Mark Knopfler's debut non-soundtrack solo album,
Golden Heart, was, in effect, the follow-up to the last
Dire Straits studio album,
On Every Street (1991). But it was also a compendium of the various musical endeavors in which
Knopfler had engaged since emerging as a major figure in 1978. "Imelda" was cast in the mold of "Money for Nothing," with its trademark electric guitar riff and sardonic lyrics about Imelda Marcos, and other songs resembled
Dire Straits songs, notably "Cannibals," which recalled "Walk of Life." But "A Night in Summer Long Ago" was presented in a Scots/Irish traditional folk style, complete with a lyric about a knight and a queen and would have fit nicely on
Knopfler's soundtrack for The Princess Bride, and "Are We in Trouble Now" was a country ballad featuring pedal steel guitar and the piano playing of Nashville session ace
Hargus "Pig" Robbins that would have been appropriate to
Knopfler's duo album with
Chet Atkins. ~ William Ruhlmann