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Telegraph Road (song)

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"Telegraph Road"
Single by Dire Straits
from the album Love over Gold
Released1982
Genre
Length14:18 (album version) 5:05 (single edit)
LabelVertigo
Songwriter(s)Mark Knopfler
Producer(s)Mark Knopfler

"Telegraph Road" is a song by British rock band Dire Straits, written by Mark Knopfler. It is the opening track on the 1982 album Love over Gold.[2]

Release and live performances

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The song was first played live at the opening concert of the band's "Making Movies" Australian tour (Perth Entertainment Centre, 22 March 1981) as the final encore. "Telegraph Road" became a staple of Dire Straits and Mark Knopfler solo tours. A slightly shorter live version of the song is included in the 1984 live album Alchemy: Dire Straits Live,[3] and a remixed edit of that performance is included in their 1988 greatest hits album Money for Nothing.[4] The original studio version is the opening track on the double disc version of the compilation The Best of Dire Straits & Mark Knopfler: Private Investigations.[5] The song was cut down to 5:05 for a single release in 1983, with "Twisting By The Pool" as the B-side.

Meaning and inspiration

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Telegraph Road is a major north-south 70-mile (110 km) thoroughfare in Michigan, and Mark Knopfler was inspired to write the song while riding in the front of the tour bus, which made the journey down Telegraph Road. At the same time, Knopfler was reading the novel Growth of the Soil by the Nobel Prize winning Norwegian author Knut Hamsun and he was inspired to put the two together and write a song about the beginning of the development along Telegraph Road and the changes over the ensuing decades.[6][7]

Composition

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The song starts out with a quiet crescendo in the key of G minor that lasts almost two minutes, before the song's main theme starts. After the first verse, the main theme plays again, followed by the second verse. After a guitar solo, a short bridge slows the song down to a quiet keyboard portion similar to the intro, followed by a slow guitar solo. Next, the final two verses play with the main theme in between. The main theme is played one last time, followed by a slightly faster guitar solo lasting about five minutes and eventually fading out.[8] "Telegraph Road" is the last song recorded with Pick Withers on drums, as he was replaced by Terry Williams.[9]

Acclaim

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In a contemporary review for Rolling Stone magazine, David Fricke praised "Telegraph Road", and he characterized as a "challenge to the average pop fan's attention span" with its "historic sweep and intimate tension".[10] Loudersound.com ranks "Telegraph Road" 6th among Dire Straits' best songs,[11] while Return of Rock ranks it 5th, describing it as "A fourteen-minute masterpiece worth every second of its length, which it deserves to be on the list of the best long-form songs and progressive rock songs."[12]

Personnel

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References

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  1. ^ Nannini & Ronconi, Le canzoni dei Dire Straits, pp. 78–79
  2. ^ "Love over Gold - Dire Straits | Songs, Reviews, Credits | AllMusic". AllMusic.
  3. ^ "Alchemy: Dire Straits Live - Dire Straits | Songs, Reviews, Credits | AllMusic". AllMusic.
  4. ^ "Money for Nothing - Dire Straits | Songs, Reviews, Credits | AllMusic". AllMusic.
  5. ^ "Private Investigations: The Best of Dire Straits & Mark Knopfler - Dire Straits, Mark Knopfler | Songs, Reviews, Credits | AllMusic". AllMusic.
  6. ^ "Telegraph Road by Dire Straits - Songfacts".
  7. ^ "Telegraph Road". Knopfler. Archived from the original on 2008-06-25.
  8. ^ "Growth of the Soil, the Telegraph Road and Sustainability". 11 November 2018.
  9. ^ "Telegraph Road - Mark Knopfler's World".
  10. ^ Fricke, David (11 November 1982). "Dire Straits: Love Over Gold". Rolling Stone. Retrieved 5 December 2012.
  11. ^ "The Top 10 Best Dire Straits Songs". 17 April 2015.
  12. ^ "Dire Straits Songs Ranked – Return of Rock".