Blame us for anything you like, exterminate us all, what we will be remembered for is our compassion. We make up six percent of world population and falling, yet we cannot seem to save ourselves.

We have sucked the last drop of juice from the fruit of The Enlightenment and now that we have arrived at its poisoned pit we cannot seem to stop chewing. Blame us for anything you like, exterminate us all, what we will be remembered for is our compassion. We were the most benevolent and beneficial empire the world has ever seen and now all that is left is to kill ourselves with kindness.

DD
DD
  HollyO
February 16, 2019 6:48 pm

…”and now that we have arrived at its poisoned pit we cannot seem to stop chewing.”

Perhaps a small minority of our children will survive, hidden in little coves and valleys, creating their own little garden west of eden.

Gloriously Deplorable Paul
Gloriously Deplorable Paul
  HollyO
February 16, 2019 7:32 pm

I viewed this piece earlier on my phone, and had to enlarge the font to read it, which made the author’s name out of frame. When I got to ” We have sucked the last drop of juice from the fruit of The Enlightenment and now that we have arrived at its poisoned pit we cannot seem to stop chewing” I said to myself “hold on- this is gold!” and went back to the top to see the author.
I knew it.
She turns a fine phrase and I can’t wait to read more.

Donkey Balls
Donkey Balls
February 16, 2019 1:11 pm

Back in my youth, I went to Ireland 4 Provinces (a bar in DC) every year for St. Paddy’s Day. The same band played every year. One of the songs they played was Sultans of Swing. They played it impeccably. The guitarist would get to the solo and walk on top of all the tables and bar. Good times, good times.

Doc
Doc
February 16, 2019 1:27 pm

Thanks Stucky. I’ve been a fan of Knopfler / Dire Straits since my senior year in high school (’78). I didn’t know the back story of ‘Sultans of Swing’ until now and thoroughly enjoyed the read.

Lager
Lager
February 16, 2019 2:01 pm

Yes, thanks for the backstory of the tune. Interesting material, Admin. And, yeah, R&J is one of my faves, but, I’d never seen that vid before. I like it. Attractive woman in there, too.

The Queen movie delivers that interesting backstory of their early days and eventual success, with all the challenges.

I was a Sr. in HS in ’78, and loved SoS at 1st hearing it. Immediately bought the cassette.
They got back burnered, in favor of other groups, until around ’86, when a good buddy turned me on to their greatest hits album.
Haven’t stopped listening to that since.
Farmer had a post with Telegraph Road. Huge fan of that one, plus
Private Investigations, Brothers in Arms, Tunnel of Love.

Always loved the creativity and talent that many 70’s bands had, with output refreshingly different than cookie cutter pop hits.
Too many to list.
And they put modern bands to shame by comparison.

Edit: Great find, T. He does that very well indeed.

Anonymous
Anonymous
February 16, 2019 3:18 pm

stumbled on this about a month or two ago…might’ve even posted it here already.
if so, then mea culpa, but maybe a few interested souls will appreciate it, and haven’t seen it yet.

i found it interesting.
cheers
-lager

Desertrat
Desertrat
  Anonymous
February 16, 2019 5:03 pm

The LiveAid concerts raised some $50 million. It bought lots of wheat. Unfortunately, the Ethiopian government controlled the unloading, so only the friends of the government got any. None went to the starving poor.

But lots of people felt really good about their contributions, both on and off stage.

DD
DD
  Desertrat
February 16, 2019 6:59 pm

And isn’t that what is really important? That charitable people appear to be charitable?

gryffyn
gryffyn
  Anonymous
February 16, 2019 7:08 pm

Cheers back at ya Anon. That is a great video, showing a bit of his knowledge of the guitar. He has said he would be a better player if he practiced more! He is also a great song writer and lyricist and has composed the scores for a few films. The man is a musical genius. Thanks for sharing.

bob
bob
February 16, 2019 7:50 pm

Sultans of Swing will always be in my top 10 rock n roll songs. Not sure there’s 10 great rock n’ roll songs, but Sultans of Swing is one of them anyway. Right up there with Sweet Home Alabama.