You Don't Bring Me FlowersNeil Diamond
Release Date: 06/25/2008
Original Release:
1978
# of Discs:
1
J&R Item # 1051786_CD
UPC # 886972484228
Label: Columbia (USA)
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Disc: 1
1.
American Popular Song, The
2.
Forever in Blue Jeans
3.
Remember Me
4.
You've Got Your Troubles
5.
You Don't Bring Me Flowers - (with Barbra Streisand)
6.
Dancing Bumble Bee / Bumble Boogie
7.
Mothers and Daughters, Fathers and Sons
8.
Memphis Flyer
9.
Say Maybe
10.
Diamond Girls
Performer: Neil Diamond
Artist: Barbra Streisand Engineer: Rick Ruggieri; Ron Hitchcock Producer: Bob Gaudio Distributor: Sony Music Entertainment Notes: Personnel includes: Neil Diamond, Linda Press, Barbra Streisand (vocals); Richard Bennett, Doug Rhone (guitar); Tom Hensley (piano, keyboards); Alan Lindgren (piano, synthesizer); Reinie Press (bass); Dennis St. John (drums); Vince Charles, King Errisson (percussion); Maxine Willard Waters, Julia Tillman Waters (background vocals). Containing one hit single in the nostalgic "Forever in Blue Jeans," one characteristic opus in the panoramic "American Popular Song," and one bona fide classic in its title track, a duet with Barbra Streisand, YOU DON'T BRING ME FLOWERS is a classic collection of solid mid-1970s Neil Diamond songwriting, notwithstanding that on many of the cuts Diamond appears to have been hit with the disco stick. There's even a real oddity in the "Dancing Bumble Bee/Bumble Boogie," a bizarre disco take on Rimsky-Korsakov's "Flight of the Bumble Bee," and a similar version of the Fortunes' '60s hit "You've Got Your Troubles, I've Got Mine." But it's the singer's duet with Streisand that steals the show here, a timeless piece of '70s pop balladry that's still capable of jerking a tear decades later.
With a career as a hitmaker stretching across the decades, Neil Diamond has purveyed catchy, three-chord pop/rock, progressive singer/songwriter material, middle-of-the-road balladry, and even traditional country. He started out as a Brill Building hitmaker; a songwriter for hire, he worked alongside the likes of Carole King and Gerry Goffin, and penned hits for the Monkees and Jay & the Americans. His solo career took off in the mid 1960s and made him one of America's most successful recording artists and concert attractions for a long time to come. Even decades down the road, younger groups such as UB40 in the '80s, Urge Overkill in the '90s, and Smash Mouth in the 2000's were still scoring hits with Diamond's evergreen compositions.
Also Appears On:
Similar Artist:
, Meat Loaf Barry, Jeff Bee Gees (The) Boyce & Hart Carpenters (The) Cross, Christopher Dion, Celine Four Seasons (The) Goffin, Gerry Greenwich, Ellie Groban, Josh Hill, Dan Humperdinck, Engelbert (Pop) Isaak, Chris Jay & The Americans Joel, Billy Jones, Tom King, Carole Manchester, Melissa Manilow, Barry Mann, Barry Rivers, Johnny (Pop) Sayer, Leo Sedaka, Neil Streisand, Barbra Tenacious D Urge Overkill Vannelli, Gino
Influences:
Bacharach, Burt Bennett, Tony Darin, Bobby Dion Dylan, Bob Fuller, Bobby Holly, Buddy Presley, Elvis Simon & Garfunkel Williams, Hank
Similar Genres:
Contemp. Pop Vocals |