| Super
Diamond Article
Super
Diamond Is Surreal McCoy
By
M.R. REES
Washington
Times
May 6, 2004
February 2001 marked a postmodern high point in the history of the entertainment
industry: Providing the music at the Hollywood premiere party for the
film "Saving Silverman," which features Jack Black and his pals
playing in a Neil Diamond cover band, was a real-life Neil Diamond cover
band, Super Diamond. Joining Super Diamond on the stage was none other
than the Neil himself, who crooned with his much younger and much hipper
progeny through "Cherry Cherry" and "Forever in Blue Jeans."
More than three years
have passed since that epic moment, but two elements of the entertainment
industry remain the same: Neil Diamond still marks a cultural fault line
throughout the world - equally loved and loathed - and Super Diamond continues
to capitalize on his success. They do about 100 gigs a year (attracting
as many as 2,500 people), and tomorrow night they bring their well-choreographed
and slightly self-parodic show to the 9:30 Club.
If you're only a
fan of weepy Diamond dandies like "Hello" and "Heartlight,"
stay home. This is not your mom and dad's Neil Diamond show, where they
could wear a new pair of Hush Puppies with no worries of getting a scuff.
Think of a Super Diamond show as a fun-loving, somewhat raucous white-bread
fraternity party for the 25-to-39 set.
The master of ceremonies
is, of course, Super Diamond's lead singer, Randy Cordero, aka "Surreal
Neil" Cordero, who sounds more like Mr. Diamond than he looks like
him, and compensates by outfitting himself and the band in vintage Diamond-style
sequins, bell bottoms and platform shoes. He has described the band's
concerts as "Neil Diamond on steroids," and the group sticks
to the pre-'82 Diamond tunes that lend themselves to dancing, drinking,
and singing.
Given the band member's
musical influences (Rush, Scorpions, Van Halen), they mischievously infuse
the occasional Diamond song with 10- to 15-second riffs of such tunes
as "Tom Sawyer," "Rock You Like a Hurricane" and "Runnin'
With the Devil." For 30-something Diamond fans who cling to those
songs with as much passion as their high school lettermen's jackets, Super
Diamond will hit your sweet spot.
Your average job
placement service does not typically post listings for full-time employment
as the lead singer of a Neil Diamond tribute band. How did Surreal Neil
land the gig?
Mr. Cordero says
he was a Diamond fan during his childhood - at 38, he's old enough to
have listened to him on eight-track - but heavy metal got the better of
him.
"When I was
12," he says somewhat wistfully, "I didn't know anyone my age
who listened to Neil Diamond." However, in 1989 this amateur musician
found himself drawn back to the man Rolling Stone dubbed "the Jewish
Elvis," and on a lark he started performing solo at clubs and parties.
The act gained popularity, and Mr. Cordero eventually hooked up with other
San Francisco-area musicians also willing to confess they were fans of
the Man. Faster than you can say, "I Am ... I Said," Super Diamond
was born.
Eleven years later,
the soft-spoken Mr. Cordero insists he still loves what he does - Super
Diamond has been his full-time gig since 1998 - but he doesn't sugarcoat
it.
"When I tell
people my job," he says, "60 percent of them tell me they hate
Neil Diamond."
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