Showing posts with label Neil Diamond. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Neil Diamond. Show all posts

Saturday, April 26, 2025

Neil Diamond with Lulu & Amy McDonald - BBC Sessions, Volume 3: Electric Proms, The Roundhouse, London, Britain, 10-30-2010

Before I dive all the way in with posting the winners of my recent BBC poll, I still have a few BBC albums I want to post of other artists. Here's one I'm finishing up. This is the third and probable last BBC concert by Neil Diamond, unless there are others I don't know about. It's a full concert and has two guest stars: Lulu and Amy McDonald.

Diamond's career peaked in the 1960s and 70s both creatively and commercially. But he had a late critical revival starting with his 2005 album "12 Songs," which was produced by Rick Rubin. This concert took place just a few days before Diamond released the album "Dreams." It consisted entirely of cover versions of famous songs, with the exception of "I'm a Believer," which was a massive hit for the Monkees back in 1967 but was actually written by Diamond. That's why he played covers like "Midnight Train to Georgia" and "Ain't No Sunshine," as well as a slowed down version of "I'm a Believer."

The concert is also unusual for the guest stars. Lulu had a big hit in 1967 with "The Boat that I Row," a song written by Diamond. She sang that here with Diamond, as well as "Oh Me, Oh My (I'm a Fool for You Baby)" another 1960s hit for her that Diamond wasn't involved with. Singer-songwriter Amy McDonald was a guest singer for two songs as well. She sang "Shilo," a song written by Diamond. Then she sang a song she wrote, "This Is the Life." It was a Number One hit in many countries in Europe in 2008, but only a minor hit in Britain and not a hit at all in the U.S. Here's her Wikipedia entry if you want to know more about her:

Amy Macdonald - Wikipedia

Otherwise, the concert was filled with the classic hits you'd expect from Diamond. Lulu returned near the end of the concert to help sing "Sweet Caroline."

This unreleased album is an hour and 37 minutes long.

01 talk (Neil Diamond)
02 Beautiful Noise (Neil Diamond)
03 Forever in Blue Jeans (Neil Diamond)
04 talk (Neil Diamond)
05 Hello Again (Neil Diamond)
06 talk (Neil Diamond)
07 Play Me (Neil Diamond)
08 talk (Neil Diamond)
09 Solitary Man (Neil Diamond)
10 Girl, You'll Be a Woman Soon (Neil Diamond)
11 Cherry, Cherry (Neil Diamond)
12 talk (Neil Diamond)
13 Love Song [Edit] (Neil Diamond)
14 talk (Neil Diamond)
15 Midnight Train to Georgia (Neil Diamond)
16 talk (Neil Diamond)
17 Ain't No Sunshine (Neil Diamond)
18 I'm a Believer (Neil Diamond)
19 talk (Neil Diamond)
20 The Boat that I Row (Neil Diamond & Lulu)
21 talk (Neil Diamond & Lulu)
22 Oh Me, Oh My [I'm a Fool for You Baby] (Lulu with Neil Diamond)
23 talk (Neil Diamond)
24 Pretty Amazing Grace (Neil Diamond)
25 talk (Neil Diamond)
26 Shilo (Amy McDonald with Neil Diamond)
27 talk (Amy McDonald with Neil Diamond)
28 This Is the Life (Amy McDonald with Neil Diamond)
29 talk (Neil Diamond)
30 Holly Holy (Neil Diamond)
31 Cracklin' Rose (Neil Diamond)
32 I Am... I Said (Neil Diamond)
33 Sweet Caroline (Neil Diamond)
34 Sweet Caroline [Reprise] (Neil Diamond & Lulu)
35 Brother Love's Traveling Salvation Show (Neil Diamond)

https://pixeldrain.com/u/AKaJ7kKF

alternate:

https://bestfile.io/en/jpW8oj6TgADorgx/file

The cover is from this exact concert. It shows Diamond with Lulu.

Thursday, February 13, 2025

Neil Diamond - BBC Sessions, Volume 2: BBC Radio Theatre, London, Britain, 5-14-2008

Here's a Neil Diamond BBC concert from 2008.

Diamond has a curious history of BBC concerts. He did one in 1971, when he was already established as a songwriter for others but was still just starting to make his mark as a solo artist. Then, apparently, he didn't do another one until this one in 2008. Perhaps for most of those years he felt he was so famous that he didn't need the promotion of a free concert broadcast over the radio.

One might have thought Diamond was past his prime in 2008, but he had a late career resurgence. In 2005, he put out the studio album "12 Songs." It was produced by Rick Rubin, and it got good reviews, just like other careers revived by Rubin, most especially Johnny Cash. Then, in 2008, he released "Home Before Dark," which also was produced by Rubin. While neither were huge sellers, if you look at the crowd-sourced ratings at rateyourmusic.com, those two albums have the best ratings of any Diamond album since the early 1970s.

However, most of the songs performed here are classic hits from earlier in his career. The only three new songs were "Pretty Amazing Grace," "Home Before Dark," and "Man of God." Strangely, it seems he didn't have any banter between songs except for one time, before "Home Before Dark." And for that time, he couldn't stop talking, going for over five minutes. Note though that this album is probably edited down by the BBC to fit an hour-long time slot, so we don't know what songs and/or banter might be missing. 

This album is 55 minutes long.

01 Beautiful Noise (Neil Diamond)
02 Hello Again (Neil Diamond)
03 Love on the Rocks (Neil Diamond)
04 Thank God for the Night Time (Neil Diamond)
05 Pretty Amazing Grace (Neil Diamond)
06 Home Before Dark (Neil Diamond)
07 Forever in Blue Jeans (Neil Diamond)
08 talk (Neil Diamond)
09 Man of God (Neil Diamond)
10 Cracklin' Rosie (Neil Diamond)
11 Sweet Caroline (Neil Diamond)
12 I'm a Believer (Neil Diamond)
13 I Am... I Said (Neil Diamond)

https://pixeldrain.com/u/FZe3c5UB

alternate:

https://bestfile.io/en/ghMHzKVt7HGUjVq/file

The cover photo is from this exact concert.

Friday, May 7, 2021

Various Artists - Covered: Neil Diamond, Volume 2: 1970-2019

While I'm at it, here's the second of two of my "Covered" series albums for Neil Diamond.

As I explained with the first volume, I music prefer the poppy music from early in Diamond's career, when he did songs like "I'm a Believer" and "Cherry, Cherry," to his later focus on cheesy ballads like "Don't Bring Me Flowers" and "Heartlight." So you won't find covers of either of those latter two hits here, or some others like them. In some cases, I did pick some of his more mellow songs, but I generally went with rocking versions.

If there's any classic song you feel was unjustly left off this album and Volume 1, please let me know. But hopefully also let me know of a good cover version of that song. If you do, I will strongly consider adding it in. 

All the songs here have been officially released, except for the Gladys Knight version of "Love on the Rocks." I like that song and wanted to include it, but I had a hard time finding a version that wasn't overproduced and cheesy. I found a YouTube video of Knight doing the song for a TV show, and converted it to mp3. The Elvis Presley version of "Sweet Caroline" is from a concert album, but I minimized the audience noise to help it fit in with the other studio tracks.

This album is 44 minutes long. Volume 1 is just a little bit longer.

01 Sweet Caroline (Elvis Presley)
02 Song Sung Blue (Vikki Carr)
03 Play Me (Harry Belafonte)
04 I Am... I Said (Bunny Scott)
05 Sunflower (Glen Campbell)
06 Forever in Blue Jeans (Tommy Overstreet)
07 Love on the Rocks (Gladys Knight)
08 Red, Red Wine (UB40)
09 Solitary Man (Chris Isaak)
10 Cracklin' Rosie (Shane MacGowan & the Popes)
11 Girl, You'll Be a Woman Soon (Urge Overkill)
12 America (Me First & the Gimme Gimmes)
13 Hello Again (Fun Lovin' Criminals)

https://www.upload.ee/files/16693967/COVRDNeilD_1970-2019_Volum2_atse.zip.html

The cover art photo dates to 1979.

Various Artists - Covered: Neil Diamond, Volume 1: 1964-1970

I've realized lately I have a lot of artists to add to my "Covered" series. I still have some more who started their careers before the 1960s, but I was listening to this one yesterday and feel like posting it now. 

Generally speaking, this series focuses on songwriters who aren't famous for performing their own songs. Neil Diamond doesn't fit this rule. He has had massive success on his own. Yet he also started out as a stereotypical Brill Building professional songwriter for others, much like Gerry Goffin, Carole King, Barry Mann, Cynthia Weil, and so on. So I've collected two albums of songs that treats Neil Diamond solely as a songwriter, with none of his own performances included. If you like his music career, this may allow you to enjoy his songs in a different way. If you are put off by his slick, show-biz presentation and don't like his records, this may allow you to realize how good many of his songs are anyway.

Neil Diamond (his birth name, by the way) released his first solo single in 1962. But his early solo efforts went nowhere. Instead, he started making his way in the music business as a professional songwriter, working in the Brill Building with the other songwriters mentioned above. He began having success on his own with "Solitary Man" in 1966. That same year, he found huge success as a songwriter when the Monkees covered his song "I'm a Believer," turning it into the biggest selling song of the year. Over the next few years, the songs he did for others went down because he had more and more hits on his own.

When it comes to his music, I much prefer his poppy late 1960s style over his sappy ballads with increasingly predominated in the 1970s and afterwards. I have included some of the best of his slower material, but I often chose cover versions which treated the songs very differently. His songs have often been done in very different ways, with reggae artists in particular often covering his songs.

Some of his biggest early hits aren't included here. That's because I chose covers of them that were done many years later. Those will turn up on Volume 2.

I tried not to include more than one song by the same artist. But I bent that rule in a couple of cases. For instance, the Monkees did such definitive versions of three of his songs that I had to use their versions for all three. I also have included two songs done by Elvis Presley, though only one of them appears on this album.

01 Just Another Guy (Cliff Richard)
02 Sunday and Me (Jay & the Americans)
03 I'm a Believer (Monkees)
04 Love to Love (Thyme)
05 A Little Bit Me, a Little Bit You (Monkees)
06 The Boat that I Row (Lulu)
07 Look Out [Here Comes Tomorrow] (Monkees)
08 It Comes and Goes (Melodians)
09 You Got to Me (Gene Pierson)
10 Kentucky Woman (Deep Purple)
11 And the Grass Won't Pay No Mind (Elvis Presley)
12 Brother Love's Travelling Salvation Show (Peggy Lee)
13 The Boy with the Green Eyes (Wool)
14 Cherry, Cherry (Jonathan King)
15 Holly Holy (Fabulous Flames)
16 Glory Road (Arthur Alexander)

https://www.upload.ee/files/17180207/COVRDNilDimnd1964-1970Volum1_atse.zip.html

alternate link:

https://pixeldrain.com/u/6YKB9pay

Normally, I only colorize a photo for an album cover if a good color one doesn't already exist. There are tons of photos of Neil Diamond, obviously. But for this album I wanted a photo of him when he was just starting out. The best photo I could find from that time was in black and white, apparently dating to 1966. So I colorized it. 

I find it amusing to think how this straight-laced looking guy in his three-piece suit would have long hair, open shirts, and lots of Las Vegas glitter and glamour not that many years later. 

UPDATE: On September 29, 2024, I upgraded the photo with the use of the Krea AI program.

Monday, April 26, 2021

Neil Diamond - BBC Sessions, Volume 1: In Concert, Royal Festival Hall, London, Britain, 5-29-1971

I've made a concerted effort to post more music that originally came from the BBC. That hasn't come as fast as I'd like, because a lot of it is new to my music collection and BBC sessions often need a lot of sound editing to get rid of the BBC DJs talking over the music. But sometimes the BBC has played entire concerts without any DJs, and those need more exposure too.

So here's one of those, featuring Neil Diamond. I have to admit my musical interest in him is very limited. I love many of his hits from the start of his career around 1966 until 1972 or so. Songs like "Sweet Caroline," "Cherry, Cherry," and "Solitary Man" are all time classics, in my opinion. But after that, it's very hit or miss, in my opinion. He moved much more into the sappy love song direction, and went all in with schmaltzy Las Vegas style glamour. 

It so happens that there are almost no live recordings of him prior to his hit live album "Hot August Night," recorded in 1972. I've posted one bootleg of him from 1967, but it's rather short and the sound quality is just okay. It's here, if you're curious:

https://albumsthatshouldexist.blogspot.com/2020/01/neil-diamond-bitter-end-new-york-city-8.html

There's also a little-known official live album recorded in 1969 called "Gold - Recorded Live at the Troubadour." It's very good in my opinion, done before the show biz overproduction overtook him. But that's about it, other than one or two bootlegs that sound pretty bad.

However, there also is a concert he did for BBC TV in 1971. I've seen it around the Internet here and there, but only in video format. So I've converted it to mp3, and I'm sharing it here. I like it because even though it was only recorded one year before "Hot August Night," and it has many of the same songs, it has a different feel. It's not exactly an acoustic concert, he does have a band that includes some strings and some horns, but it has a more subdued "confessional singer-songwriter" feel. I think a lot of that is because he talked a lot between songs, often shedding light on what his songs are about. It's a rather short concert at 45 minutes, but 10 of those minutes are him talking. That may not sound like a lot, but it's a much higher ratio than you'll find for most artists.

Crucially, the sound quality of this show is excellent. Thanks to those BBC professionals, it sounds just as good as a typical official live album from that era.

UPDATE: On February 2025, I updated the mp3 download file. The music is the same, but I changed the album title to "BBC Sessions, Volume 1" after finding out there was another BBC concert much later in his career. So I had to change the cover art and mp3 tags.

01 Sweet Caroline (Neil Diamond)
02 talk (Neil Diamond)
03 Solitary Man (Neil Diamond)
04 talk (Neil Diamond)
05 Cracklin' Rose (Neil Diamond)
06 talk (Neil Diamond)
07 Done Too Soon (Neil Diamond)
08 A Modern Day Version of Love (Neil Diamond)
09 talk (Neil Diamond)
10 He Ain't Heavy, He's My Brother (Neil Diamond)
11 talk (Neil Diamond)
12 Holly Holy (Neil Diamond)
13 I Am... I Said (Neil Diamond)
14 talk (Neil Diamond)
15 Brother Love's Traveling Salvation Show (Neil Diamond)

https://pixeldrain.com/u/YRSwVKYw

alternate:

https://bestfile.io/en/DK6dxRDuZvJUp2v/file

For the cover art, I took a screenshot from the exact concert in question. For the text, I used the exact same color and font type as the BBC did for the very start of the show.

Thursday, November 12, 2020

Melissa Etheridge - Neil Diamond Tribute - Home Concert, Los Angeles, CA, 5-7-2020

This is the last Melissa Etheridge home concert album I have to post before her son died in mid-May 2020. After that, she took a long break then resumed doing home concerts, but only for those who paid for a subscription service. Since then, she has posted some stuff for free on YouTube, so I plan on collecting and posting some of that eventually.

It turns out that Etheridge is a big Neil Diamond fan, thanks to her father, who played lots of Diamond's music while she was growing up. Thus, she did an entire home concert playing nothing but Neil Diamond songs. This is a relatively short album at only 36 minutes, and if you remove all her talking between songs its only 23 minutes long. But I figured it was good to keep this together since it holds together thematically.

This follows the same format as the other Etheridge home concerts I've posted. Namely, she plays and sings everything herself, live. But sometimes she sounds like a one-person band, complete with drums and lead guitar solos and such, due to her looping ability. That means she records a sample of some music, such as a drum beat, then plays other instruments on top of it. I've cut out the bits where she made the loop samples and built them up. The songs she does the looping for here are "Cherry, Cherry" and "Holly Holy." Otherwise, it's just her and her acoustic guitar.

As with all her other home concert stuff, the sound quality is excellent, and everything is officially unreleased.

Say what you will about Neil Diamond and his music. Yes, he's often cheesy and uncool. But he wrote a lot of classic songs, and naturally Etheridge chose to play some of his best ones. She also told some interesting stories about him, including her personal interactions with him.

01 talk (Melissa Etheridge)
02 Shiloh (Melissa Etheridge)
03 talk (Melissa Etheridge)
04 Play Me (Melissa Etheridge)
05 talk (Melissa Etheridge)
06 Cherry, Cherry (Melissa Etheridge)
07 talk (Melissa Etheridge)
08 I Am, I Said (Melissa Etheridge)
09 talk (Melissa Etheridge)
10 Holly Holy (Melissa Etheridge)
11 talk (Melissa Etheridge)
12 Sweet Caroline (Melissa Etheridge)

https://www.upload.ee/files/15289683/MelissaE_2020h_NeilDiamndTributeHomeConcrtLsAngelesCA__5-7-2020_atse.zip.html

For the cover art, I wanted to use a photo of Etheridge and Diamond together. I'm happy to say I found out. This shows them together at a radio station in New York City in 2014. There was a radio station logo repeated several times on the wall behind them. I found those distracting, so I removed them using Photoshop.

Wednesday, January 29, 2020

Neil Diamond - The Bitter End, New York City, 8-1967

I have to confess that I'm not a huge Neil Diamond fan. I think he's written a number of great songs, but I pretty much only have a double album greatest hits from him in my music collection. But today, I stumbled across something from him that's so rare and interesting that I'm pretty psyched to have it here.


Neil Diamond (that's the name he was born with, by the way) had his first successful single with "Solitary Man" in 1966. He followed that with a handful of additional hit singles in 1966 and 1967. But his musical style was square and out of fashion for the time, a throwback to the Brill Building sound that he'd been a part of. So music critics and audiences didn't quite know what to make of him, yet many of his songs were so good and catchy that he couldn't be ignored.

Into that scenario comes this concert recording. As far as I can tell, there are virtually no live recordings of him from before 1970, either official or bootleg. Yet I stumbled across this fascinating bootleg of him playing the Bitter End in New York City in August 1967, at a very early stage of his career. The sound quality isn't great. It's rougher than the vast majority of live recordings I post here. But I'm posting this anyway because I think it's a fascinating recording, and it sounds decent enough for me to enjoy listening to it.

This concert is interesting to me due to the song selection, as well as its historical rarity of being the only known concert recording from his early years. The recording is less than 30 minutes long, but almost every song he played is now considered a classic. He started with a cover of the Ike and Tina Turner classic "River Deep, Mountain High," which is interesting in and of itself. He didn't release a version of it on record until 1993. He also played "I'm a Believer" and "A Little Bit Me, a Little Bit You." Both of those were big hits for the Monkees. Diamond put out his own version of "I'm a Believer" on album after the Monkees had their hit with it, but he never put out his own version of "A Little Bit Me, a Little Bit You." So it's great to have that here, even though it's part of a medley and only about one minute long.

Aside from that, he played most of his best, classic songs, including "Solitary Man," "Cherry, Cherry," and "Kentucky Woman." He also did "The Boat that I Row," a song he wrote that was a big hit for Lulu in Britain. Because the recording is so short, I looked around to see what else I could add that would fit. All I could find was a performance of "Girl, You\ll Be a Woman Soon," which he played on TV two months later.

There were some problems with the recording. One is that there was virtually no space between the songs. Whatever between song banter existed hasn't been included, which is a shame. Also, typically, there was just a couple seconds of applause at the end of each song, and then there was a quick and drastic cut to the start of the next song, often cutting off a bit of the song's beginning. I tried to fix this as well as I could by patching in more audience applause from elsewhere in the recording, then fading that out, so the songs don't slam into each other. I also tried to repair the song beginnings that got cut off, by using intro riffs that got repeated later in the song. This worked in a couple of cases, but in others, there wasn't anything i could do.

Anyway, despite the somewhat rough sound quality, the short length, and the lack of talking between songs, I still think this is a very interesting recording. Personally, this is the kind of Neil Diamond I like best, before he turned into a slick and professional superstar with glammy production and presentation. It's kind of like the early Elvis (Presley) at Sun Records vs. late Elvis in Las Vegas comparison. Here, we have a young and hungry Neil Diamond back when he was still playing a tiny club. I wish we could hear the entire concert, with top notch sound quality.

By the way, around the month this concert happened, Diamond got in a big dispute with his producer Bert Berns. Berns was an excellent songwriter, so much so that I've included him in my "Covered" series of albums. But Berns also was a ruthless businessman. (Van Morrison would certainly attest to that, since he had big problems with Berns as well.) A couple of weeks after Diamond and Berns had a falling out in a recording studio, Diamond was playing a show at this very venue when a bomb went off. Nobody got hurt, but the club had to be cleared out, and there was damage. The police never found out who did it, but Diamond was convinced that Berns was behind it. Berns died later in 1967 of natural causes. Even so, Diamond was so spooked that he alerted the FBI, and carried a gun with him wherever he went for about another year, worried that Berns' Mob-connected associates were out to get him.

Now, I'm not sure if that bomb went off at this show or another one at the same venue. It's known that Diamond played the Bitter End at least twice in August, once on August 1oth and again on August 27th. So this recording could be from either show, or there could have been other shows there around that same time that weren't documented. But the odds are decent that that bomb went off at this very show, which makes it even more interesting, in my opinion!

01 River Deep, Mountain High (Neil Diamond)
02 Cherry, Cherry (Neil Diamond)
03 I'm a Believer (Neil Diamond)
04 A Little Bit Me, a Little Bit You (Neil Diamond)
05 The Boat that I Row (Neil Diamond)
06 Solitary Man (Neil Diamond)
07 Shilo (Neil Diamond)
08 Thank the Lord for the Nightime (Neil Diamond)
09 Kentucky Woman (Neil Diamond)
10 Girl, You'll Be a Woman Soon (Neil Diamond)

https://pixeldrain.com/u/Jo8RM2rE

alternate:

https://bestfile.io/x12SZGMZxdvo010/file

The cover art photo might look a little odd at first, and it's somewhat blurry. But I chose this because it depicts Diamond standing in front of the Bitter End around the time this concert took place. I cropped it so you can see that the sign he's standing next to says "The Bitter End" on it. The picture was originally black and white, but over a year after I first posted it, I colorized it. Then, in February 2025, I upgraded it using the Krea AI program.