Neil Diamond – I Got The Feelin’ (Oh No, No)
“I Got the Feelin’ (Oh No No)” is Neil Diamond’s early warning siren—when your heart senses trouble before your pride can invent a happier story, and all you can do…
“I Got the Feelin’ (Oh No No)” is Neil Diamond’s early warning siren—when your heart senses trouble before your pride can invent a happier story, and all you can do…
“Walk On Water” is Neil Diamond turning doubt into momentum—starting in a whisper, then rising like a gospel-tinted surge of courage, as if faith itself has to be sung into…
A Sunlit Dream Beneath the Rain—Innocence Was Never So Melodic When The Cowsills released “The Rain, The Park & Other Things” in 1967, the song quickly became an emblem of…
“Crunchy Granola Suite” is Neil Diamond turning California’s new “health-and-harmony” craze into a joyful little sermon—half wink, half revelation—about finding peace in the middle of modern noise. Released in 1971…
“Hell Yeah” is Neil Diamond answering time itself with a grin and a scar—an unvarnished declaration that even after the losses, the doubts, and the long miles, he still chooses…
“Morningside” is Neil Diamond’s small, solemn elegy about what we leave behind—how a life can end in silence, yet still speak through the work of one’s hands and the memory…
“Yesterday’s Songs” is Neil Diamond holding up a mirror to memory—showing how the music we once loved keeps loving us back, long after the room has changed. Released in November…
“And the Grass Won’t Pay No Mind” is Neil Diamond at his most tender and almost spiritual—an invitation to step out of the noisy world and into a private, sunlit…
“Mr. Bojangles” becomes, in Neil Diamond’s reading, a small lantern in a dark room—an ode to dignity that survives poverty, loss, and the long night of forgetting. If you’re looking…
“Stones” turns heartache into something you can hold—heavy, quiet, and strangely beautiful. When Neil Diamond released “Stones” as a single (backed with “Crunchy Granola Suite”) in late 1971, it arrived…