I really love Fare Thee Well but it's kind of folky as well and that's why I didn't include it in my original list.
I feel like this is MK's strength - taking elements of different genres, making into a big old goulash, writing a good song around it and putting some cool guitar on the top. I feel like he's less successful when he makes a straight up attempt at one of these genres.
Yep.
MK is one kind of artist that created his own language.
I've read an YT comment many years ago when i was watching a live footage of I Think I Love... with the Hillbillies.
The comment was: - This is not blues or rock. It's Mark Knopfler.
I think that MK is not a Blues Afficionado. I think that he is very sucessfull when he tries some traditional country stuff.
The Blues, in my opinion, is a state of spirit. Its a mantra. Its not about harmony, scales or technique. Is much more about sing a tale or a interpretation over that same progression.
When i listen to Muddy Waters, Little Walter, Junior Wells, BB or even modern stuff like SRV, Robert Cray, Kirk Fletcher or McKinley James, both have passion and spirit enoght to deliver 3 hours of music without being bored.
Mark, in my opinion, don't have that 'Blues Feeling' to bring a 12 bar blues without being loose at some point. So, he deliver his vision about the blues.
Clapton, Stevie, Cray, the Kings, Bonamassa, Beck, Collins... all great blues artists have his own visions and styles about the Blues. But also they have the Blues spirit. With, in my opinion, MK doesn't have.
And this what makes MK's music so special.