Hi, all. I know there's a discussion going on about the meaning of R&J but I can't find it-- so I thought I'd start my own post. (Still getting used to the interface-- bear with me)
Apparently, briefly, Ed Bicknell became Holly and the Italians' manager, thanks to Mark. She actually broke up with him on the phone
right before he was headed out for a performance (nice timing). Here are some links:
This song [R&J] was inspired by Mark Knopfler's broken romance with Holly Vincent, who was the leader of the band Holly And The Italians. Some of the lyrics indicate that Knopfler felt she used him to boost her career...
The line, "Now you just say, oh Romeo, yeah, you know I used to have a scene with him," came from an interview where Holly Vincent was quoted as saying: "What happened was that I had a scene with Mark Knopfler and it got to the point where he couldn't handle it and we split up."
http://www.nationmaster.com/encyclopedia/Romeo-and-Juliet-(song)
AND
This song is actually about Knopfler's ex-girlfriend, Holly Vincent. She treated him badly, dumping him over the phone when he was on tour in America. He wrote Romeo and Juliet about her, and Love Over Gold shows his contempt of her - he's talking about the love he had for her, that she let run through her fingers like dust - and it echoes the sentiments of Romeo and Juliet - 'You can fall for chains of silver, you can fall for chains of gold, You can fall for pretty strangers, And the promises they hold, You promised me everything, You promised me thick and thin, yeah, Now you just say, oh, Romeo, yeah, you know I used to have a scene with him'.
http://www.songmeanings.net/profiles/submissions/17295117/comments/FWIW