Neil Diamond – Brooklyn Roads
“Brooklyn Roads” is a homecoming you can’t actually go back to—an adult voice walking old streets in the mind, learning that memory can be both shelter and bruise. Neil Diamond…
“Brooklyn Roads” is a homecoming you can’t actually go back to—an adult voice walking old streets in the mind, learning that memory can be both shelter and bruise. Neil Diamond…
“If You Know What I Mean” is a song about the hush between two people who once shared everything—where the past returns in flashes of music, smoke, and half-spoken memories…
“Thank the Lord for the Night Time” turns dusk into a doorway—where the day’s weight falls away, and desire, music, and second winds finally get their say. The essential facts…
“Heartlight” is Neil Diamond turning wonder into a vow—a soft beam of hope held up against the dark, insisting that tenderness can still guide us home. Released as a single…
Long before reggae made it famous, “Red, Red Wine” was Neil Diamond at his most quietly desolate — a small, sorrowful song in which heartbreak did not cry out for…
“You Don’t Bring Me Flowers” endures because it turns the smallest signs of love — flowers, songs, conversation — into evidence of a heartbreak far larger: the slow fading of…
On “If You Go Away,” Neil Diamond did not try to overpower sorrow — he walked straight into it, and sang with the weary dignity of a man who already…
“Soolaimon” is Neil Diamond in one of his most adventurous moods—a song where rhythm, ritual, yearning, and spiritual openness come together until the music feels less like pop than a…
“Delirious Love” is Neil Diamond in late bloom—passionate, slightly unruly, and gloriously unashamed, a song where desire returns not as youthful fantasy but as a full-hearted, hard-earned burst of feeling.…
“Brother Love’s Travelling Salvation Show” is Neil Diamond at his most theatrical and fevered—a revival-tent sermon turned pop spectacle, where religion, longing, showmanship, and American hunger all meet under one…