Neil Diamond – Jingle Bell Rock
A Diamond’s Gleam Beneath the Tinsel: When Tradition Meets the Golden Voice of Pop Storytelling When Neil Diamond released his rendition of “Jingle Bell Rock” on his 1992 holiday collection,…
A Diamond’s Gleam Beneath the Tinsel: When Tradition Meets the Golden Voice of Pop Storytelling When Neil Diamond released his rendition of “Jingle Bell Rock” on his 1992 holiday collection,…
“Save Me a Saturday Night” is a gentle, late-hour promise—love asked for not with fireworks, but with the quiet urgency of someone who knows how quickly a week can swallow…
“Be” is a quiet hymn to becoming yourself—an ascent through doubt and gravity, until the spirit finally remembers it was meant to fly. In October 1973, Neil Diamond released “Be”…
“Oh Mary” is a late-night confession—Neil Diamond singing into the silence until a name becomes a prayer, and longing becomes the only honest language left. “Oh Mary” opens Neil Diamond’s…
“Desirée” is Neil Diamond’s bittersweet memory of first awakening—where desire feels like sunlight, and regret arrives the morning after, when the room is already empty. Some songs don’t unfold like…
“Done Too Soon” is Neil Diamond staring straight at mortality—turning history into a roll call, and turning a pop record into a quietly haunting reminder that time never negotiates. When…
“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…
“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…