The Essential Neil Diamond

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The Essential Neil Diamond album cover
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Total Tracks: 38   Total Length: 140:45

eMusic Review 0

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Barry Walters

eMusic Contributor

06.30.09
Emo for suburban grandparents
2001 | Label: Columbia

Neil Diamond is a roadmap for children of all ages to connect with baby boomers alienated by a rock ‘n'roll heaviness that set in between Sgt. Pepper's and Altamont. That's not to say that Diamond wasn't initially a rocker (dig the joyous R&B riffs that animate “Cherry Cherry”) or heavy in his own way &#8212 witness his sulky “Solitary Man,” all those black leather stage costumes, or his voice itself; an instrument that deepened while accumulating the gravel of passing years. This Brooklyn-born mensch captures the everyday drama of ordinary lives as he pits the vulnerability of his lyrics against the stoicism of his unrepentantly masculine croon. Diamond is emo for suburban grandparents.

And why should they have all the fun? Only a party pooper would deny the craftsmanship and emotional truths abundant in this career-spanning, Diamond-curated collection; particularly on the first disc, where songs more familiar by other artists (“I'm a Believer,” “Red, Red Wine”) sit next to what are now ballpark anthems (“Sweet Caroline”) and often-covered classics (“Girl, You'll Be a Woman Soon.”)

As the bubblegum-soul efficiency of his Brill Building output on the Bang label gave way to the orchestral grandeur of his introspective songbook on Uni and Columbia,… read more »

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So Many Memories!

GraceM.

I never expected to find so many of my favorite songs here, but I did. They took me back to a lot of great times in my life. One great song after another. Simply wonderful album!

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So many of my favorites

ItsMyIlusn

are in this collection. 'Tis the Essential Neil Diamond, indeed. 'Scuse me while I sing along to "Red, Red Wine" ...

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Good Collection

Rusty.B

Really enjoyed the music. Brought back a lot of good memories.

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This compilation is a great

jgavinfl

start for those beginning a Neil Diamond collection. The oldies are the original versions and much of the later songs are as well. Only a few demonstrate the apparent vocal cord problems Diamond has suffered with for decades that new listeners may not notice. Recommended.

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The Essential Neil Diamond

gwhogs

A must have for your Neil Diamond collection. Wow! What more can you say other than its great

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Not A Neil Diamond Fan...

jugaluck

I'm not a big fan of Neil Diamond, but he did 2 songs that I really liked. So here they are and are categorized as "album only". The record companys used to make money selling singles. I wonder what happened? This is a good deal if you are really into Neil Diamond, but I'll have to pass.

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How to make a hit

EMUSIC-01D371BB

What more can you say a songwriter who can make a hit with lyrics that don't rhyme!

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Now, as for the MUSIC....

timabouttown

I'm going to make the wild, irrational leap that you're at this page because of Neil, instead of Sony. The real problem with this isn't the album-only tracks. Other than the absence of "Stones" and nothing from Johnathan Livingston Seagull (a 70s highlight, 5 tracks of which show up on the 3-disk In My Lifetime), this is a wonderful selection with very little fat, and very little missing. The problem is that many of the songs you most want to hear are so-so live versions, not the studio versions you love. If you listen to the samples and are okay with that, this is a bargain. Otherwise, it really is worth considering "In My Lifetime," 71 tracks for only 36 credits, which is an even better deal, with many essential tracks that can't fit here.

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"Album Only" is no good

MattyDread

I am happy that emusic is getting rights to more catalogs, but the pricing system needs to be tweaked. There is no reason to spend so many credits for the few tunes that I want. I can go elsewhere and get what I want for less. Boooooo! to Sony and their pricing demands.

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All those "album only" downloads?

NickNayme

I'm getting them from somewhere else. For free. Eat shit and die, Sony.

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Columbia Records’ series of two-disc, limited-edition Essential compilations of its major long-term stars — Bob Dylan, Billy Joel, Barbra Streisand, etc. — has generally been a winner, so it is a shame to have to report that the Neil Diamond number is not. True, most of the singer/songwriter’s best and most popular songs are included, but there are also significant omissions and enough inessential material to prevent this from being the sort of definitive collection it could and should have been. For once, the basic problem in assembling a Diamond best-of has been overcome, since Columbia has licensed the five Top Ten hits he scored for Uni Records in the late ’60s and early ’70s from Universal. Meanwhile, Columbia parent Sony controls the Bang Records catalog for which Diamond recorded from 1966 to 1968, and he has been signed to Columbia since 1973, so that puts his biggest hits at the compilers’ disposal. But those compilers, Diamond himself and Al Quaglieri, have chosen oddly, shortchanging the Columbia material in favor of using more Bang recordings (nine) than necessary and employing ten live recordings, six of them newly made, nine of them songs from the Uni era, including versions of obscure album tracks like “Captain Sunshine.” That leaves space for only 14 Columbia studio recordings from 1973-2001, and though most of them were chart singles, fans will miss the Top Five hit “Longfellow Serenade,” while “I’ve Been This Way Before,” another track from the Serenade album that barely made the Top 40, is included. This is the kind of idiosyncratic selection typical of a collection chosen by the artist himself, in this case one who is more interested in his new interpretations of half-forgotten songs from 30 years earlier than what a more objective observer might consider the “essential” recordings of his career. – William Ruhlmann

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