Solitary Man ~ Neil Diamond ~ Chris Isaak ~ Acoustic Cover w/ Epiphone Dove Pro & Bluesharp - Video
PUBLISHED:  Mar 09, 2014
DESCRIPTION:
(c)1966 Words & Music Neil Diamond
From the album "The Feel of Neil Diamond"
Arr. stagwolf
~~~~~~~~
Melinda was mine ´til the time that I found her holding Jim loving him.
Sue came along loved me strong that´s what I thought. Me and Sue that died, too.
Don´t know if I will but until I can find me, the girl who will stay and won´t play games behind me.
I´ll be what I am.. a solitary man.. solitary man.. [Bluesharp
I had it to here being where love is a small word, paper ring part time thing.
I know it´s been done having one girl who loves you, right or wrong weak or strong
Don´t know if I will but until I can find me, the girl who will stay and won´t play games behind me.
I´ll be what I am.. a solitary man.. solitary man.. [Bluesharp
Don´t know if I will but until I can find me, the girl who will stay and won´t play games behind me.
I´ll be what I am.. a solitary man.. solitary man.. [Bluesharp to fade
~~~
"Solitary Man" is a 1966 hit song written, composed, and originally recorded and released by Neil Diamond. It has since been covered many times by such artists as Billy Joe Royal, B.J. Thomas, Jay and the Americans, T. G. Sheppard, Gianni Morandi, The Sidewinders, Chris Isaak, Johnny Cash, Johnny Rivers, HIM, Crooked Fingers, Cliff Richard, and Ólöf Arnalds.
Initially released on Bang Records in April 1966, "Solitary Man" was Diamond's debut single as a recording artist having already had moderate success as a songwriter for other artists. By July, the track had become a minor hit rising to #55 on the U.S. pop singles chart. It would then be included on Diamond's first album, The Feel of Neil Diamond, released in August 1966.
While nominally about young romantic failure, parts of the lyric:
Don't know that I will,
But until, I can find me
...
I'll be, what I am —
A solitary man ...
Solitary man.
have been closely identified with Diamond himself, as evinced by a 2008 profile in The Daily Telegraph: "This is the Solitary Man depicted on his first hit in 1966: the literate, thoughtful and melodically adventurous composer of songs that cover a vast array of moods and emotions..." Indeed, Diamond himself would tell interviewers in the 2000s, "After four years of Freudian analysis I realised I had written 'Solitary Man' about myself."
"Solitary Man's" dynamic melody, matched with the melancholic universality of its lyrics, would make the song an attractive target for later interpretations.
After Diamond had renewed commercial success with Uni Records at the end of the decade, Bang Records re-released "Solitary Man" as a single and it reached #21 on the U.S. pop charts in summer 1970.
He originally recorded two versions of the song, as he later did with "Cherry, Cherry." One of them had his harmonic vocal track on the Chorus of the song. The other version was him singing the song alone, without his prerecorded harmony on the track.
On such live albums as Gold: Recorded Live at the Troubadour, Hot August Night and some subsequent recordings, Diamond altered the lyrics to "then you came along" from the original "then Sue came along."
In a 2005 Rolling Stone retrospective, Dan Epstein wrote, "'Solitary Man' remains the most brilliantly efficient song in the Diamond collection. There's not a wasted word or chord in this two-and-a-half minute anthem of heartbreak and self-affirmation, which introduced the melancholy loner persona that he's repeatedly returned to throughout his career."
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