Disco de Neil Diamond: «Play Me: The Complete Uni Studio Recordings...Plus!»

- Valoración de usuarios: (4.1 de 5)
- Título:Play Me: The Complete Uni Studio Recordings...Plus!
- Fecha de publicación:2002-03-26
- Tipo:Audio CD
- Sello discográfico:Mca
- UPC:008811282424
- Media (4.1 de 5)(17 votos)
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- 1 - 1 Two-Bit Manchild3:05
- 1 - 2A Modern Day Version Of Love
- 1 - 3Honey-Drippin' Times
- 1 - 4The Pot Smoker's Song
- 1 - 5 Brooklyn Roadsimg 3:41
- 1 - 6 Shiloimg 3:50
- 1 - 7 Sunday Sunimg 2:49
- 1 - 8Holiday Inn Blues
- 1 - 9Practically Newborn
- 1 - 10Knackelflerg
- 1 - 11Merry-Go-Round
- 1 - 12Broad Old Woman (6 A.M. Insanity)
- 1 - 13 Brother Love's Travelling Salvation Showimg 3:27
- 1 - 14Dig In
- 1 - 15River Runs, New Grown Plums
- 1 - 16 Julietimg 2:56
- 1 - 17 Long Goneimg 2:48
- 1 - 18 And The Grass Won't Pay No Mindimg 3:43
- 1 - 19 Glory Roadimg 3:23
- 1 - 20Deep In The Morning
- 1 - 21 If I Never Knew Your Nameimg 3:20
- 1 - 22 Memphis Streets2:38
- 1 - 23You're So Sweet, Horseflies Keep Hangin' 'Round Your Face
- 1 - 24Hurtin' You Don't Come Easy
- 1 - 25 Sweet Carolineimg 3:25
- 1 - 26Everybody's Talkin'
- 2 - 1 Mr. Bojanglesimg 4:52
- 2 - 2 Smokey Lady2:40
- 2 - 3 Holly Holyimg 4:43
- 2 - 4 Both Sides Nowimg 3:31
- 2 - 5And The Singer Sings His Songs
- 2 - 6Ain't No Way
- 2 - 7 New York Boyimg 2:59
- 2 - 8 Until It's Time For You To Goimg 3:35
- 2 - 9 Cracklin' Rosieimg 3:01
- 2 - 10Free Life
- 2 - 11 Coldwater Morningimg 3:22
- 2 - 12 Done Too Soonimg 2:42
- 2 - 13 He Ain't Heavy, He's My Brotherimg 4:35
- 2 - 14Childsong
- 2 - 15I Am The Lion
- 2 - 16Madrigal
- 2 - 17 Soolaimonimg 4:15
- 2 - 18Missa
- 2 - 19African Suite
- 2 - 20Childsong (Reprise)
- 2 - 21 I Am.. I Saidimg 4:29
- 2 - 22 The Last Thing On My Mindimg 3:34
- 2 - 23 Husbands And Wivesimg 3:45
- 2 - 24 Chelsea Morning2:38
- 3 - 1 Crunchy Granola Suiteimg 2:59
- 3 - 2 Stonesimg 3:03
- 3 - 3 If You Go Awayimg 3:48
- 3 - 4 Suzanneimg 4:42
- 3 - 5 I Think It's Gonna Rain Todayimg 2:37
- 3 - 6I Am... I Said (Reprise)
- 3 - 7 Song Sung Blueimg 3:06
- 3 - 8 Porcupine Pieimg 1:55
- 3 - 9High Rolling Man
- 3 - 10 Canta Libreimg 4:56
- 3 - 11 Captain Sunshineimg 3:25
- 3 - 12 Play Meimg 3:53
- 3 - 13Gitchy Goomy
- 3 - 14 Walk On Waterimg 3:05
- 3 - 15Theme
- 3 - 16 Prelude In E Majorimg 0:41
- 3 - 17 Morningsideimg 4:24
- 3 - 18Lordy
- 3 - 19 Kentucky Womanimg 2:49
- 3 - 20 Thank The Lord For The Night Timeimg 3:03
- 3 - 21 Solitary Manimg 3:21
- 3 - 22Cherry, Cherry - Single Version
- 3 - 23 Red, Red Wineimg 2:42
- 3 - 24 Girl, You'll Be A Woman Soonimg 3:22
As one reviewer already noted, there have been numerous variations of box sets containing the work of Neil Diamond's Uni/MCA years. But finally, with "Play Me...", they finally compiled it in the ideal way: complete, chronologically, and digitally remastered. The end result is an enjoyable, if slightly uneven, collection that really demonstrates Mr. Diamond's maturation into one of the seminal American singer-songwriters.
Mr. Diamond had already enjoyed success on the pop charts in the late 1960's with "Solitary Man", "Cherry Cherry" and other hits. But his move to the Uni label was not so much a move to "reinvent" himself as it was to expand and refine his musical horizons. Disc One of this set - containing the albums "Velvet Gloves and Spit", "Brother Love's Traveling Salvation Show", and part of "Touching You, Touching Me" - shows the first awkward steps. There are probably more misses here than hits, so you may find yourself skipping tracks. It does include a humorous look into the studio with "Broad Old Woman (6 AM Insanity)", but in listening to this disc, you can begin to hear the maturation and transition of Neil Diamond in the tunes and lyrics. By the time the CD hits "Sweet Caroline", most of the "Cherry Cherry" sound is gone and a different kind of pop sound - the unique "Neil Diamond sound" that doesn't fit in any particular musical genre - is starting to form.
Disc Two finishes off "Touching You Touching Me", then rolls into "Tap Root Manuscript" (an underrated album in the Diamond discography), and the beginning of "Stones". This disc shows the maturation nearly complete, as you listen to the awesome "Holly Holy", the hit and concert staple "Cracklin' Rosie", the African experimentation of the remainder of "Tap Root Manuscript", and the dynamic introspection of "I Am, I Said".
By the time the listener reaches Disc Three, the maturation is very much complete, and the new "Neil Diamond sound" is in full effect. The lyrics are as deep, powerful, and emotionally touching, as are the tunes, which are now including elegant acoustic guitars, pianos, and strings. As this disc rolls through the last part of "Stones" and the tracks from "Moods", the listener gets to hear the foundation for "Jonathan Livingston Seagull", which - while not included on this set - became one of the seminal albums in Mr. Diamond's career. The add-on live tracks at the end of this disc are largely unnecessary, and don't add anything particularly to the larger collection.
Throughout all three discs, the digital remastering of these songs is remarkable. It is a audio treasure to hear even more of the range of the rich music contained in this collection. This alone might draw the die-hard Neil Diamond fan to buying this set.
One reviewer notes this demonstrates Mr. Diamond as more of a singles artist than an album's artist. That is debatable; while you could make a case to that effect simply from this box set, the breadth of Mr. Diamond's career has shown many examples of his ability to create powerful albums (e.g., "Jonathan Livingston Seagull", "Beautiful Noise", and "The Jazz Singer"). What listeners should take from this collection is what I have described here: the maturation of Neil Diamond as a singer-songwriter. Additionally, there is the simpler fact that with this one inexpensive purchase, you'll get six albums in one package.
I wholeheartedly recommend this collection to Neil Diamond fans or those just discovering and/or becoming a fan of his music. The average listener may not appreciate it as much, despite the fact that there is some very good music to be found here.
I love each of Neil's six Uni studio albums tremendously and this set could have been great but alas it was not meant to be.
The sound quality is harsh and super compressed. There is no space at all to let the music breathe. These albums were very dynamic and warm to begin with and much of that is lost on the Play Me set.
Sequencing - the ideal sequencing would have been to place two complete albums on each disc, with the leftover space to be used for the single mixes that have not yet been released on CD (the mono mix of Brother Love's for example). Instead, they filled up each disc to the max, forcing one to change discs in the middle of an album side which totally breaks up the flow. I know one can burn these to CD-R to get whatever sequencing they like, but there was absolutely no reason for the compliers to do this.
No gaps between songs - one song starts almost immediately after the other. This is completely pointless. Like most albums, the original Uni albums had a few seconds of silence between the songs.
Disc 3 indexing - most of the songs on disc 3 chop off the first split-second of the song if you scan from track to track. If you play the disc straight through, it's not a problem.
Stones - the first few seconds of "Stones" (the song) are completely missing. Unacceptable.
Extra material - instead of filling up the remaining space on disc 3 with live songs from Gold and Hot August Night, it would have been much more preferable to give us the mono single mixes that have not yet seen the light of day on CD.
Neil Diamond signed with Uni for more artistic freedom and stronger promotional support after his short stint at Bang Records. Diamond already had a couple of hits to show forhis efforts but in a disagreement over the song "Shilo" (which Diamond wanted as his next single), Diamond left the label after the death of founder Bert Berns. "Play Me: The Uni Studio Recordings...Plus" takes all of Diamond's albums and puts them in chronological order on a three CD set that also features bonus live tracks from his two live albums. The sound isn't as good as I had hoped--Eric Labson has remastered these using compression and making the songs louder than necessary squeezing the life out of the recordings in the process but I have heard worse. The sound will be passable to most folks and really won't bother you unless you're an audiophile.
The next six studio albums that Diamond recorded were wide ranging and varied. Most of the albums hold up remarkably well although there are flaws such as the horrendous "The Pot Smoker's Song" (what WAS Neil thinking?), "Knackelflerg" (which would have sounded out-of-place on everything that Diamond did) and "You're So Sweet Horseflies Keep Hangin' 'Round Your Face" but on the whole the originals mixed with the covers work quite well.
Diamond's first two albums for Uni "Velvet Gloves and Spit" and "Brother Love's Traveling Salvation Show" had a number of strong songs including "Brooklyn Roads", "Shilo" (which if I recall correctly wasn't on the original album but on a reissued version a couple of years later)and the title track (along with "Sweet Caroline" which was added to the album a year later becoming a hit). The latter album allowed Diamond to incorporate his love of gosepl music into a diverse collection of strong songs. We also get the rare b-side "Broad Old Woman(6 A.M. Insanity)" here.
Diamond followed these two up with "Touching You, "Touching Me" and "Tap Root Manuscript" two of his strongest albums for the label. The former had a fair amount of covers but also had one of Diamond's best songs "Holly Holy" where Diamond turned a traditional love song on its head by melding with a melody/arrangement that made it sound almost like a religious gospel song. "Tap Root" had Diamond's song cycle that featured the influence of African music and imagery (over two decades before Paul Simon tapped similar influences)and the brilliant hit singles "Cracklin' Rosie" and "Free Life".
Diamond's last two albums for the label were also quite enjoyable with "Stones" mixing Diamond originals like the confessional songwriting of "I Am...I Said" (which some fans love and some folks thing is a pretentious mess written when Diamond felt he blew an audition to play Lenny Bruce in a movie)along with covers of Leonard Cohen ("Suzanne") and Randy Newman ("I Think It's Gonna' Rain Today")that fit in easily with the original songs. "Moods" may have been a tad less consisten but it had treasures in the form of "PLlay me", "Walk on Water", the charming rocking "High Rolling Man" and "Morningside" as well as the hit single "Song Sung Blue".
This three CD set closes out with seven tracks representing earlier hits he had on Bang and/or popular songs from Diamond's impressive songwriting catalog. The live tracks are pulled from "Gold" and "Hot August Night" the latter the two album set that Diamond recorded before going to Columbia Records.
The flaws of the set are many--the albums are broken up oddly over the three CD set with, for example, some songs that were the second or third track appearing as the first on another CD. This does break up the flow of the original albums. Also, the mastering is loud and compressed which robs the original recordings of much of their rich warmth and dynamic range.
If the fact that this isn't the best sounding collection doesn't bother you, this is the most economical way to get these albums and the only place to find "Broad Old Woman" that I know of right now. The booklet is informative with a good overview of each album and credits for each one (although they are all lumped together on the last page and credits for those guest vocalists often aren't mentioned at all).
I'd give this collection 3 to 4 stars for the albums themselves (as the quality varies)and the mastering 2 stars. Personally, I'd go with "Glory Road" if you want the bulk of his singles and a few album tracks from the same time frame as it nicely captures the hits and highlights with better sound quality.
Excellent collection containing 2 songs never released on album or CD before. Broad old woman and Lordy. Both were flipsides to 45 releases. (remember those?) One problem though. The intro to the song "Stones" is abbreviated by a couple of bars of guitar. Too bad. Otherwise it would have been perfect.
The title says it all - Simply the best Diamond set you can own! Neil Diamond was and is my choice. My friends would hear his music playing every time they came over.
This is my choice as the Neil Diamond alblum to own.
Jon

