
Mark Knopfler isn’t afraid to drop names. The heavyweight Cassius Clay laid low, the man who made burgers and fries into big business, the kings of rock & roll and skiffle are among the motley assortment who pass through Knopfler’s fourth solo album. Recorded in Malibu with a tight crew of steadfast Knopfler sidemen, Shangri-La (the title comes from the studio where the entire set was recorded) chronicles the foibles of the acclaimed and the adrift, all delivered with the nonchalant grace that has marked Knopfler’s music since Dire Straits emerged in the late ’70s. Seven of album’s 14 originals clock in at between five and seven minutes. That’s Knopfler in a nutshell–don’t rush things, but don’t loose the thread, either. As a songwriter, Knopfler has a storyteller’s eye for minutiae, which he delivers with practiced nuance. He overreaches here and there (”Song for Sonny Liston” fails to capture the pathos of the menacing fighter), but also pulls off a few career highlights (the understated crime-drama opener “5.15 a.m.”).
1. 5:15 AM
2. Boom, Like That
3. Sucker Row
4. The Trawlerman’s Song
5. Back To Tupelo
6. Our Shangi-La
7. Everybody Pays
8. Song For Sonny Liston
9. Whoop De Doo
10. Postcards From Paraguay
11. All That Matters
12. Stand Up Guy
13. Donegan’s Gone
14. Don’t Crash The Ambulance
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