Money for Nothing

Money for Nothing

Dire Straits

From the album

Brothers in Arms (1985)

Key:G Minor
Duration:4:08

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Summary

Released at the height of the 1980s, this track combined cutting-edge digital production with Mark Knopfler's signature fingerstyle guitar work to create a global #1 hit. It remains a cultural landmark for its pioneering 3D computer-animated music video and Sting’s guest vocal hook.

Classic Rock80sGuitar RiffSatiricalNew Wave

Musical Analysis

The harmonic foundation of 'Money for Nothing' is a masterclass in modal ambiguity, oscillating between G Dorian and G Aeolian. While the iconic, finger-plucked riff is anchored in G minor, the frequent use of C major (the IV chord) injects a bright Dorian fla…

Structure:Intro-Verse-Chorus-Verse-Chorus-Bridge-Chorus-Outro

Chords

intro:G
verse:Gm7 - C - Gm7 - Bb - C - Gm7 - F - Gm7
chorus:Eb - Bb - Eb - F - Gm7 - C - D - E

History

Mark Knopfler wrote the song after visiting an appliance store in New York City. While there, he observed a delivery man watching a wall of televisions tuned to MTV. The man was making derogatory yet fascinated comments about the rock stars on the screen, comp…

“The distinctive guitar tone was achieved by using a 1958 Gibson Les Paul through a Laney amplifier with a wah-wah pedal fixed in a specific position.”

📝 Lyrics

cynical · satirical · observational

Theme

Class resentment and the perceived artifice of the 1980s music industry.

Surface

A blue-collar worker in an appliance store watches music videos on MTV while moving heavy goods, complaining that rock stars get rich without doing any 'real' work.

Deeper meaning

A meta-commentary on the transition from an industrial economy to a media-driven one, highlighting the disconnect between physical labor and the rewards of celebrity culture. It also serves as a self-deprecating joke by Knopfler, who is himself a rock star.

Symbols

The Microwave OvenMTV

Full Musical Analysis

The song is primarily in the key of E major, featuring a relatively simple but effective harmonic progression. The use of power chords and bluesy riffs contributes to its rock feel.

The rhythm is straightforward and driving, with a strong backbeat. The song features a distinctive drum groove and a steady bassline.

The melody is relatively simple and memorable, following the harmonic progression of the song. Mark Knopfler's distinctive vocal delivery adds to the song's character.

Mark Knopfler wrote the song after visiting an appliance store in New York City. While there, he observed a delivery man watching a wall of televisions tuned to MTV. The man was making derogatory yet fascinated comments about the rock stars on the screen, comparing their 'easy' lifestyle to his own hard manual labor. Knopfler asked for a pen and paper and wrote down the delivery man's lines verbatim as he said them, including phrases like 'that ain't working' and 'chicks for free.'

Released at the height of the 1980s, this track combined cutting-edge digital production with Mark Knopfler's signature fingerstyle guitar work to create a global #1 hit. It remains a cultural landmark for its pioneering 3D computer-animated music video and Sting’s guest vocal hook.

Song DNA

Genre

Rock

Era

80s

Mood

Cynical

Tempo

Upbeat

Key

Minor

Texture

Layered

Sound

Guitar-driven

Feel

Groovy

Explore More

Listen & Learn

Statistics

8.2M

Plays

1.2M

Listeners

100%

Popularity

4:08

Duration

4/4

Time

Chord Sheet

Song Structure

Verse-Chorus

Chords Used

E5
A5
D5

Chord Fingerings

E5

Standard

A5

Standard

D5

Standard

Sections

IntroVerse 1ChorusVerse 2ChorusGuitar SoloVerse 3ChorusOutro