Super Diamond
Article
The
real and the surreal; Neil Diamond is so cool,
it pays to impersonate him...
By DAVID PENCEK
Norwich Bulletin
Thursday, September 12, 2002
It was a hot August
night. Just as Randy Cordero finished singing another one of Neil Diamond's
classic songs, a woman yelled out, "You're almost as hot as Neil."
Cordero, otherwise known as Surreal Neil --the lead singer and founder
of the tribute group Super Diamond, simply shook his head and said,
"No. No." Physically, Cordero actually bears a closer resemblance
to Elvis than Neil Diamond.
More than a month
ago, Super Diamond played two consecutive nights in the Mohegan Sun
Wolf Den. Because it was August, the group performed songs from Diamond's
live albums "Hot August Nights" and "Hot August II."
But as close as Cordero came to sounding like Diamond, it ain't nothing
like the real thing.
For all those Diamond
Heads out there, the real thing hits town today. The 61-year-old singing
icon visits the Mohegan Sun Arena for an 8 p.m. show. After that, he'll
travel north for shows Friday and Saturday at the Centrum Centre in
Worcester, Mass.
Since his first
hit "Cherry, Cherry" in 1966, Diamond has written and sung
some of the best-known songs of all-time.
"It never gets
old," said Rama Diamond, the keyboardist for Super Diamond. "They're
great songs that hold up."
They're also songs
that other singers have covered numerous times. UB40 and The Monkees
scored No. 1 hits with "Red, Red Wine" and "I'm A Believer"
respectively. Urge Overkill sang "Girl You'll Be A Woman Soon"
for the movie "Pulp Fiction." Last year's blockbuster "Shrek"
featured Smash Mouth's version of "I'm A Believer."
Diamond himself
has reached No. 1 on the singles chart three times with "Cracklin'
Rosie," "You Don't Bring Me Flowers" and "Song Sung
Blue."
And those songs
just scratch the surface. "Sweet Caroline," "Forever
In Blue Jeans," "Solitary Man," "Hello Again,"
"Holly Holy" and the list goes on and on.
What may be even
more remarkable is that Diamond's popularity crosses generations, even
though you won't find him anywhere on MTV.
The members of Super
Diamond, who are in their 9th year of performing, said their shows are
usually dominated with Gen Xers and younger.
"Personally
I think there is a lot of tasteless music out there today," the
37-year-old Cordero said. "A lot of people who grew up in the '80s
listened to Diamond. They grew up on it."
The real Diamond
has actually jumped onstage twice to sing with Super Diamond. The first
time came in December 2000 at the House of Blues Hollywood. The second
occasion was last year during the "Saving Silverman" premiere
party.
Diamond made a cameo
in the comedy film, which is about a group of twentysomethings who have
a Neil Diamond cover band. It was Diamond's first big screen appearance
since his starring role in the 1980 remake "The Jazz Singer."
While "The Jazz Singer" was critically panned and wasn't the
blockbuster Diamond and the producers had hoped for, the soundtrack
was a huge success and it produced three top 10 singles.
"I decided
while I was doing 'The Jazz Singer' that I'd rather be a really good
singer than a mediocre actor," Diamond said in a February 2001
interview with the Los Angeles Times. "('Saving Silverman') was
really more about my fans than anything else, about their devotion over
the years and how that has transferred to their children as represented
by the three main characters."
Last year Diamond
released "The Essential Neil Diamond," a two-disc set with
38 of his selections. Diamond has said that he breaks his career down
in eras. In one category, he puts his early hits from Bang Records.
They include "Kentucky Woman," "Solitary Man" and
"Cherry, Cherry."
Next are his MCA
years during the '70s that produced songs like Song Sung Blue"
and "I Am ... I Said." Then came his time with Columbia Records.
That era began with Diamond's Grammy-winning original score for "Jonathan
Livingston Seagull" and continued with songs such as "Beautiful
Noise," "September Morn" and "Forever In Blue Jeans."
"The Jazz Singer"
marked Diamond's fourth era. And Diamond has called his current era
"wish-fulfillment." The new era includes "Three Chord
Opera," a new album Diamond released last summer. It was his first
record since 1974 that he wrote entirely.
Someday, Cordero
would like to have success with the songs he has written. He is recording
tracks with his original band TijuanaStripClub and hopes to release
a CD soon.
For now, pretending
to be Neil Diamond pays the bills. And Cordero realizes that there are
worse ways to make a living.
"Other than
my own, I can't think of anyone else's songs I'd rather sing than Neil
Diamond's," Cordero said.