'Mark Knopfler' is a member of:


Dire Straits
 
vocals 0000 - 0000  delete
guitar 0000 - 0000  delete
Chet Atkins and Mark Knopfler
 
vocals 0000 - 0000  delete
guitar 0000 - 0000  delete
Notting Hillbillies
 
guitar 1986 - 1990  delete
Mark Knopfler and Emmylou Harris
 
vocals 0000 - 0000  delete
guitar 0000 - 0000  delete



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'Mark Knopfler' History: 


Bio



Mark Knopfler was born in Glasgow, Scotland, on the 12th of August 1949. He was around seven years old when the Knopfler family moved to Newcastle-Upon-Tyne in the North-East of England. Mark attended Gosforth Grammar School. As a young boy Mark was inspired by his uncle Kingsley's harmonica and boogie-woogie piano playing. Later, in his teens, he set his heart on an all too expensive flamingo-pink Fender Strat, just like Hank Marvin's, but in the end he had to settle for a £50 twin pick-up Hofner Super Solid and £50 was a lot of money in those days. Like lots of other guitar-toting schoolboys of the 1960s, he served an early apprenticeship by forming and joining anonymous schoolboy bands and listening to guitarists such as Scotty Moore, Jimi Hendrix, Django Reinhardt and James Burton. At sixteen he made a local TV appearance as half of a harmony duo along with school-friend Sue Hercombe.


At school Mark had demonstrated a flair for English and in 1967 he went to study journalism for a year at Harlow Technical College. At the end of the course he secured a job in Leeds as a junior reporter on the Yorkshire Evening Post. After two years he decided to further his studies and commenced a degree in English at Leeds University. It was whilst Mark was living in Leeds that he met a local blues singer/guitarist by the name of Steve Phillips. Mark wrote newspaper articles and reviews on the music scene in and around Leeds. By an odd coincidence, Mark's boss was another man by the name of Stephen Phillips. This has caused some confusion over the years and a number of Steve Phillips biographies have claimed erroneously that Steve himself worked as a journalist. Mark and his boss - the other 'Steve Phillips' - went to see Steve playing in Leeds. Steve fondly recalls how Mark's first words were "Steve Phillips, meet Steve Phillips." Steve and Mark found that musically they had much in common and they went on to form a duo called The Duolian String Pickers. By day Mark continued working as a reporter and, later, as a full-time student, while Steve took a job restoring paintings and furniture at Leeds City Art Gallery and Temple Newsam House. They played together on and off over the next five years. Some of their work is featured on Steve's 1996 Just Pickin' album. "He was a good guitar player", Steve says wryly of the young Knopfler, "in a B.B.King sort of way." Steve was to have a profound affect on Mark's guitar playing introducing him to the intricate lead technique of black blues guitarist Lonnie Johnson and the subtle skills of country blues guitar, the elements of which Mark was eventually to weave into his own unique style of guitar picking.


This was, in fact, a very important stage in Mark's development as a guitarist. He was later to tell Jack Sonni that it was not until he began to finger-pick that he found his guitar 'voice'. While living in Leeds Mark made his first record. It was recorded in a room that had been converted into studio in a house in Pudsey. The song was called Summer's Coming My Way and it featured Steve Phillips on twelve-string guitar. On graduating from Leeds University in 1973 Mark decided to go to London and try to break into the rock scene. He scanned through the music press and finally answered the biggest advert he could find in Melody Maker. That led him to an audition and a two month stint with a blues band called Brewer's Droop. Mark played guitar on three songs they recorded at Dave Edmunds' Rockpile Studios in Wales. The band's drummer was a guy called Pick Withers. Pick had turned professional at the age of seventeen and was a very experienced drummer. Having left Brewer's Droop Mark took up a job as a lecturer at Loughton College in Essex where he remained for two years living in a rented flat in Buckhurst Hill, sometimes giving guitar lessons at Staples Road School. Then brother David came to stay for a few weeks en route to London. The Knopfler brothers would often sit up late into the night playing songs and, without knowing it, to some extent laying the foundations of what was to become, in time, Dire Straits. It was the mid-1970s, David moved on to London and Mark went on to form a working band with friends at Loughton College. They called themselves the Café Racers. David came to share a flat at Farrer House on Deptford's Crossfield Estate, South-East London, with a Leicester-born bass player by the name of John Illsley. John recalls first meeting Mark. "I'd been out all night and came in about ten in the morning. I walked into the kitchen, started making myself a cup of tea, walked into the lounge and there was this guy lying on the floor with his head propped up against a chair. He was fast asleep, fully clothed in denim with leather boots. He had a guitar slouched over his waist." David had often spoken to John of his guitar-playing brother and John guessed correctly that the guy sprawled out on the lounge floor was indeed Mark.


It wasn't long before John found himself on stage with Mark. One night the Café Racers' bass player was ill and John was asked to stand-in. Mark and John immediately struck up a great working relationship and both realised that, despite having built-up a good reputation on the local pub scene, the Café Racers had a limited future. In April 1977 Mark gave up his flat in Buckhurst Hill and moved in with David and John. John quickly realised that not only was Mark a talented and excitingly different guitar player, he was also a gifted song-writer. During the summer of 1977 the three musicians found themselves playing and rehearsing Mark's songs. Yet, something was missing - a drummer. Mark, recalling his brief stint with Brewer's Droop, said he knew of a drummer who would be ideal for the sort of music they were developing. Mark had been very impresssed with Pick Withers back in 1973 and so Pick was invited to the Farrer House flat and the four musicians began doing gigs together under the name of Mark's old band, the Café Racers. John recalled that "playing with Pick Withers was fantastic...I'd never played with anybody as good as him." Later, a friend of Pick's suggested a new name for the band - Dire Straits. The die was cast. The band's first gig took place on the open space at the back of the Farrer House flats, the electricty provided by a power cable running from the stage into a socket on the wall of John's first floor flat. Punishing rehearsals and live gigs followed. There was just enough room in the back of John's estate car for the band's equipment and they earned just enough money to pay for PA hire and a round of beers. On the 27th of July 1977 Dire Straits recorded the now famous demo tapes of five songs - Wild West End, Sultans of Swing, Down To The Waterline, Sacred Loving and Water of Love. In what was probably October they recorded Southbound Again, In The Gallery and Six Blade Knife for BBC Radio London and, finally, on the 9th of November demo tapes were made of Setting Me Up, Eastbound Train and Real Girl.


Many of these songs reflected Mark's experiences in Newcastle, Leeds and London, and were to be featured on the first Dire Straits album the following year: Down To The Waterline recalled images of life in Newcastle; In The Gallery is a tribute to a Leeds sculptor/artist named Harry Phillips, father of Steve; and, Lions, Wild West End and Eastbound Train were all drawn from Mark's early days in the capital. The demo tapes were given to BBC Radio London DJ Charlie Gillett. Charlie played the tapes calling upon record company executives to sign this new band: enter John Stainze and Ed Bicknell. It is said that Phonogram A&R man Stainze was in the shower listening to the radio when he first heard Dire Straits. A few weeks later he signed the band to Phonogram's Vertigo label and Mark secured a publishing deal with Rondor Music. Towards the end of 1977 Ed Bicknell was working at the NEMS agency when he got a call from Stainze asking him to fix up some gigs for Dire Straits. Ed was invited round to Phonogram's offices in December where he heard the Charlie Gillett demo tapes. He was then taken to Dingwalls Club in North London to meet Dire Straits. The date was the 13th of December, 1977, and as he walked into the club they were playing Down To The Waterline. Ed recalls, "The first thing I noticed was that it wasn't necessary to stand at the back of the room; they were very quiet. I'd just done The Ramones, who were deafening......The second thing I noticed was that Mark was playing a red Stratocaster, which immediately made me think of Hank Marvin, who I had idolised in the sixties." After hearing two or three numbers Ed decided that he wanted to manage the band. He was organising a tour for Talking Heads and was able to put his new band on the bill as the support act. Dire Straits were paid £50 per night for the Talking Heads tour; a ten-fold increase from their fee at Dingwalls. The rest - as is often said - is history.


I once asked Ed Bicknell's former assistant, Liz Whatley, when it was that she realised Dire Straits were going to be really big. She replied that it was the first time she heard Romeo and Juliet. By the mid-1980s Dire Straits had released Brothers in Arms, one of the best selling albums of all time, and had been tagged 'the biggest band in the world'. By that stage the recording and touring personnel of the band had changed more than once. David left. Hal Lindes, guitar, and Alan Clark, keyboards, joined. Then came Tommy Mandel, keyboards, and Mel Collins, saxophone. Pick left and was replaced on drums by Terry Williams. Keyboard player Guy Fletcher became a member of Dire Straits for the Brothers In Arms album. Jack Sonni, guitar, and Chris White, saxophone, were brought in for the subsequent world tour. By the time Dire Straits commenced the 1991/92 On Every Street tour Mark, John, Alan, Guy and Chris were left from the mid-80s line-up. They were joined on stage by Phil Palmer, guitar, Paul Franklin, pedal-steel guitar, and percussionists Danny Cummings and Chris Whitten. Others who have been featured on Dire Straits' recordings include Roy Bittan, keyboards, and Joop De Korte, drums. The Brothers In Arms tour saw Dire Straits play 234 shows in twelve months to combined audiences of about 2.5 million. Within a couple of weeks of the tour finishing Mark was producing Tina Turner but, at the same time, felt he needed to get back to his roots. Long-time mates Steve Phillips and Brendan Croker had teamed-up to form a duo shortly after Mark had left Leeds in 1973. In 1986 Steve was in London and called in to see Mark who said he fancied coming up to Leeds and sitting in with Steve and Brendan on one of their gigs. This resulted in the three of them playing together at The Grove pub in Hunslet, Leeds, on the 31st of May, 1986. The following year Mark offered to produce Steve's next album but Steve suggested that a new album should feature both himself and Brendan. Guy Fletcher was brought in to help out on the technical side. From this evolved the Notting Hillbillies.


Ed Bicknell is an accomplished drummer in his own right and during a meal in a Notting Hill wine bar, Mark sat next to him and said "OK, Ed; we've formed a band, and you're the drummer." Paul Franklin joined on pedal-steel guitar. There followed an extensive UK tour to promote the 1990 release of the multi-platinum selling album Missing......Presumed having A Good Time. Also in 1990 Mark was able to release the Neck and Neck album, a joint project with the greatly admired Chet Atkins. Mark brought Dire Straits back together for the 1988 Nelson Mandela 70th Birthday Concert which featured Eric Clapton who was standing-in for Jack Sonni as Jack had just become the father of twin girls. Mark, John, Alan and Guy appeared on stage at Knebworth in June 1990 along with, among others, Eric Clapton, Elton John, Ray Cooper and Phil Palmer, to help raise funds for the Nordoff Robbins charity. Then came the On Every Street album. The resulting extensive world tour, which played to more than four million people, was punishing and exhausting. After it was over Mark felt that he needed to take a break from the pressures of live performance and studio schedules. In 1996 Mark began his career as a solo performer with the release of the Golden Heart album. The album was simply a step forward in the evolution of his music, "It's just moving forwards...", he said, "...Just trying to be better." In addition, he has scored the music to a number of films. First came Local Hero in 1983 followed in 1984 by the Cal and the Comfort and Joy soundtracks. These were followed in 1987 by The Princess Bride and two years later came Last Exit To Brooklyn. Further soundtrack work has seen the release of Metroland and Wag The Dog both of 1998. Mark's second solo album, Sailing To Philadelphia, was released in September 2000. His soundtrack album to the film A Shot At Glory is due for release in the not too distant future. To date, Mark Knopfler/Dire Straits have sold millions of singles and over 105 million albums.


Over the years Mark has collaborated with many artists. He has at one time or other worked with people such as Bob Dylan, Van Morrison, Randy Newman, Buddy Guy, Tina Turner, Phil Lynott, Willy DeVille, Eric Clapton, Waylon Jennings, Chet Atkins, Phil Everly, Vince Gill, Paul Franklin, Kate and Anna McGarrigle, Paul Brady, The Chieftains, Ben. E. King, Mary Chapin-Carpenter, Joan Armatrading, Scott Walker, Jeff Healey, The Judds, Jimmy Nail, Bryan Ferry, Aztec Camera, Steely Dan, Sting, Sonny Landreth, James Taylor, Emmylou Harris, Gillian Welch and David Rawlings. He has also devoted a great deal of time to charity work for institutions large and small. Dire Straits did a total of three concerts for the Prince's Trust in front of Prince Charles and Diana, Princess of Wales. They appeared at the 1985 Live Aid Concert and the 1988 Nelson Mandela 70th Birthday Concert. In 1995 Mark was featured on the chart-topping Dunblane single Knockin' On Heaven's Door and in September 1997 was one of the artists who performed for Sir George Martin's Music For Montserrat Concert at the Royal Albert Hall. The Notting Hillbillies, too, have performed many charity concerts helping to raise money for a range of deserving causes. Mark has been the recipient of countless awards and accolades, not least among which was the conferring in May 1993 of an Honorary Music Degree by Newcastle University of which he is justly proud. Mark Knopfler has always been a songster, to him the song is king. It is said that he has never really understood why his music is so popular. In this he is not alone. When reviewing the Sultans of Swing compilation album in November 1998, the writers of Mojo magazine commented "overwhelming sales testify to Mark Knopfler's song-writing ability and guitar expertise, and there is certainly something intimate and friendly in that smokey voice and fluid guitar, though the scale of Dire Straits' success remains mildly baffling." Some have tried to answer this by arguing that Mark's music has an instant appeal. Perhaps a better explanation comes in Robert Sandall's liner essay for the Sultans of Swing compilation.


Sandall noted, "As the fires of punk raged around them, they made no secret of their love for styles of music which the cultural commissars of the day had recently declared irrelevant....What part could this lot possibly play in the brave new world of anarchy, media manipulation and anti-musicianship? Apart from their consummate skill as performers, it was their complete disregard for all the fashionable nonsenses of the moment that rescued Dire Straits from the fate which swiftly overtook most of their punky contemporaries. While others lived and died in a blaze of publicity and disappointing record sales, they took the world by stealth....Dire Straits were, above all, superb communicators.... The heartfelt simplicity of their music - chiefly derived from Mark Knopfler's gruff vocals and elegantly burnished Fender guitar tone - came across in songs that sounded both fresh and timeless, and which also possessed a breathtaking accuracy." There is another side to Mark Knopfler, a very private side. By the mid-80s Mark was being referred to by some as the "quiet man of rock and roll." He is shy by nature and gets embarrassed when fans tell him how much they have been affected by his songs and how his music has changed their lives. It is a matter of public record that Mark has been married three times. His second marriage produced his twin sons, Benji and Joseph, born in 1987, and more recently his third marriage to Kitty Aldridge has been blessed with a daughter, Isabella, born in 1998. After more than twenty years at the top of his profession, Mark Knopfler is now a family man who loves to spend time with his wife and his children.
source: http://www.working-on-it.com/eng/index.html




Official Website


Official Website


Mark Knopfler Discography:


 Release Title and date
All the RoadrunningAll the Roadrunning
2006
One Take Radio SessionsOne Take Radio Sessions
2005
 Ahoy (Live) (Disc 1)
2005
Shangri-LaShangri-La
2004
The RagpickerThe Ragpicker's Dream
2002
 amsterdam 17-06-2001 (disc 1)
2001
Golden HeartGolden Heart
1996
 Live in Copenhagen 1996
1996
Local HeroLocal Hero
1990
Princess BridePrincess Bride
1990
 2005-04-17 - ahoy - cd2
 a lovestruck
 a seattle night (14-5-01) cd 1
 a shot at glory
 a shot at glory - soundtrack
 amsterdam 17-06-2001 (disc 2)
 best
 boom, like that (single)
 break of day
 cal
 cal (original movie sountrack)
 cannibals (cd single)
 comfort and joy
 from the film cal
 golden demos & hamburg 2001
 golden live
 golden live in hamburg
 golden tears
 grand collection
 greatest hits i
 greatest hits ii
 guitar dreams
 hamburg
 hamburg stadpark [disk 1 ]
 hamburg stadpark [disk 2]
 helsinki 2001 cd1
 last exit to brooklyn
 last exit to hamburg cd1
 last exit to hamburg cd2
 le zenith
 le zenith cd 1
 Legendary Masters
 leuka 2000
 live at the royal albert hall
 live at the royal albert hall - limited edition disc in
 live from boston, ma, july 1, 2005 (disc 1)
 live from nashville, tn, 2005 - disc 1
 live im stadtpark ii.
 live in amsterdam
 live in bern '96 (part 1)
 live in bern '96 (part 2)
 live in hamburg
 live in lyon (le zénith) 2005 vol.1
 live in nashville cd2
 live in nashville, tn july 13, 2005
 Local Hero
 local hero (lp)
 metroland
 music and songs from the film metroland
 music from the film "cal"
 neck and neck
 philadelphia gold-best 2001
 rare session ii
 rarities
 roma @ 192 kbps
 roma @ 192 kbps (cd2)
 Sailing to Philadelphia
 Sailing to Philadelphia
 sailing to philadelphia (preview)
 sailing to philadelphia 2
 Sailing to Philadelpia (Single)
 sampler
 screenplaying
 screenplaying (music from the films ---)
 screenplaying (music from the films ...)
 screenplaying (music from the films...)
 shangri la se
 silvertown blues (the best hits)
 single - boom, like that
 stp 04062001
 stp london 04062001
 stp tour
 sultans of swing promo cd2 - interview cd
 swinging golden hearts (1)
 swinging golden hearts (2)
 swinging golden hearts (2-2)
 swinging golden hearts cd1
 swinging golden hearts disk 1
 tales of the heart
 the best
 the best collection
 the best collection.
 the best of "sons of scotland"
 the golden globe
 the long road ep
 the princess bride
 The Ragpicker's Dream
 The Ragpicker's Dream
 The Ragpicker's Dream
 The Ragpicker's Dream
 The Ragpicker's Dream (Bonus CD)
 The Ragpicker's Dream (Disc 2)
 The Ragpicker's Dream (Limited Edition)
 The Ragpicker's Dream (live) (Bonus Tracks)
 the ragpicker's dream interview disk
 the ragpicker`s dream
 the ragpieker's dream bonus cd
 the ragpieker´s dream
 the ragpiker's dream
 the regpieker's dream
 the sailing to philadelphia tour - disc1
 the sailing to philadelphia tour - disc2
 trawlerman's song ep
 vaison la romaine
 vaison la romaine (cd1)
 vaison la romaine (cd2)
 Wag the Dog
 wag the dog (music from the motion picture)
 whaat it is - cd single
 what it is
 what it is (mexican promo)
 why aye man
 why aye man (single)
 words + music
 zenith, lille, france, jne 5th 2005 - disc 1
 zenith, lille, france, jne 5th 2005 - disc 2


Tracks by 'Mark Knopfler' 


 
5.15 AM Play
Acoustic Pieces of Songs 
A Fistful of Ice Cream 
A Happy Ending Play
A Happy Ending (from 'The Princess Bride') 
Alison 
Alison (Elvis Costello) 
All the Roadrunning 
All That I Have in the World 
All That Matters Play
Lyrics
Al Macho (live on WDR2) 
Alone and forsaken (with Emmylou Harris and Paul Franklyn) - Nas 
A Love Idea Play
A Love Idea {from Last Exit to Brooklyn} 
An American Hero 
A Night in Summer Long Ago 
Lyrics
A Night in Summer Long Ago (G.H.). 
Annick 
Another of the, I suppose, best remembered tracks from Making 
A Place Where We Used to Live 
Lyrics
Are We in Trouble Now 
Lyrics
A Secret Place 
A Secret Place-Where Will You Go 
As Low As It Gets 
A Walk in Paris 
Back to Tupelo Play
Lyrics
Baloney Again Play
Lyrics
Baloney Again ( Live ) 
Balony Again (live on WDR2) 
Beachcombing 
Beifall 
Belle Star 
Beyond My Wildest Dreams 
Big River 
Blues Chair 
Blues Chair (Django Reinhardt) 
Bonaparte 
Bonnie Banks of Loch Lommond, What it is (Chicago, May 5) 
Bonnie banks o`loch lomond & What it is 
Bonus 
Boom, Like That Play
Lyrics
Boom Like That [single] 
Boomtown Play
Boomtown (Local Hero) 
Boomtown (Variation Louis' Favourite) Play
Brats 
Broken Wing 
Brothers in Arms 
Brothers in Arms (Live) 
The bug 
Calling Elvis 
Calling Elvis - live (14-5-01) 
Calling elvis - Warsaw, Sala Kongresowa 10 june - soundboard rec 
Camerado 
Lyrics
Camerado (previously unreleased) 
Cannibals 
Lyrics
Carry That Weight 
The Ceilidh: Louis' Favourite 
The Ceilidh: Louis' Favourite, Billy's Tune 
The Ceilidh and the Northern Lights 
Chet Atkins Documentary 
Chet Atkins, I'll see you in my dreams 
Chet Atkins, Just one time 
Chet Atkins, The next time I'm in town 
Chet Atkins, So soft, your goodbye 
Chet Atkins, Sweet dreams 
Chet Atkins, Tahitian skies 
Chet Atkins, Tears 
Chet Atkins, There'll be some changes made 
Chet Atkins, Yakety axe 
The Cliffs of Insanity 
Comfort (Theme From Comfort and Joy) 
cordet is So Far Away. It's on the Brothers in Arms album. A 
Coyote 
Lyrics
Daddy's Gone to Knoxville 
Lyrics
Darling Pretty 
Lyrics
DATA- What It Is (video) 
Devil Baby 
Lyrics
Dire Straits, Lady writer 
Dire Straits, Portobello Belle 
Do America 
Lyrics
Do America (previously unreleased) 
Done with Bonaparte 
Lyrics
Done with Bonaparte (Detroit, Fox Theater, May 4) 
Done with Bonaparte - live (14-5-01) 
Donegan's Gone Play
Lyrics
Donkey Town 
Don't Crash The Ambulance Play
Lyrics
Don't You Get It 
Lyrics
Don't You Get It (Golden Heart). 
Down Day 
Drooling National 
Eastbound Train 
El macho Play
Lyrics
El Macho (Montevideo, Teatro de Verano, Apr. 2) 
El Mancho ( Live ) 
Empty Track 
er 24 may 
Espresso Love 
Everybody Pays Play
Lyrics
Fade to Black 
Fare Thee Well Northumberland 
Lyrics
Father and Son Play
Father and Son [Cal] 
Fear and Hatred 
Feel Like Going Home 
Finale - Last Exit To Brooklyn Play
Finale - Last Exit to Brooklyn {Last Exit to Brooklyn} 
The Fireswamp and the Rodents of Unusual Size 
Florin Dance 
Four in a Row 
France) 
Freeway Flyer 
The Friends' Song Play
The Friends' Song (from "The Princess Bride") 
From the Spring Days of Winter 
George Harrison, Eric Clapton) 
Ghost of Faffner Hall 
Going Home (incomplete) 
Going Home (live on TV) 
Going Home (Theme from 'Local Hero') Play
Going Home (Theme from 'Local Hero') (live) 
Golden Heart 
Lyrics
Golden Slumbers, Carry That Weight, The End (w. Paul McCartney) 
Good Rockin' Tonight 
Gravy Train 
Lyrics
Guide My Sword (from 'The Princess Bride') Play
Hard Cases 
He's the Man 
Hi 
Hill Farmer's Blues 
Lyrics
How Long 
I Dug Up a Diamond 
If This Is Goodbye 
Imelda 
Lyrics
I'm the Fool 
Lyrics
In a Secret Place 
In the days when we used to talk about LP's, Telegraph Road wa 
Information,Talks About the Album 
In the Heartland 
In Private & In Public I 
In Private & In Public II 
Instrumental #1 
Instrumental #2 
Instrumental #3 
Instrumental, Cannibals 
Instrumental, Golden heart 
Intro 
Intro Band Members 
Intro, Golden Heart 
Intro Music 
Intro, Romeo and Juliet 
Intro, Rudiger 
Intro, What It Is 
Irish Boy Play
Irish Love Play
It is a rather cynical track. 
It's Over 
I Will Never Love Again 
Je suis désolé 
Lyrics
Joy 
Junkie Doll Play
Lyrics
Just Instinct 
Just One Time 
Lyrics
Just One Time (with Chet Atkins) 
Kansas City 
Last Exit to Brooklyn 
The Last Laugh Play
Lyrics
Layla 
Let's See You 
Lyrics
Let's See You (previously unreleased) 
The Lily of the West 
Local Hero 
Local Hero, Wild Theme 
the long highway 
Lyrics
The long highway (previously unreleased) 
The Long Road Play
The Long Road [Cal] 
Lost on the river (with Emmylou Harris and Paul Franklyn) - Nash 
Love 
Love and Guilt 
Love and Happiness 
Love Over Gold 
Mademoiselle Will Decide 
Mademoiselle will decide (wih Jools Holland and his Rhythm and B 
Marble Town 
Lyrics
Meeting Under the Trees