Neil Diamond Song Lyrics Hello Again

Neil Diamond's 10 greatest songs, ranked

one July 2020, 17:14 | Updated: 26 Nov 2020, 12:58

Neil Diamond
Neil Diamond. Picture: Getty

Veteran vocalist-songwriter Neil Diamond has a career spanning over fifty years and over 100 1000000 albums sold, which is frankly amazing.

To celebrate his stellar career, we've picked out just a handful of Neil's best ever songs. Is yours in in that location?

  1. Beloved on the Rocks

    Almost 30 years after he started, and Neil Diamond was nonetheless scoring hits.

    This song from the film The Jazz Singer climbed to number 2 in the U.s. charts, and was after covered by Gladys Knight amidst others.

  2. Cracklin' Rosie

    This rocking tune helped Neil to break through in the United kingdom of great britain and northern ireland, where it charted at number 3, his highest position to that bespeak.

    Oh, and "who's Cracklin' Rosie?", you ask - it's actually a type of wine. Neil heard a story about a native Canadian tribe while doing an interview in Toronto, in Canada.

    The tribe had more than men than women, and so the lonely men would sit down around the fire and drink wine together, inspiring him to write the song.

  3. Daughter, You'll Be a Woman Presently

    This intense, yearning song had some success when it offset came out in 1967, but when a cover by Urge Overkill was featured in Quentin Tarantino'south Pulp Fiction in 1994, information technology enjoyed a much deserved 2d wind.

    It has also been covered by Cliff Richard among others.

  4. Yous Don't Bring Me Flowers (with Barbra Streisand)

    This duet is most two lovers who have drifted apart over time, while they "go through the motions" and heartache of life together.

    Information technology was intended as theme tune for the curt-lived TV show All That Glitters, and was afterward recorded as ii split solo versions past Neil and Barbara.

    After an early form of 'mashup' featuring the ii versions gained popularity, an official duet was recorded by the pair, and it became a huge hit.

  5. Hello Again

    'Hello Again' featured in the 1980 movie, The Jazz Singer.

    It performed well in the Usa, just not so much in the UK Singles Chart - reaching just number 51.

    A beautiful ballad with those gorgeous soaring strings, it has since been covered by several artists and orchestras, including Celtic Thunder, Donny Osmond and Steve Cherelle.

  6. Delirious Honey

    Neil Diamond began work on i of his most acclaimed albums when temporarily snowed in his Colorado cabin.

    Produced by Rick Rubin, the album featured many of the same musicians he had used for Johnny Greenbacks's American releases. The sessions were also the last always performances by Billy Preston.

    This song nigh the euphoria of falling in love was featured in an episode of Scrubs in 2006.

  7. Play Me

    This acoustic ballad became a must-play song during his alive shows to this date, with i critic noting that information technology has a "bizarre aphrodisiac consequence" on sure audience members.

    However, certain academics weren't fond of his employ of the English on the line: "Song she sang to me, song she brang to me".

  8. I Am... I Said

    The tricky, perky melody gets you every time, and information technology compliments the very personal lyrics beautifully, which Neil says leave him struggling to gather himself after singing live.

    Neil later told Mojo: "It was consciously an attempt on my office to limited what my dreams were well-nigh, what my aspirations were about and what I was about. And without whatever question, it came from my sessions with the analyst."

  9. Forever in Blue Jeans

    This uptempo pop archetype had a resounding result in the sales of jeans in the late 1970s.

    According to Cotton fiber Incorporated: "Neil Diamond might have been correct when he named his 1979 #1 striking 'Forever in Blueish Jeans': 81% of women are planning their next jeans buy to be some shade of bluish."

  10. Sugariness Caroline

    Read more: The Story of... 'Sweet Caroline' by Neil Diamond

    Neil wrote this archetype, soaring ballad for his wife Marsha, but her name didn't have enough syllables for him so he used the name Caroline instead.

    'Sweet Caroline' reached number iv on the Billboard nautical chart and eventually went platinum for sales of ane million singles.

    In 2007, Neil revealed that the inspiration for his song was John F Kennedy's daughter, Caroline, who was 11 years old at the time it was released. He later on sang the song to her at her 50th birthday celebration in 2007.

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Source: https://www.smoothradio.com/artists/neil-diamond/best-songs-ever/

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