Back to the original thread, I was thinking of examples of songs where you can hear the change prominently in Pick's approach to drumming. Single Handed Sailor is a good example I think:
1979 - Rockpalast. A pretty much replicate version of the version that features on the album, delicate drums from Pick:
https://youtu.be/E36JaBiYI0g?si=GCaANltT5Mi_s3DF
Move forward to Boston 1980 and from the word go you have a straight, and harder 4 4 beat kicking off the song and then been backed, presumably by Joop, on tambourine.
https://youtu.be/yhdMvUZ8KBc?si=9aRaWxx92L6-3Qn2
Note also the addition of keys from Alan.
Very interesting comparison!
... so many differences between the two versions. This is a song that got many different ways to be played, in the Boston one - apart from keyboards - there are many differences in the way Mark plays the guitar, the rhythm, and also in the vocal part.
Same as Boston is the New York version, same tour:
It's true!
Despite having three original members in the band (Mark, John, and Pick), in 1980/81 they were distancing themselves from Dire Straits' live sound of 1978/1979, and Ed brought a perspective that might go unnoticed, the type of audience the band was beginning to play for frequently, along with the new sound, the band experimenting with new arrangements, inevitably took them to new musical horizons. Songs like "Telegraph Road" and the ending of "Private Investigations" that they had developed for the end of "News" live, were created during this tour.
Pick's contribution to the development of the live songs was fundamental. It's very interesting to see where these songs came from between 77/78 and how they arrived in 80/81, especially OUATITW and SOS (the only survivors of the first two albums that made it to the LOG tour 82/83, along with PB). Pick indirectly passed the baton to Terry from 1982 onwards, and he continued to bring a new dimension, certainly more appropriate for the band's moment. I believe that the very direction the band was taking made it impossible to include songs like "Southbound Again," "In The Gallery," "Lions," "News," "Skateaway," and "Single Handed Sailor." (I never understood why "Lady Writer" didn't make it past 79, since it was the big hit from the second album.) Obviously, there wasn't room for new arrangements for so many songs, so they were left out, a shame that many of them were forever.
This period with Pick and Alan in the band is intriguing, to say the least. I like to observe the elements that make up this transition from the band's live performance between 1978/1979 (a pub rock band) to 1980/1981 (a rock and roll orchestra). I think this hasn't been fully explored among us on the forum yet. Beyond this forum (a space for avid fans), there's much more talk about success, especially BIA's, this somewhat overshadows other interesting aspects of the band, such as this transition to a rock and roll orchestra (as Mark often referred to it during this period in the 1980s and 1981s).