Five Good Covers presents five cross-genre reinterpretations of an oft-covered song.

Fact: “Sultans of Swing” is a musical manifesto par excellence. Dire Straits might have a reputation (unearned) for not taking risks, but in terms of a debut single, their willingness to go against fashion and to consider biting the hand of pop norms was a significant statement.
Dire Straits were one of the biggest acts of the ’80s. There is sometimes a sense that a talent as obvious as Mark Knopfler’s would inevitably find a way to be a success. Musical stardom is not like that. Sometimes the gap between a Mark Knopfler and a Vini Reilly is a small one, and the distance between either of them and someone who performs occasionally to a coterie of rapt fans even smaller. We all know of amazing guitarists who are not playing arenas for years on end and are giving lessons to budding future axe-wielders rather than wielding themselves.
There is also the issue of whether Dire Straits would have been the vehicle for that success, had it come at a different time or in a different way. With natural self-awareness augmented by decades of therapy, bassist John Illsley notes that the band members shaped Mark Knopfler’s vision, but it was nevertheless the band leader’s vision, and his songs. The outcome was massive success, and perhaps it would have been anyway. Or perhaps not. Perhaps the polishing and shaping from the different members of the group over the years fully enabled the outcome.
The band came together fortuitously. Mark’s younger brother David moved into a rundown apartment in a proleterian part of London, later followed by Mark, and eventually a four-piece band together came together. Of these, initially, only drummer Pick Withers was making a living from music, as a successful session musician and in-house drummer at Rockfield Studios, recent subject of a fascinating book by Tiffany Murray. The band could see that they had something special, but what band does not? They were willing to work hard, realizing that they might not get many more throws of the dice. What they did not have was a lot of road to take off or any means to turn their aptitude and endeavor into a record deal. Although they could live cheaply, by forsaking any sense of luxury or, indeed, hygiene, they could not do so forever.
As Illsley tells it a legacy from a grandmother, passed on to him by his parents, hoping it would cover rent for a period, was spent on a demo tape instead. The anchor of that tape was “Sultans of Swing,” and it was persistent radio play by a sympathetic believer in the band that eventually got the attention of the record companies, from which the band could choose a partnership. They chose that partnership on the basis of musical fit, rather than succumbing to the ministrations of Virgin, who assumed that indulgent female company might be the way to seal the deal!
As a choice to roll the dice on for the last time, it is a ballsy choice. Musical London in 1977 appealed to the emotions, and often the sartorial sense. Punk was taking it three chords and spittle-flecked frontmen to the irritated front pages of the newspapers and thus to the hearts of the young, disco was in the nightclubs appealing to lovers of all types, and rock was getting rockier and developing a subculture. Dire Straits was practicing, and proselytizing, none of these things. There was no fashion, fans did not form close-knit groups, and the music was not really danceable, nor did it have the rhythms for love.
The song specifically celebrate a form of music that, if it was ever fashionable in the UK at all, it was during a short-lived fad for ‘Trad Jazz’ in the ’60s, and which young people would largely not be aware of. The Sultans of Swing were a Dixieland Jazz band playing in a particularly hardscrabble bit of London, to an audience largely indifferent to their presence. Mark Knopfler found them fascinating. They made no concessions to fashion at all, and were happy with their choices. Partly because some of them had other (less enjoyable?) jobs to fall back on. Or because some of them, for instance the rhythm guitarist, seemed not to want too much success or adulation. They were happy with their lot, because they were playing the music they loved with people that they liked. They were not going to make any concessions for the sake of success. As manifesto and metaphor it was clear. Illsley and Withers provide expert, practiced and nuanced, rhythms to work with, David Knopfler does not make his guitar “cry or sing” but he provides a necessary backdrop. The choice to have Mark Knopfler’s legendary solo go on into the fade sent another message: I Can Do This All Day.
A scarcely believable run of success followed. Only Mark Knopfler and John Illsley were in the band for all of it. Each committed fully, having had failures before, and sacrificed elements of themselves, and certainly a chance of a successful relationship with their partners, to the process. Others who lacked that commitment, or had stronger partnerships, did not stay as long. They could anchor Live Aid, their presence convincing others to come on board, but they choose not the headlining slot but an afternoon slot, so they could play their own paid gig in the evening. The business of music had become important. The albums and tours became more grand, perhaps even grandiloquent. There was an air of professionalism that may have rankled some. They were rock stars, but Illsley proudly notes that they never missed a gig due to excess, and no Rolls Royces were fished out of swimming pools on their tours. Mark Knopfler built an additional career and produced a range of his own music, and shaped successful albums for a number of huge acts, although not all the music or collaborators were susceptible to the shaping.
Some people were sniffy about Dire Straits’ accession to the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, and Mark Knopfler himself did not attend, which was a very English thing to do. It was not part of the music, and thus not necessary. Separate things that he did think were necessary were making music for films, and supporting the local football team. In 2025 Newcastle United FC, starved of success for decades, won a trophy when facing the best football team in the land, Liverpool. For a week the most popular song in a part of England was “Coming Home,” the theme from Scotland’s greatest ever movie, Local Hero. That is true recognition, in his book.
Hundreds of artists have covered the music of “Sultans of Swing,” hoping to reiterate the message that making the music you love, regardless of fashion, is a call worth making. Here are Five of the Best. They are unlikely to completely overlap with your suggestions. We have a comments section.
Noisy Water Band – Sultans of Swing (Dire Straits cover)
A “Sultans of Swing” cover is often a setting for a single maestro to show off his chops, ably supported by an at least competent rhythm section. In place of a single electric guitar genius this version has two soloists, one on banjo and one on acoustic guitar, circling and supporting each other with considerable empathy, in a Bluegrass work of genius.
Laszlo Buring – Stijn Bloemhof – Sultans of Swing (Dire Straits cover)
Mark Knopfler will have encountered and engaged with many styles of guitar playing, before he settled on his fingerpicking style and Stratocaster. He will have heard Rockabilly and Elvis, and enjoyed and enhanced it for his own style. Buring, on guitar, manages to roll back the years and do something many guitar players don’t have the fortitude to do–roll it back. Or Rock-n-Roll it back. Whilst maintaining the jazz tones of the original, he doesn’t incorporate styles that were not available to the pickers of the ’70s, or any of the years since. It didn’t have to work, but it does.
Detholz! – Sultans of Swing (Dire Straits cover)
The plucking pyrotechnics of the original “Sultans” has inspired a lot of covers which attempt to ape the original fretwork. Deltholz! concentrate on the other part of the song, that of being true to your vision and beliefs. The Chicago-based art rockers give a frightening reading that is all their own, part of their album of reanimated songs from the ’70s and ’80s, and they are proud of it!
Pericopes – Sultans of Swing (Dire Straits cover)
Mark Knopfler was celebrating jazz when he wrote “Sultans” and, despite what some people might think, jazz also evolves and continues to entrance outside its natural home in the US. This modern jazz version, from Italy, still manages to stir the emotions, where the refrain from the original drifts in and out.
Robin Schild – Sultans of Swing (Dire Straits cover)
Of the hundreds of covers of “Sultans of Swing,” this version stands out for augmenting one part of the original’s success, and highlighting another. Of the parts of the writing, solos, vocals and rhythm section of the original, perhaps the vocals are not the strongest aspect. Schild corrects this to some extent, but the version also captures the importance of the bass of the original. Illsley may have a rounded sense of his own contribution to the success of Dire Straits, but his contribution to “Sultans of Swing” was considerable, if you listen closely. The bass on this version highlights the importance of a successful bassline to a successful cover of the song.
All excellent. I shall add all to my “Sultans of Swing” covers mix. Might I also humbly suggest the very silly and fun version by Leo Moracchioli and Mary Spender?
She shreds.
https://youtu.be/x0RV0kgdqJU?si=cHb7_66vkDzp4aBB