Neil Diamond has been a pop music star since the
mid-1960s, writing and singing hit songs such as "Kentucky
Woman" (1967), "Song Sung Blue" (1974) and "Love on the Rocks"
(1980). A hired-gun songwriter in the early 1960s, he wrote the
Monkees' 1967
hit "I'm a Believer" around the time he began his own recording
career. On the strength of a string of hits, Diamond became one
of the best selling performers of the 1970s. His devoted fan
base carried him through the 1980s and in the 1990s he was
rediscovered by a new generation of retro-loving pop fans. He
has released several albums of live performances and many
collections of his greatest hits, and composed soundtracks for
the movies, includingJonathan Livingston Seagull (1973)
and The Jazz Singer (1980, with Diamond also starring in
film),. His 2005 album 12 Songs was hailed as a return
to his early days of songwriting and was the basis for one of
the top grossing tours of the year. He followed up with 2008's
Home Before Dark -- his first album to debut at the top
of Billboard's charts. Diamond's other songs include: "Cherry,
Cherry" (1966); "Girl, You'll Be A Woman Soon" (1967); "Red,
Red Wine" (1968); "Sweet Caroline" (1969); "Cracklin' Rosie"
(1970); "You Don't Bring Me Flowers" (1978, a duet with
Barbra
Streisand); and "America" (1981).
Extra credit: Diamond songs that were hits for others
include "Red, Red Wine" by the U.K. group UB40, and "Girl,
You'll Be A Woman Soon" by Urge Overkill (from the Quentin
Tarantino film Pulp Fiction)... Diamond announced in
2007 that a childhood photo of Caroline
Kennedy inspired him to write the hit tune "Sweet
Caroline."