Neil Diamond
b. 24 January 1941, Brooklyn, New York, USA. With a career as
a hitmaker stretching across three decades, Diamond has veered
between straightforward pop, a progressive singer-songwriter
style and middle-of-the-road balladry. He attended the same high
school as Neil Sedaka and Bobby Feldman of the Strangeloves and
began songwriting as a young teenager. He made his first records
in 1960 for local label Duel with Jack Packer as Neil And Jack.
After college, Diamond became a full-time songwriter in 1962,
recording unsuccessfully for CBS before Sunday And Me produced by
Leiber And Stoller for Jay And The Americans brought his first
success as a composer in 1965. The following year, Diamond made a
third attempt at a recording career, joining Bert Berns
Bang label. With Jeff Barry and Ellie Greenwich as producers, he
released Solitary Man before the catchy Cherry Cherry entered the
US Top 10. In 1967 the Monkees had multi million-sellers with
Diamond's memorable I'm A Believer and A Little Bit Me, A
little Bit You. Like his own 1967 hit, Thank The Lord For
The Night, these songs combined a gospel feel with a memorable
pop melody. In the same year, Diamond also showed his mastery of
the country-tinged ballad with Kentucky Woman.
After a legal dispute with Bang, Diamond signed to MCA Records
Uni label, moving from New York to Los Angeles. After a failed
attempt at a progressive rock album ( VELVET GLOVES AND SPIT) he
began to record in Memphis and came up with a series of catchy,
and simple hits, including Sweet Caroline (1969), Holly Holy and
two number 1s, Cracklin Rosie (1970) and Song Sung Blue (1972).
At the same time, Diamond was extending his range with the semi-concept
album TAP ROOT MANUSCRIPT (on which Hollywood arranger Marty
Paich orchestrated African themes) and the confessional ballad, I
Am
I Said, a Top 10 single on both sides of the Atlantic. He
was also much in demand for live shows and his dynamic act was
captured on HOT AUGUST NIGHT. Soon after its release, Diamond
announced a temporary retirement from live appearances, and spent
the next three years concentrating on writing and recording. He
moved into film work, winning a Grammy award for the soundtrack
of JONATHAN LIVINGSTON SEAGULL to which his long-time arranger
Lee Holdridge also contributed. BEAUTIFUL NOISE (on his new label,
CBS) was a tribute to the Brill Building songwriting world of the
'50s and '60s. It cost nearly half a million dollars to make and
was produced by Robbie Robertson. Diamond also appeared in THE
LAST WALTZ, the star-studded tribute movie to the Band.
In 1978, he recorded his first duet since 1960 and his biggest
hit single. The wistful You Don't Bring Me Flowers had previously
been recorded solo by both Diamond and Barbra Streisand but after
a disc jockey had spliced the tracks together, producer Bob
Gaudio brought the pair together for the definitive version which
headed the US chart. Now at the peak of his success, Diamond
accepted his first film acting role in a re-make of THE JAZZ
SINGER. The film was undistinguished although Diamond's
performance was credible. The soundtrack album sold a million, in
part because of America, a rousing, patriotic Diamond composition
which he later performed at the Statue Of Liberty centenary
celebrations. During the '80s, he increasingly co-wrote songs
with Gilbert Becaud, David Foster and above all Carole Bayer
Sager and Burt Bacharach. They collaborated on the ballad
Heartlight (1982), inspired by the film E.T. The next year, UB 40
revived one of his earliest songs Red Red Wine and had a UK
number 1. There were also disputes with CBS, which insisted on
changes to two of Diamond's proposed albums, bringing in Maurice
White to produce HEADED FOR THE FUTURE. However, The Best Years
Of Our Lives, written by Diamond alone, showed a return to the
form of the '70s while he worked on his 1991 album with leading
contemporary producers Don Was and Peter Asher. Diamond has
neither courted nor has been fully accepted by the cognoscenti,
his track record however speaks volumes; almost 60 hits in the
USA, over 30 charting albums and is one of the Top 20 most
successful artists ever in the USA. His success in the UK is
comparable with 26 charting albums and a fiercely loyal fan base.
In 1993 Diamond released one of his finest records in a long time.
His interpretation of songs by the great songwriters of the Brill
Building was an outstanding tribute.
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