I'm not an MK fanatic by any means, I just look at facts. The fact is almost everybody who worked with the man treats this experience as a highlight of their career or most likely even the best part of it. Read or listen to any interviews. The only people who disagree on this are the ones who tried to battle MK and failed miserably or simply couldn't find a middle ground. I'm sure for Chris working with Mark was a highlight despite all the flaws. How can it NOT be a highlight?
It's the job of regular members of the band to use this experience as a trampoline to their own success, either within the band or on their own. If you don't like Mark and his work ethic, then go and become Mark yourself if you're so smart. For some reason, I don't see a lot of Mark Knopflers running around.
This is sooooo over the top.
For a start Pick left the band. He wanted to pursue different projects. I'm gonna guess he never expected to be a rock star like Mark, or that his other projects would achieve the same success as Dire Straits.
I had many career highlights, probably by far the biggest of which was playing Beatles songs with one of The Beatles, songs that had NEVER been performed live before.
I've played on critically acclaimed hit albums, I've played with Johnny Cash and The Pretenders etc...
As a professional you have to be calm when working with huge stars, so many of us just assess our experience in a calm and reasoned way.
The OES tour was gruelling. Mark was pretty much in a bad mood the entire 14 month tour. This has been well documented before - by Ed Bicknell and John Illsley in various interviews after the fact.
I rank playing with Dire Straits as a career highlight, sure, but it is no more of a highlight than working with McCartney or being in the studio playing on a hit record.
Finally, I have no ambition to be an incredible song writer or a millionaire rock star (I've seen what it does to people). So like many before me, I congratulate Mark on his career and success, but I'm not envious or jealous of him.
Fully agree with Chris here, seems to obvious to me that I never understood why the rest of people doesn't get it...
I don't get what I didn't get here and what's so obvious about it. That for Chris working with Mark Knopfler is not the biggest career highlight? I never stated that. But for some people, it seems like it is. Listen to Chuck Ainlay and how he pretty much compares everybody and every studio to MK's work and studio. And that's a co-producer we are talking about, not even a musician. You can find more examples if you want to.
I'm not trying to kiss MK's butt here, but a lot of people seem to diminish his work as if it's just another musician. It's the songs, man, the songs he wrote. Chris is so lucky to play with all these amazing artists, on these albums and songs, and I'm not an idiot enough to judge which is better. I apologise for being over the top, it's my style. I'm just not satisfied with simple answers, I always dig deeper.
Well, to play with DS and/or MK is not the biggest career highlight for any session player who work with them/him despite how much you and I could think he's the best. It can be a highlight for someone like Jack Sonni that didn't play with any other, but for the proffesional musicians who play with them? Some yes, some not.
Richard Bennett played half of his career with Neil Diamond and the other half with MK with thousands of the biggest stars of the NAshville scene in betwen. Is MK his bigest career highlight? It's a highlight of course, and probably the biggest as they are close friends, but thats probably true for Neil Diamond.
I use to laugh quite a lot when someone tell me, that saddly happens a lot, that nobody would know Phil Palmer if he didn't played for Dire Straits. I always answer, no, YOU won't know Phil Palmer if he didn't played for DS. He was already well known for playing with Eric Clapton, he also played for Tina Turner, recorded with everyone in the UK and also was musical director for George Michael from long time! Was DS the biggest career highlight for him? In his words, that was Clapton. Yes, DS was a highlight, probably one of the bigs in his long career. The biggest? Not, certainly not.
Same with Chris Whitten. It's quite obvious that someone who played for Paul McCartney, that's his biggest career highlight for sure. DS? yes of course, a big highlight, the biggest? no. He also played with many important bands mostly in the studio so many highlights in his career already. He even played from a Spanish band from where I live, Valencia, names "Presuntos Implicados"!
Thats what is obvious for me and that's what I don't get anyone else doesn't understand. The fact that we love DS and MK doesn't means that they are the biggest career highlight to anyone who played with them.