Super Diamond
Article
Harder
Than Diamond: Band gives edge
to such songs as `Cherry Cherry,' `Holly Holy'
MIKE WEATHERFORD
Review-Journal
Super Diamond may
be just what Neil Diamond needs today.
The six-piece band
that plays Saturday at Palace Station offers a "slightly campy" take
on Diamond's classic song book, with an alternative rock twist, according
to singer Randy Cordero -- a k a "The Surreal Neil."
Yet the band stops
short of parody. "We've never had a complaint, and a lot of people from
the Neil Diamond fan club come to our shows," Cordero reports. "We all
went together to see him in Vegas (on New Year's Day) and they were
like, `Gosh, it seems a bit slow,' because they'd all been hearing our
versions for so long."
While the real
Neil offered a sedate band playing with headphones to a metronomic "click
track," Super Diamond likes to "play around with the sounds of today,"
Cordero says. "Our sound is almost Kiss meets Depeche Mode, doing Neil
Diamond."
Instead of the
organ solo you're used to hearing on "Cherry Cherry," Super Diamond
plays it with "a really weird synth sound." Likewise, "Soolaimon" (from
"Tap Root Manuscript," Diamond's African-themed concept album) starts
out "really spacey and weird." And "Holly Holy" sneaks in a little of
Black Sabbath's "Iron Man" at the end.
"They're great
songs," he says, but "it's just really fun to add more power to it."
The most common response from people who see them for the first time
is, "You guys (expletive) rock!"
Cordero, 33, started
doing Neil in 1989 as a solo performer. "I'd do things like, `Here's
how Neil Diamond would sound doing The Cure.' I've always thought Peter
Murphy from Bauhaus and Ian McCulloch from Echo and The Bunnymen sound
very similar to his voice, so I'd do Neil singing their songs."
Cordero put the
band together six years ago, but had a hard time advertising for musicians.
"I was afraid I would get the wrong kind of people, hotel bands and
stuff," he says. Eventually, "it just worked out. I finally ended up
meeting young people from bands that were doing more original stuff
in the Bay area."
Surreal Neil has
cultivated his own fan following. "I never wanted to wear a wig. I never
wanted to try and look like (Diamond), but sequins sounded like a lot
of fun. I tried to find the biggest platform shoes I could find, the
tackiest black bell bottoms I could find. I wanted to take what I remembered
of Neil and do it kind of bigger and wackier."
To Cordero's knowledge,
the real Neil has yet to check out the act. "He wants to, but I guess
security issues ..." But, Cordero adds, "Everyone else has seen us.
His children, his girlfriend, his merchandise guy and people from his
band have shown up when we play the House of Blues in L.A."
Super Diamond plays
at 7 and 9 p.m. Saturday in the new Trax Nightclub at Palace Station,
2411 W. Sahara Ave. There is no cover, but a two-drink minimum.