Neil Diamond

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About this artist

Rising from humble roots in working-class Brooklyn to global success, Neil Diamond became one of the best-selling recording artists of the 20th century as well as a dynamic, internationally known touring act and skilled songwriter whose compositions produced numerous hits for himself and others. In a career that began in the early 1960s as a staff songwriter at New York’s legendary songwriting institution the Brill Building, he soon transitioned into performing and recording his own songs, finding success among the emerging pop singer/songwriter market with early highlights like “Solitary Man” and “Kentucky Woman.” A move to Los Angeles at the end of the ’60s coincided with a shift toward more adult-oriented pop and subsequently ushered in Diamond’s heyday as a major star. Melodic chart-toppers like “Cracklin’ Rosie” and “Song Sung Blue” kept him on top and opened the door for ambitious project material like the Grammy Award-winning Jonathan Livingston Seagull soundtrack and 1976′s conceptual Beautiful Noise album. He branched into acting with a star turn in the 1980 remake of The Jazz Singer, which also produced major hits like “Love on the Rocks” and “America.” While his popularity fell off during the latter half of the ’80s and much of the ’90s, Diamond remained a bankable touring act and by the end of the century, he was again on the upswing, thanks in part to a cultural resurgence of his enduring ’60s hit “Sweet Caroline,” which became a staple at major sporting events for teams like the Boston Red Sox. His status as a still-relevant legacy artist was further bolstered by a pair of critically lauded, stripped-down albums produced by Rick Rubin during the 2000s. Heading into the 2010s, Diamond continued to tour, release music, and accumulate impressive honors including his induction to the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame, Kennedy Center Honors, and a Lifetime Achievement Grammy. During a 2018 world tour celebrating his five decades in music, it was revealed that Diamond had been diagnosed with Parkinson’s Disease, ending his live career. Nevertheless, he remained active in the studio, returning with 2020′s Classic Diamonds.
Neil Leslie Diamond was born January 24, 1941 in Brooklyn, New York, the first of two sons born to Akeeba Diamond (known as Kieve), who operated and owned a series of dry goods stores in the New York City borough, and Rose (Rapoport) Diamond. Except for two years in the mid-’40s that the family spent in Wyoming while Akeeba Diamond served in the military, Diamond grew up in Brooklyn, albeit in different neighborhoods as his father moved from store to store; he later claimed to have attended nine different schools and to have suffered socially as a result. He showed an early interest in music and took up singing and playing the guitar after seeing Pete Seeger perform at a camp he was attending as a teenager. In June 1958, he graduated from Abraham Lincoln High School, and that fall he enrolled at New York University as a pre-med student after winning a fencing scholarship.
During this period, he spent much of his time writing songs and trying to place them at music publishing companies. He formed a duo with Jack Packer, a friend of his younger brother’s, and as Neil & Jack they signed a publishing contract with Allied Entertainment Corporation of America and a recording contract with its subsidiary, Duel Records. This resulted in the release of two singles, “You Are My Love”/“What Will I Do” in 1960 and “I’m Afraid”/“Til You’ve Tried Love” in 1961, Diamond’s first commercially released recordings. (In 1996, he reissued “What Will I Do” on his box set In My Lifetime.) The discs were not successful, and Neil & Jack broke up when Packer enrolled at the Manhattan School of Music in January 1961. Diamond, meanwhile, had stopped attending NYU in 1960, but in 1961 he enrolled in the university’s School of Commerce, where he maintained his student status until 1965. (Although many accounts of his life repeat the erroneous story that he dropped out of NYU in 1962 just short of earning an undergraduate degree, biographer Rich Wiseman learned the truth by consulting the university’s records.)
On his own, Diamond continued trying to break into the music business as a songwriter. In 1962, he briefly had a deal at Sunbeam Music, which published some of his songs, followed by a stint at Roosevelt Music. While he was there, an assignment came in from Dot Records to submit a follow-up to Pat Boone’s novelty hit “Speedy Gonzales.” Ten of the firm’s writers eventually collaborated on a song, appropriately called “Ten Lonely Guys,” which Boone recorded and which reached number 45 in the Billboard Hot 100 in October 1962. Diamond, one of the ten, was credited under the pseudonym Mark Lewis, but this was his first appearance in the charts. Also in 1962, his composition “Santa Santa” was recorded by the Rocky Fellers and released by Scepter Records. But his next career development involved his own performing. In early 1963, he was signed to a singles deal by Columbia Records, and on January 24, his 22nd birthday, he had his first solo recording session, followed by a second session three months later. The results emerged on July 2 as Columbia single 42809, “Clown Town”/“At Night,” his first solo release. Unfortunately, the record flopped, and he was dropped by the label.
Marrying schoolteacher Jay Posner (with whom he had two daughters), Diamond kept plugging away, even opening his own tiny office above the jazz club Birdland in midtown Manhattan. In early 1965, his song “Just Another Guy” was recorded in the U.K. by Cliff Richard and placed on the B-side of the number one single “The Minute You’re Gone,” released on the British Columbia label. In February 1965, he met the successful writers and producers Jeff Barry and Ellie Greenwich, who took an interest in him and got him signed to songwriter/producers Jerry Leiber and Mike Stoller’s Trio Music publishing company for three months. This association was over by the time Leiber and Stoller had one of their clients, Jay & the Americans, record “Sunday and Me,” a song Diamond had written at Trio. Released as a single in the fall of 1965, the song peaked at number 18 in December, giving him his first real hit as a songwriter.
By then he had made other progress in his career. On June 25, he signed a deal with Barry and Greenwich for publishing and recording, the three forming Tallyrand Music with Diamond as president. (This appears to have prompted his decision to drop out of NYU.) Tallyrand shopped both Diamond’s songs and Diamond as a recording artist, and on January 6, 1966, a contract was signed with WEB IV, the company controlling the independent Bang Records label. Soon after, Diamond was back in a recording studio, and on April 4, Bang released his label debut single “Solitary Man,” produced, as all his subsequent Bang discs would be, by Barry and Greenwich. “Solitary Man” gave him his first chart entry as a recording artist, peaking at number 55 on the Hot 100 in July.
Diamond quickly followed “Solitary Man” with his second Bang single, “Cherry, Cherry,” released in July 1966, which gave him his first substantial hit, peaking at number six in October. The single’s B-side, “I’ll Come Running,” was covered by Cliff Richard, who scored a Top 40 hit with it in 1967. When song publisher Don Kirshner heard “Cherry, Cherry,” he called Diamond into his office and asked if the songwriter had a similarly upbeat tune that could be used by the Monkees, a group put together for an upcoming TV series. Diamond played him “I’m a Believer,” a song intended for his debut album. Kirshner liked it, and Diamond, Barry, and Greenwich recorded a backing track that Kirshner took to California and had the Monkees sing over. By the time “I’m a Believer” was released as the Monkees’ second single in the fall of 1966, the group was a teeny-bopper phenomenon, and the LP had advance orders of over one million copies. It shot to number one, where it stayed seven weeks, becoming the biggest single of 1967.
Diamond’s debut LP, The Feel of Neil Diamond, released in August 1966, was a rush job, featuring “Cherry, Cherry” and “Solitary Man” along with his covers of hits like “La Bamba” and “Monday, Monday.” It barely charted. Also featured, however, was “I Got the Feelin’ (Oh No No),” an original composition that would be his next single in October. It reached number 16 in December, but the 45 was also significant for its Diamond-penned B-side, “The Boat That I Row.” British singer Lulu quickly covered the song, and her version became a Top Ten U.K. hit in the spring of 1967. Diamond’s fourth Bang single, “You Got to Me,” was released in December 1966 and peaked at number 18 in March 1967. In February, his song “Look Out (Here Comes Tomorrow)” was featured on the Monkees’ chart-topping second album, More of the Monkees. The following month, “A Little Bit Me, a Little Bit You,” the Diamond-penned follow-up to “I’m a Believer,” entered the singles chart for the Monkees; it peaked at number two in April.
Also in March, Bang released its fifth Diamond single, “Girl, You’ll Be a Woman Soon,” which became his second Top Ten hit in May. In April, Ronnie Dove entered the charts with “My Babe,” written and produced for him by Diamond; it peaked at number 50 in May. Bang’s sixth Diamond single, “Thank the Lord for the Night Time,” appeared in June, peaking at number 13 in August. That month also saw the release of Diamond’s second LP, Just for You, which peaked at number 80. Diamond’s sixth Bang single, “Kentucky Woman,” followed in September, and it reached number 22 in November, giving him his sixth consecutive Top 40 hit.
After nearly two years of hit recording and songwriting, Diamond had a falling out with his producers and his record label. As popular music turned more serious in the late ’60s, he became less satisfied writing simple pop songs, and, instead of “Kentucky Woman,” he proposed that his sixth Bang single be “Shilo,” an introspective ballad not about the Civil War battle but about an imaginary childhood friend that he had written and recorded. Bang, thinking the song less commercial than “Kentucky Woman,” used it as an LP track on Just for You instead, and Diamond, who was also dissatisfied with his royalties, found a loophole in his contract, which, it turned out, failed to bind him exclusively to WEB IV and Tallyrand. He therefore declared himself free to sign a recording contract with another company and soon lawsuits were flying.
On March 12, 1968, a judge denied WEB IV’s request for a temporary injunction preventing Diamond from signing to another record label while his contract dispute was making its way through the courts. It was a key decision; the lawsuits would continue for another nine years until Diamond settled them on February 18, 1977, when he purchased his Bang master recordings. But on March 18, 1968, he signed a five-year contract with Uni Records, a division of MCA. The first product of the deal was another introspective, autobiographical ballad, “Brooklyn Roads,” released in April. Diamond followed with the more uptempo “Two-Bit Manchild” that month, but neither that single nor its follow-up, “Sunday Sun,” which appeared in September, restored him to the Top 40, and Velvet Gloves and Spit, Diamond’s debut album for Uni, failed to chart. Meanwhile, there was more upheaval in his life. Now romantically involved with TV production assistant Marcia Kay Murphey, he left his wife and moved to California. Their divorce was final in November 1969 and he married Murphey a month later.
Professionally, Diamond tried to stem the tide of his career’s nadir by recording at American Sound Studio in Memphis, beginning on January 8, 1969. Working with producers Tommy Cogbill and Chips Moman, he took more of a gospel-tinged, country-rock approach, starting with the single “Brother Love’s Travelling Salvation Show,” quickly released as a single, which peaked at number 22 in April, his best chart showing in 18 months. He quickly returned to Memphis and cut an album also called Brother Love's Travelling Salvation Show that was released in April and peaked at number 82.
The song that finally sealed Diamond’s commercial comeback was his next single, “Sweet Caroline (Good Times Never Seemed So Good),” a catchy tune that peaked at number four in August, the same month it earned a gold record certification for sales of one million singles. Diamond followed “Sweet Caroline” with the gospel-tinged “Holly Holy,” released in October 1969, and scored another big hit, the track peaking at number six in December. It was his second gold (and eventually platinum) single, and the song earned a cover by Junior Walker & the All-Stars that made the R&B Top 40 in 1971. The Diamond recording was included on his fifth LP, Touching You Touching Me, released in November 1969; it was his most successful effort so far, peaking at number 30 and going gold in a little over a year.
Meanwhile, Diamond’s career resurgence was not going unnoticed at his former label, Bang Records, which hired American Sound Studio musicians to record a new musical track for “Shilo” under Diamond’s vocal. With a sound more like his contemporaneous records, the single reached number 24 in April 1970. Diamond responded by returning to Memphis himself and cutting a new recording of “Shilo,” which was added to later editions of Velvet Gloves and Spit. A more ambitious effort was “Soolaimón (African Trilogy II),” released in April, an excerpt from the side-long “folk ballet” of African-styled songs to be featured on his next album, Tap Root Manuscript, in the fall. The single reached number 30 in May. Diamond’s next new single, “Cracklin’ Rosie” (famously referring to the cheap wine Cracklin’ Rosé), appeared in July and became his biggest hit yet, topping the charts in October.
Also released in July 1970 was the live album Gold, which had been recorded in March at the Troubadour nightclub in Los Angeles. Another major commercial success, it peaked at number ten in September. As the result of “Cracklin’ Rosie” and Gold, Diamond had graduated to the theater and arena circuit as a live act by the fall of 1970. For his next single, he made the odd choice of releasing a cover of “He Ain’t Heavy, He’s My Brother,” a song that had been a Top Ten hit for the Hollies the previous spring. Competing with Bang’s release of the former B-side “Do It,” it still managed to peak at number 20 in December and, along with “Soolaimón” and “Cracklin’ Rosie,” served as a good calling card for Tap Root Manuscript, which appeared in November. Consistent with Diamond’s concurrent status, the album peaked at number 13.
Reportedly, Diamond worked months on the lyrics of his next single, the autobiographical “I Am…I Said,” released in March 1971. An impassioned statement of emotional turmoil, the song was very much in tune with the confessional singer/songwriter movement of the time, and it became a major hit, peaking at number four in May, with even its B-side, “Done Too Soon” (previously released on Tap Root Manuscript), earning a chart placing. “I Am…I Said” earned Diamond his first Grammy nomination, for Best Pop Vocal Performance, Male. He returned to the record racks in the fall with the ballad “Stones,” released in October, followed by an album of the same name in November. The single reached number 14, while the LP stopped just short of the Top Ten and went gold in two months.
Diamond’s next album, Moods, was prefaced by another of his standards. “Song Sung Blue,” released in April 1972, became his second number one hit on the Hot 100 in July and his fourth gold single, earning Grammy nominations for Record of the Year and Song of the Year. In August, Diamond performed ten shows at the Greek Theatre in Los Angeles, recording them for a live album. The double-LP set Hot August Night, which appeared in November, cemented his status as a concert attraction by hitting number five and going gold in a month. (It was later certified double platinum.) A single of “Cherry, Cherry” was excerpted from the release and made number 31.
Hot August Night marked Diamond’s ascension to superstar status, and it also marked the end of a phase of his career. After three weeks of shows at the Winter Garden on Broadway in October, he temporarily retired from live performing. At the same time, he had completed his recording contract, and he signed a lucrative deal with Columbia. His first project for the new label was a song score for the film version of the best-selling novel Jonathan Livingston Seagull. It was a troubled project, and by the time the movie was released in October 1973, both Diamond and Richard Bach, the book’s author, were suing the film producer. Reviews were awful, and the picture bombed. But Diamond’s score, released as a solo album, was a hit. The single “Be” only grazed the Top 40 but the LP reached number two in December. It also won Diamond the 1973 Grammy Award for Best Album of Original Score Written for a Motion Picture or TV Special.
Even after completing Jonathan Livingston Seagull, Diamond stayed off the road. He was next heard from in the fall of 1974, when he released his first regular album for Columbia, Serenade, prefaced by the single “Longfellow Serenade,” which was his biggest hit since “Song Sung Blue,” peaking at number five on the Hot 100 and number one on the AC chart in November. Serenade hit number three in December, another instant gold album that has since gone platinum.
Another year went by before Diamond finally returned to live work, doing a few shakedown shows in California and Utah in late January and early February 1976 before launching a tour of Australia and New Zealand, followed by more dates in the U.S. in the spring. Meanwhile, working with Malibu neighbor Robbie Robertson of the Band as his producer, he had finished a new album, Beautiful Noise, its songs reflecting back on his early-’60s days in Tin Pan Alley. Leadoff single “If You Know What I Mean,” issued in June, reached number 11 on the Hot 100, and the album, which followed a couple of weeks later, hit number four. On July 1, 1976, for a hefty fee, Diamond made his Las Vegas debut at the Aladdin Hotel, though he would avoid the entertainment mecca afterward until well into the ’90s. In September, he returned to the Greek Theatre in Los Angeles, this time with both cameras and recording equipment in tow. On November 25, 1976, he appeared as one of the special guests at the Band’s farewell concert at Winterland in San Francisco, performing the Beautiful Noise track “Dry Your Eyes,” which he had co-written with Robertson. The show was filmed and recorded for the 1978 movie and triple-LP set The Last Waltz.
Both of Diamond’s albums of 1977 were associated with television specials. First came Love at the Greek, like Hot August Night a two-LP concert set drawn from shows at the Greek Theatre. It appeared in February 1977, two weeks ahead of The Neil Diamond Special, broadcast February 21. The LP reached number eight in April, selling a million copies by July, with another million registered since then. Diamond undertook a lengthy tour of Europe in the spring and summer. In November, he was back with a new studio album, I'm Glad You're Here with Me Tonight, again tied into a TV special. The simultaneously released single “Desirée” went Top 20, while the album reached number six in February 1978, racking up the usual sales number of a million copies with another million to come.
One of the album tracks for I'm Glad You're Here with Me Tonight was a sad breakup ballad called “You Don’t Bring Me Flowers” that Diamond had written for a television pilot about reversed sex roles (hence the novelty of having a man complain about romantic neglect). Labelmate Barbra Streisand knew a big ballad when she heard one, especially one co-written by her personal lyricists, Alan and Marilyn Bergman, and she quickly covered the song, which appeared on her Songbird album in May 1978. A disc jockey, realizing that both Diamond’s and Streisand’s versions were in the same key, spliced them together, and began playing the duet he had created on the air, leading to requests for a record. On October 17, 1978, that desire was satisfied, as the two singers cut a new recording of the song. Credited to “Barbra & Neil,” the single was quickly released and soared to number one on the pop charts, eventually earning a platinum certification.
Diamond had been working on an album to be titled after a tune called “The American Popular Song,” written by his pianist, Tom Hensley; the LP was to be a collection of covers. The unexpected success of the duet upset those plans, however, and Diamond quickly cobbled together an album for release under the title You Don't Bring Me Flowers, which appeared in November. By the end of January, it peaked at number four, having been certified platinum, with a double-platinum award to follow. In February, Columbia released another single from it, the uptempo “Forever in Blue Jeans” (co-written by Richard Bennett), which reached the Top 20.
Diamond collaborated with French singer/songwriter Gilbert Bécaud on the title track of his next album, September Morn, released in December 1979. The single reached the Top 20 of the pop chart, and the album peaked at number ten in February 1980. Any thought that Diamond’s popularity might be cooling, however, was belied by his next project. With virtually no acting experience, he agreed to star in a second screen remake of The Jazz Singer. The response was very similar to what had greeted Jonathan Livingston Seagull seven years earlier, except that this time Diamond was actually in the picture. Upon release in December 1980, it was panned by critics and became a box office failure. But the Capitol soundtrack, consisting of a Diamond-written and performed song score, was a remarkable hit. “Love on the Rocks” (co-written with Bécaud) came out in advance of the LP, and it peaked at number two in January 1981. By February, the album was up to number three, having already sold a million copies. “Hello Again” (co-written by Alan Lindgren of Diamond’s band), the second single, reached number six in March, and the anthemic “America” peaked at number eight (number one AC) in June as the album kept selling. (Eventually, it was certified for sales of five million copies, making it Diamond’s most successful LP to date. It earned him another Grammy nomination in the category of Best Album of Original Score Written for a Motion Picture or TV Special.)
Diamond picked a good time to reach a career peak: his record contract was up for renewal, and he re-signed to Columbia in October 1981 committing himself to ten more albums for a guaranteed $30 million dollars. It was (briefly) the most lucrative record contract in history. At the same time, of course, he had a new Columbia album ready, On the Way to the Sky, promoted by the single “Yesterday’s Songs,” which topped the AC chart and reached number 11 in the pop chart. The album, however, became his first in a decade to miss the Top Ten, peaking at number 17. The title track, co-written with Carole Bayer Sager, failed to chart as a 45, but a third single, “Be Mine Tonight,” made the Top 40. Having worked with Bayer Sager, Diamond now turned to collaborating with both her and her then-husband Burt Bacharach, a fellow graduate of the Brill Building era, on his next album Heartlight. The title song, written by the three and inspired by the release of E.T.: The Extra-Terrestrial, emerged in August 1982 as a single that hit number one in the AC chart and returned Diamond to the pop Top Ten, peaking at number five in November.
Diamond was relatively inactive on the performing front in 1983, though he did undertake a week-long series of shows at the Forum in Los Angeles in June, his first L.A. shows in six years. He was, of course, writing, again collaborating with Bacharach and Bayer Sager, and recording. On February 6, 1984, he submitted a new album to Columbia. The label asked him to make changes but, citing the artistic control mandated in his contract, he sued to have the LP released as it was. In April, however, he withdrew his suit and revised the disc per the record company’s requirements. After completing the new version, he accepted a $500,000 fee for performing three shows at Harrah’s Trump Plaza in Atlantic City, New Jersey in June, then undertook a European and American tour. Columbia released the new album, Primitive, in July, along with the first single “Turn Around” (co-written by Diamond, Bacharach, and Bayer Sager). Notwithstanding the label’s attempt to enhance the commerciality of the disc, it was a disappointing seller. “Turn Around” lodged in the AC Top Ten, but missed the pop Top 40, and Primitive peaked at number 35 and only went gold, the worst showing for a new Neil Diamond album since 1969.
He reacted by working up what was intended to be one of his most personal albums, as indicated by its proposed title, The Story of My Life. He submitted the collection to Columbia in September 1985, and for the second time in a row he had an album rejected by the label. This time, he did not protest publicly. Instead, he accepted Columbia’s suggestions that he try to take a more contemporary approach by, for example, working with Maurice White of Earth, Wind & Fire, recording a song written by concurrently popular rocker Bryan Adams, and using such guest stars as Stevie Wonder (who also co-wrote a song). Eventually, every song on the album except the former’s title track, “The Story of My Life,” was replaced. To further promote the upcoming release, now titled Headed for the Future, in January 1986 Diamond taped a new television special, Hello Again, for CBS, then the parent company of Columbia. The special was broadcast May 25, two-and-a-half weeks after the release of Headed for the Future, which itself had been prefaced by the release of the title song (written by Diamond, Hensley, and Lindgren) as a single in late April. The effort to modernize Diamond’s sound succeeded only slightly. The album peaked at number 20, an improvement over Primitive, but like its predecessor, it only went gold. The single missed the Top 40, and a second single, “The Story of My Life,” got to only number 11 AC.
But if his record sales were disappointing, Diamond’s concert tours remained SRO. An eight-night stand at Madison Square Garden in New York was followed by 14 shows back at the Greek Theatre in August, commemorated by Columbia with another double-LP live album, Hot August Night II, released in October 1987. The album, however, peaked at a disappointing number 59 and didn’t even go gold at first (though it has since gone platinum). (Appended was a studio recording of “I Dreamed a Dream” from the musical Les Misérables, which got to number 13 on the AC chart.)
Diamond’s main collaborator for his next studio album, The Best Years of Our Lives, was David Foster, who produced it and co-wrote several of the tracks. Released in December 1988 to coincide with an HBO special, the album peaked at number 46 and went gold, with three of its tracks making the AC chart. Much the same response greeted Diamond’s next studio album, Lovescape, produced by Peter Asher (the famed producer of James Taylor and Linda Ronstadt, who began to work with Diamond regularly), when it appeared in August 1991. It peaked at number 44 and spawned three AC chart entries, while taking almost three years to go gold. Meanwhile, however, Diamond remained a major force on the concert circuit, taking his Love in the Round tour around the country and the world. In 1992, for example, he was said to be the second-highest grossing American concert act of the year. In September 1992, he released his first seasonal collection, The Christmas Album, and promoted it with Neil Diamond’s Christmas Special on HBO.
In January 1993, he again re-signed to Columbia for an additional six albums. The first of these, released in September, was Up on the Roof: Songs from the Brill Building, his treatments of early-’60s evergreens like the title song and “You’ve Lost That Lovin’ Feelin’.” It hit number 28 and went gold. Meanwhile, the singer continued to tour extensively, his grosses for the year exceeded only by U2. That success was reflected by yet another chart-bound concert recording, Live in America, a double CD issued in June 1994. The fall brought The Christmas Album, Vol. 2, only two years after its successful predecessor. Also in the fall of 1994, Diamond participated in the Frank Sinatra album Duets II, singing “The House I Live In” with the venerable star.
During 1995, Diamond finally got to work on an album of newly written material, but there was a twist. The man whose songs had sometimes been turned into country hits went to Nashville and held songwriting sessions with country writers, also recording with country stars. The result was Tennessee Moon, released in February 1996, along with a TV special, Under a Tennessee Moon, broadcast on ABC. The album peaked at number three in the country charts and number 14 in the pop charts and went gold. Diamond continued to make events out of his album releases. In October 1998, he issued The Movie Album: As Time Goes By, a two-disc collection of covers of movie songs like “Moon River” and “Unchained Melody.” It reached number 31 and went gold, earning a Grammy nomination for Best Traditional Pop Vocal Performance. As usual, Diamond embarked on a world tour to support it. And as usual, his fans came out. Even during a decade when he’d retreated from the front line of recording artists, the singer’s live following, if anything, increased. He was named the top solo concert artist of the ’90s by Amusement Business magazine.
In 2001, Diamond finally wrote and recorded a new studio album, Three Chord Opera, released in July. In fact, he did all the writing entirely by himself, the first time he hadn’t collaborated with anyone since Serenade in 1974. In 2004, he began working with renowned producer Rick Rubin, a longtime fan who had produced Johnny Cash’s ’90s comeback albums. The resulting album, 12 Songs, was issued in late 2005 to a chorus of positive reviews. An intimate, largely acoustic set, it entered the chart at number four, Diamond’s highest chart placing in 25 years. The following year he made another movie cameo, singing “Hava Nagilah” in the comedy Keeping Up with the Steins. Reuniting in 2008 with Rubin, Diamond’s next album, Home Before Dark, was a similarly stripped-down affair and featured a duet with Chicks member Natalie Maines. A holiday release, A Cherry Cherry Christmas, appeared in 2009, and in 2010 Diamond released Dreams, a covers collection featuring songs by some of his favorite songwriters of the rock and soul era.
In 2011 he was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame at a ceremony in New York City, and by the end of summer 2012 his legacy had been further cemented with a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame. Prestigious television appearances ensued in the form of a headline slot on December 2012′s centenary edition of the U.K.’s Royal Variety Performance, before Independence Day 2013 found Diamond on a bill at the U.S. Capitol’s A Capitol Fourth concert. After a 40-year relationship with Columbia, it Diamond signed a recording contract with Capitol. This resulted in the whole of his catalog — incorporating his MCA, Columbia, and Bang material — being assembled under the umbrella of Universal Music Group, Capitol’s owners. Even bigger news was the announcement of Melody Road, his first album for Capitol. Produced by Don Was and Jacknife Lee, it appeared in October 2014 and debuted at three on Billboard’s Top 200. Diamond reunited with the pair of Was and Lee for 2016′s holiday-themed Acoustic Christmas. Early in 2017, Diamond celebrated the 50th anniversary of his first hit by releasing the triple-disc compilation 50 and launching a massive world tour. Latter portions of this same tour were cancelled after Diamond revealed in January 2018 that he had been diagnosed with Parkinson’s Disease and would be retiring from live performing. Digging into the vault, he released Hot August Night III, a 2012 concert captured at Los Angeles’ Greek Theatre, later that year. Although no longer performing live, Diamond returned to the studio for 2020′s Classic Diamonds, which saw him reinterpreting songs from his catalog backed by the London Symphony Orchestra. ~ William Ruhlmann