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"Sweet Caroline" is a song written and performed by American singer Neil Diamond and released in May 1969 as a single with the title "Sweet Caroline (Good Times Never Seemed So Good)". It was arranged by Charles Calello , [ 2 ] and recorded at American Sound Studio in Memphis, Tennessee .
Brother Love's Travelling Salvation Show is the fourth studio album by American singer-songwriter Neil Diamond, released in 1969.Four months after the title cut became a #22 hit, Diamond recorded and released a new single, "Sweet Caroline", which reached #4.
Moods is the eighth studio album by Neil Diamond, released by Uni Records in 1972. [2] It contained the second of his No.1 songs, "Song Sung Blue", and was something of a follow-up in style to the highly experimental Tap Root Manuscript.
Mexican singer Roberto Jordán recorded a Spanish language version of the song, titled "Rosa marchita" (Which Means "Withered rose"). The lyrics of this version depart from the original Neil Diamond lyrics, instead telling a story about a lost love. This version topped the charts in Mexico in 1971. [25]
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Sweet Caroline" is a 1969 song by Neil Diamond. Sweet Caroline may also refer to: "Sweet Caroline" (Prison Break), 2007 "Sweet Caroline", a song from a re-release of the 1969 album Ahead Rings Out by Blodwyn Pig "Sweet Caroline", a song from The Gap Band's 1980 eponymous album The Gap Band III
The single version is an edit of the album version and runs 4:04. Cash Box said that it has a "heavy dance beat and a splendid instrumental burst". [10] A remastered version appears on the two-CD 30th anniversary album 30: Very Best of Deep Purple and runs 4:43. [11] Both those versions end on a fadeout.
A live version was released on Diamond's The Greatest Hits (1966–92), but the 1968 single version has never been issued on a vinyl album or CD. However, according to the liner notes in the booklet included in the 1996 box set In My Lifetime , the version of "Red Red Wine" erroneously indicates it is “from Bang single 556” but it is really ...