NEIL DIAMOND : THE VERY BEST OF NEIL DIAMOND - THE ORIGINAL RECORDINGS

  1. Forever in Blue Jeans
  2. Beautiful Noise
  3. Love on the Rocks
  4. Cherry, Cherry
  5. I Am...I Said
  6. Sweet Caroline
  7. Cracklin' Rosie
  8. Play Me
  9. I'm a Believer
  10. Girl, You'll Be a Woman Soon
  11. Holly Holy
  12. Solitary Man
  13. Song Sung Blue
  14. You Don't Bring Me Flowers (feat. Barbra Streisand)
  15. Hello Again
  16. Red, Red Wine
  17. If You Know What I Mean
  18. Brother Love's Traveling Salvation Show
  19. Pretty Amazing Grace
  20. Kentucky Woman
  21. Shilo
  22. America
  23. Hell Yeah

Label : Sony Music

Release Year : 2011

Length : 78:35

Review (AllMusic) : Neil Diamond's five-decade career as a singer, songwriter, and performer has certainly been a successful one by any standard. He's sold well over 115 million records worldwide to date and has had eight number one singles ("Cracklin Rosie," "Song Sung Blue," "Desiree," "You Don't Bring Me Flowers," "Love on the Rocks," "America," "Yesterday's Songs," and "Heartlight"), and if he hasn't always generated the kind of critical respect he probably deserves, he's been a steady and dependable artist who has managed to keep his large core audience happy. This 23-track set surveys the whole of Diamond's recording career, collecting his key and signature sides, beginning with his first hits for Bang Records in the mid-'60s through his commercial peak for Uni/MCA between 1968 and 1972, cuts from 1980's The Jazz Singer (a soundtrack album that went platinum five times over on Capitol Records), and ending with tracks from Diamond's two Rick Rubin-produced albums, 2005's 12 Songs and 2008's Home Before Dark, on Columbia Records. Amazingly, this is the first multi-label single-disc collection of Diamond's signature songs like "Forever in Blue Jeans," "Cherry, Cherry," "I Am...I Said," "Sweet Caroline," "Cracklin' Rosie," "I'm a Believer," "Holly Holy," "Solitary Man," "Song Sung Blue," "Kentucky Woman," "Brother Love's Traveling Salvation Show," his hit duet with Barbra Streisand "You Don't Bring Me Flowers," and many others. The end result is the perfect career-spanning single-disc introduction to this iconic singer and songwriter.