First Listen - "Money For Nothing" by Dire Straits (Hip Hop Fan Reacts)

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Published 2023-05-28

All Comments (21)
  • Mark Knopfler wrote it after overhearing delivery men in a New York department store complain about their jobs while watching MTV. He wrote the song in the store sitting at a kitchen display they had set up. Many of the lyrics were things they actually said.
  • @KevinRCarr
    It's simpler than you think. It's a song about overheard delivery guys who worked for a home appliance and home electronics retail store, and he's quoting what those delivery guys were saying about the musicians and actors in the videos they were watching on MTV.
  • @jasonremy1627
    Just like "Sultans of Swing", this is a real story. Knopfler was in a department store, and two of the store clerks were watching MTV in the store, and this song is basically the conversation he overheard.
  • @RicoBurghFan
    Knopfler wrote this after he saw department store employees making fun of videos on MTV that were on the TV screens. He's speaking in their voices. Great song, great satire.
  • @jp1170
    The song is written from the perspective of a guy working at an appliance store talking to his co-worker and hes calling the long haired, 80s hair metal guys he seeing on the tv as “fa**ots” while talking about how easily they get girls and money and how easy their jobs are compared to his own.
  • He’s saying those guys on MTV, despite how they look, are laughing all the way to the bank while “we” are stuck here doing hard manual labor making little money.
  • @johnbe8810
    A lot of the context is lost now, but this song was a very meta comment on MTV, which was the biggest thing in the music/entertainment world at the time. He's quoting blue collar workers commenting on how great life would be if they'd just learned to play a few chords and made it on to MTV (while putting down the performers) -- and at the same time the video of the song was a huge hit on MTV, which benefited from the satirical publicity. 'I want my MTV' was the network's slogan at the time.
  • Producer: Mark, are you sure you want to have such a long intro? You're building a lot of anticipation there. You're gonna need a bloody good riff, mate. Mark: Not a problem.
  • This is from a conversation he overheard. Working men talking about the musicians on tv. And yes, the daft hair and the make up. It’s not Mark Knopfler’s opinion or anger. He just wrote a song from the perspective of some non-musicians, feeling a little jealous.
  • @markhodge7
    Brilliant lyrics :) "He's banging on the bongos like a chimpanzee." In the vein of Money and Have a Cigar.
  • @KevinCBullard
    One of the first albums to be all digital, and you could tell that it sounded crisper even on cassette tape.
  • @peter9910
    Personally, I think this is one of the best tracks in modern music. Everything about it is perfect, from the classic 80s synth intro, tight rhythm and powerful drums, fun ad libs, and brilliantly satirical lyrics. The song perfectly encapsulates the 1980s resentment of the average person (those feeling left behind by Reaganomics) for the wealthiest in society, be it in rock music, or yuppies on Wall Street. Mark Knopfler's unique fingerpicking style, combined with the power of the double-humbucking pickups on the Les Paul, and a wah-pedal set half way for a uniquely "nasel", biting tone, is an amazing combination, and the riff is widely celebrated as one of the greatest of all time. Even the music video was very iconic for its day, using digital animation in the 80s.
  • @loadedorygun
    There’s an important cultural key here: for a good while MTV was struggling to get onto cable services. So MTV started a campaign to get watchers to call their provider and shout “I want my MTV!” The way they got the message across was by using celebrity musicians of the time (who had been elevated by MTV) like Cyndi Lauper, Billy Idol and…Sting. The campaign worked beyond their wildest dreams, obviously.
  • @konradv7
    The lines about the musicians aren’t Mark’s feelings, but what he heard the workers saying.
  • This was the first song played on the UK launch of MTV. The fact that Sting is on this is pure chance. He was on holiday where the band were recording this and Mark just asked him if he wanted to sing the line.
  • I’ve heard that Mark heard delivery workers talking to each other and he just lifted their conversation for this song
  • @BobGeogeo
    Wasn't "I want my MTV" an advertising slogan at the time - encouraging people to get their cable service to carry MTV?
  • @guichogf5636
    The problem in the 80s is that the big money and stadium shows took out creativity. Lots of bands were forced to put out songs they didn't necessarily want to do, but the record labels demanded at least one AM radio single and MTV video. The "hits" were contrived and heavily promoted on the radio and MTV. The better bands of the era hid their good music on the album, but the culture of listening to an album as a whole was undermined, mostly by the new format introduced on MTV. Creatives of the time called it formula rock. They had to produce singles that followed the format and it all started to sound the same.
  • @binkymagnus
    the main reason this song was a huge hit was the video. it had some ground breaking computer animation that was mind blowing at the time.