WE DO THE MASHED POTATO AND THE FUNKY CHICKEN

Neil Diamond

Home Before Dark

  • AMG Review of Home Before Dark

    Amg
    Thom Jurek
    All Music Guide

    Home Before Dark is Neil Diamond's second collaboration with producer Rick Rubin. It follows the fine but ill-fated 12 Songs, which was sabotaged by Sony's "Rootkit" program scandal: a nefarious bit of "copy protection" software that invaded the operating system of PCs and wreaked havoc. 12 Songs had to be recalled from store shelves just as Diamond received better reviews than he had in a decade. Sony reissued it in 2007, but the damage was done. Diamond, disappointed but undaunted, sought out Rubin. Rubin enlisted Heartbreakers keyboardist Benmont Tench and lead guitarist Mike Campbell, studio guitarist/bassist Smokey Hormel, and former Chavez guitar slinger Matt Sweeney. There are no drums. David Campbell did some skeletal string arrangements, but that's it. In addition, Natalie Maines of the Dixie Chicks duets on the track "Another Day (That Time Forgot)." Home Before Dark is a more exposed Diamond than listeners have ever heard. He's out there, bashing on his guitar and singing from a position of extreme vulnerability; he's on a wire without a net. His musicians understand what is so dynamically and poetically evident in the songs, and use painterly care in adorning them. Diamond is not a young man anymore and, thankfully, he doesn't write like one -- though he sounds lean and hungry for something just out of reach. "Forgotten" has a rock & roll progression worthy of his Bang singles. Its lyric reflects the travails of a protagonist whose heart bears hurt without the grace and wisdom that age is supposed to bring. The grain in his voice is fierce; it quavers just a bit in the refrain, and Sweeney's electric guitar nails it to the wall. It follows "One More Bite of the Apple," another rollicking rocker, but this one is about reuniting with his true beloved -- songwriting itself.

    Home Before Dark contains some beautiful love songs, too. "If I Don't See You Again," the album's opener, reflects the bittersweet aftertaste of lost love. It's classic Diamond. His character converses with a reflection, a ghost. The gorgeously crafted instrumental bridge and the sense of loneliness in the protagonist's voice combine seamlessly. The album's first single is "Pretty Amazing Grace." Diamond sings a prayer of gratitude for rescue and restoration, whether to Divine Providence, his lover, or both; we don't know. His infectious, haunting melody is jarring, played in minor chords by fingerpicked steel-string guitars and anchored by a standup bass. Tench's piano adds tension just before the refrain where the guitars get punchy flamenco-style and break it wide open. Strings decorate the backdrop, as the lyric juxtaposes the present against the past, not as contrast but as progression. The duet with Maines, "Another Day (That Time Forgot)," has shadowy traces of the gentle but brooding intensity of the intro to "Holly Holy" in the chord progression. It's a joint confession between lovers who are lost to one another; the tragedy is they have no idea how they grew apart. Tench's piano improv fills the space between verses; he underscores the melancholy gorgeously. "The Power of Two," with multi-tracked, entwining acoustic guitar lines by Campbell, is an artful framework for one of Diamond's protagonists to realize that he finally has the ability and courage to embrace another fully, and to allow himself to become a part of love instead of remaining apart from it. Home Before Dark is a less "civilized" album than anything Diamond's done before. It is a stark and moving portrait of what an accepted artist found when he reached all the way down to face his fear, doubt, and knowledge, and brought the discovery into his work. Diamond proves not only that can he still write great songs, but also that he can deliver them with toughness and grit as an expression of real beauty.

The Ladies Still Love Neil Diamond
about 1 year ago
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Neil Diamond debuted for the first time ever on the Billboard Top 200 this week. Diamond’s Rick Rubin produced album Home Before Dark sold 146,000 copies its first week, nudging Madonna’s Hard Candy down two spots to Number Three.The crazy thing is that the last time Diamond came close to Number One spot was in 1973 with the soundtrack to Jonathan Livingston Seagull, when it topped at Number T

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New Neil Diamond
about 1 year ago

Home Before Darkto the safety to the wombwhere we keep the world at bayin the quiet of our roomwhere we find once more the sparkIn the light, out of the dark

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New Neil Diamond
about 1 year ago

But with each birth, the inevitable death.The realization of our own mortality, it's evidence in every mirror, in every reflection...If I Don't See You AgainWhat is it about the human spirit that needs closure?If I Don't See You AgainAt some unseen barrier, the hope that springs eternal gives way to the resignation or reality.Just don't go quietly

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New Neil Diamond
about 1 year ago
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Ah yes, one more bite of the apple.Once you have tasted the fruit that is the joy of creation, it's sweet nectar is never far from your mind.This creative process is not something you turn off, not something to be ignored or swept under a rug and forgotten.It is how you express yourself, how you lay bare your soul and stand naked before the world.It is how you laugh and how you cry.It is youBut...

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Neil Diamond is back!
about 1 year ago

Neil Diamond has a new album out, Home Before Dark, and it's great to hear the legend at it again. I've only had a chance to listen to the album once or twice so far, but the first track, If I Don't See You Again, is my favorite so far.

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Neil Diamond & Rick Rubin to Return to the Studio
about 1 year ago

Neil Diamond and Rick Rubin are about to take their musical relationship for a third spin, returning to the studio to record the follow-up to their two critically acclaimed albums, 12 Songs and Home Before Dark . Diamond tells Billboard that the two will be meeting on January 12 to discuss the next steps. "I told (Rubin) I want to start writing on the 12th. He said, 'Why don't you not star...

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