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This is the discography of American singer-songwriter Neil Diamond. He has sold more than 130 million records worldwide, making him one of the best-selling music artists in history . [ 1 ] [ 2 ] Billboard ranked him as the 25th greatest artist of all time. [ 3 ]
Play Me: The Complete Uni Studio Recordings...Plus! is a box set of Neil Diamond's recordings for Uni Records. This anthology contains all of the tracks from: Velvet Gloves and Spit (1968) Brother Love's Travelling Salvation Show (1969) Touching You, Touching Me (1969) Tap Root Manuscript (1970) Stones (1971) Moods (1972)
It should only contain pages that are Neil Diamond songs or lists of Neil Diamond songs, as well as subcategories containing those things (themselves set categories). Topics about Neil Diamond songs in general should be placed in relevant topic categories .
12 Songs is the twenty-sixth studio album by Neil Diamond, released in 2005. It was his first studio album since 2001's Three Chord Opera. It was produced by Rick Rubin. The working title for the album was self-titled. The original pressing of the album was copy-protected using Sony's controversial XCP technology. [7]
The Jazz Singer is an album by Neil Diamond from 1980, which served as the soundtrack album to the 1980 remake of the film The Jazz Singer.The soundtrack was released in November 1980 originally on Capitol Records, instead of his then-usual Columbia Records, because the film was produced by EMI Films, owned by the parent company of the label for which the soundtrack was released.
As the title suggests, it contains twelve songs from Neil's catalogue. The album contains songs from his tenure with Uni Records , from 1968 to 1972. After Neil had returned to Columbia Records , his earlier works were reissued on MCA Records, which was the parent company of Uni Records which had folded in the early 1970s.
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. The album entered Billboard on July 15, where it reached No. 5 in early September. [3]
The Greatest Hits: 1966–1992 is a compilation album by Neil Diamond released in 1992. Songs from his years with Uni/MCA (1968–1972) are represented by live or studio re-recordings as noted below because MCA Records refused to license the masters to Columbia Records, something that would cause controversy.