12 Songs Neil Diamond

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CD - Jewel Case

  • Release Date: 11/08/2005
  • Sales Rank: 7,718
  • Label: SONY
  • UPC: 828767750828
 
  • Overview
  • Tracks
  • Editorial Reviews
  • Customer Reviews
  • Details & Credits
Track List
Click on LISTEN or link to hear an audio clip.
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12 Songs

1LISTENOh Mary 5:12
2LISTENHell Yeah 4:25
3LISTENCaptain of a Shipwreck 3:55
4LISTENEvermore 5:18
5LISTENSave Me a Saturday Night 3:31
6LISTENDelirious Love 3:12
7LISTENI'm on to You 4:27
8LISTENWhat's It Gonna Be 4:04
9LISTENMan of God 4:21
10LISTENCreate Me 4:10
11LISTENFace Me 3:27
12LISTENWe 3:50

About this Artist

Editorial Reviews

Neil Diamond, "the Jewish Elvis," has been phoning it in for decades, but he owes his success to a bunch of great songs delivered with singular swagger and conviction. Rick Rubin, the storied producer who resuscitated the career of Johnny Cash, saw a no doubt more challenging -- and personal -- project in his collaboration with Diamond. For Cash, Rubin curated material; with Diamond, his role was to restart youthful creative impulses in a 60-year-old kitsch icon. Against all odds, it's a success. Another triumph of Rubin's less-is-more maxim, 12 Songs is the most vital and focused work from Diamond since the Carter administration. Accompanying himself on guitar, he turns back the years to Velvet Gloves and Spit–era acoustics on a spare set of carefully crafted, dark-hued reflections. In these environs, Diamond's voice retains its melodramatic, stentorian appeal, his lyrics left-of-center yet just right. "If you're captain of a shipwreck, I'll be first mate to your shame," is one of his Townes Van Zant–worthy couplets. Neil's mojo is risin' on "Evermore," with its orchestral crescendo, an elegiac response to a younger man's searching "I Am, I Said." Fans of Diamond's primal rockers will even find satisfaction on this drum-less set in the form of "Delirious Love" (reprised on the essential bonus tracks version with backing harmonies by Beach Boy Brian Wilson), a chugging celebration of lust that would be inappropriate coming from any other senior citizen. The triumph of 12 Songs is that, unlike Rubin's repackaging of Cash for '90s hipsters, the producer simply let Neil be the best Neil Diamond he can be. And in our flash-in-pan youth-focused culture, that's a revelation. Mark Schwartz, Barnes & Noble



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Customer Reviews

12 Songsby Anonymous

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March 02, 2007: To hear Neil Diamond as he said,down to basics is simply saying he's never forgot where he came from!

12 Songsby Anonymous

Reader Rating:
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January 21, 2006: It'll be easy to sound like a goofy uber-fan, but this album turned me into one. I saw him on Oprah, and looked up the CD to satisfy my curiosity. I was hooked immediately. I find myself playing it on a continuous loop on the weekend because it keeps revealing new aspects while it becomes more familiar at the same time. I've been generally interested in his music, but never enjoyed the teflon aspects (when his songs slid right out of my ears, and never stuck in my head). These new songs make me happy, glad I bought the CD, and give me respect for his musical accomplishment.


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