News

It was the year footballer Wayne Rooney, singer Lily Allen, actor Kiera Knightley and Radio 1 DJ Greg James were born, while ...
We look back on the story behind their mega-successful 1985 album Brothers In Arms, featuring brand new interviews with ...
Amazon Prime Day isn't just about buying yourself a decent set of wireless headphones. Physical media is back on the rise, ...
Mark Knopfler, 40 years after Dire Straits’ groundbreaking album: ‘I’m not good enough to improvise like a jazz musician’ ‘Brothers in Arms,’ which sold more than 30 million copies worldwide, was ...
A woman has gone viral for sharing her theory on Sabrina Carpenter's newly-released upcoming album artwork, and believes she knows who appears on the cover alongside the popstar.
Sabrina Carpenter Is Back With Provocative New Album Title and Cover Art first appeared on Parade on Jun 11, 2025 This story was originally reported by Parade on Jun 11, 2025, where it first appeared.
dIRE sTRAITS is not just a band, it's a legend that left an indelible mark on the music scene between 1977 and 1992. bROTHERS iN bAND is much more than a tribute band, it's a high-caliber musical ...
The overwhelming success of 'Brothers in Arms' tends to overshadow the catalog of Dire Straits. So here are five great Dire Straits tunes from the records that came before it.
Ralph celebrates Dire Straits Brothers In Arms album as it turns 40, looks ahead to this year's Blues On The Bay Festival in Warrenpoint and has tracks from The Doors, Mary Coughlan, The Pretty ...
The cover of Dire Straits’ Brothers in Arms. The album is having a luxury reissue 40 years on. “Terry, in my view, was one of the best live drummers I’ve ever played with,” Illsley says.
Set to celebrate its 40th anniversary on Saturday 17 May, Dire Straits’ Brothers In Arms is many things - not least the album that’s viewed as the one that turned the world on to the compact ...
Brothers In Arms and the Compact Disc revolution that never was Dire Straits’s slick, luxuriant album helped turn the CD into the shiny, indestructible future of audio. What went wrong?