UPC: 602498677155
Format: CD
Release Date: May 29, 2000
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![Shangri-LA [Germany Hybrid Sacd] cover art](http://www.moviemars.com/cdn/shop/files/b0e1981303801eec78a44b9d83b0dbe4.jpg?v=1781953744&width=1445)
Mark Knopfler's first excursions outside of Dire Straits were film soundtracks, where his guitar mastery served him well. Starting in the mid-1990s, he embarked on a proper post-Straits solo career. By the time of 2004's SHANGRI-LA, Knopfler had almost entirely left behind the expansive instrumental textures of his former band in favor of a more straight-ahead singer/songwriter approach, which works wonderfully here. Knopfler keeps things low-key throughout most of SHANGRI-LA, with quietly intoned, often drolly sardonic lyrics, supple finger-picked guitar lines, and songs full of subtly crafted surprises.
There's a wealth of unusual topics on offer here; "Boom, Like That" is a first-person monologue by Knopfler in the voice of Ray Kroc, the man behind the McDonald's fast-food empire. The bluesy "Song for Sonny Liston" chronicles the famed boxer's brushes with the underworld. "Donegan's Gone" laments the passing of British folk/skiffle pioneer Lonnie Donegan, a key influence on Knopfler and scores of other British rockers. Departing from the more folk-oriented sound of its predecessor, THE RAGPICKER'S DREAM, SHANGRI-LA more fully develops the detail-oriented, irony-laced songwriting style Knopfler first hinted at in Dire Straits tunes like "Money for Nothing."
There's a wealth of unusual topics on offer here; "Boom, Like That" is a first-person monologue by Knopfler in the voice of Ray Kroc, the man behind the McDonald's fast-food empire. The bluesy "Song for Sonny Liston" chronicles the famed boxer's brushes with the underworld. "Donegan's Gone" laments the passing of British folk/skiffle pioneer Lonnie Donegan, a key influence on Knopfler and scores of other British rockers. Departing from the more folk-oriented sound of its predecessor, THE RAGPICKER'S DREAM, SHANGRI-LA more fully develops the detail-oriented, irony-laced songwriting style Knopfler first hinted at in Dire Straits tunes like "Money for Nothing."
Tracks:
1 - 5:15 Am
2 - Boom, Like That
3 - Sucker Row
4 - Trawlerman's Song
5 - Back to Tupelo
6 - Our Shangri-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
2 - Boom, Like That
3 - Sucker Row
4 - Trawlerman's Song
5 - Back to Tupelo
6 - Our Shangri-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