Look, this could go in the covers section, but these aren’t covers, they’re complete reinterpretations by a jazz guitarist and cellist. First the Stereophile review that drew my attention to its existence:-
ARNE JANSEN/STEPHAN BRAUN
Going Home
Jansen, electric and acoustic guitars; Braun, 5-string cello, bass Herzog 901101HER (CD). 2023. Jansen, Arne Schumann, Josef Bach, prods.; Schumann, Bach, engs.
If you don’t love Dire Straits, either you’re too young to remember the ’80s or lack good taste. Mark Knopfler was one of the anointed. “Money for Nothing” and “Telegraph Road” are immortal. “Sultans of Swing” is as perfect a song as rock’n’roll ever gave birth to.
Arne Jansen is a German jazz musician who didn’t start with jazz. He started with Dire Straits. When he was 9, his father brought home their 1982 album, Love Over Gold. Arne was never the same. He says, “‘Telegraph Road’ is the reason I started playing guitar.”
Jansen does not merely play these 10 Knopfler songs. He is a jazz improviser, and he affirms his reverence by making them the basis for fresh creation. He gives them new shadings and places them in new contexts. Often you don’t recognize the songs right away. When you do, it’s a rush.
Knopfler wrote vocal stories. Jansen’s achievement is to reveal, instrumentally, the beauty of Knopfler’s melodies—even, or especially, when he is loose and free with them as on “Telegraph Road.” “Money for Nothing,” with its suspenseful waltz groove, is unexpectedly dark; it makes you laugh out loud to hear this casually cynical tune transformed into something so foreboding.
Jansen’s duo partner, Stephan Braun, is a valuable asset. With his unique percussive approach to the 5-string cello, he is a complete rhythm section. When he sometimes takes the lead, he presents a fascinating alternative sonority and sensibility.
“Sultans of Swing” is the killer. The song is so tight and complete, it would seem to defy jazz interpretation, but Jansen and Braun find a way in. They lavish love on its irresistible melody then give it new bite and twang.
What fun this album is.
—Thomas Conrad
I should add that Thomas Conrad has been writing jazz reviews for years for Stereophile, but I don’t think rock reviews. He seems to have very good taste! The album itself - available on Qobuz, so I guess all the other streaming services - contains eight DS classics plus StP and the title track. As Conrad hints, some songs would take quite a while to identify, others are obvious. I think it needs more than the one listen I’ve given it so far to get all the references. Definitely worth a listen during the endless wait for something new from the master….