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Hot August Night III
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Hot August Night III
Current price: $36.99
Barnes and Noble
Hot August Night III
Current price: $36.99
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Hot August Night III
documents a concert
Neil Diamond
held at the Los Angeles Greek Theatre upon the 40th anniversary of
Hot August Night
in 2012. It was a glitzy celebration that bordered on a marathon: on record, which was released six years later, it runs a mammoth two and a half hours. Considering how
arrived several months after
Diamond
announced he was retiring from the road due to his diagnosis with Parkinson's disease, it's hard not to see this live album as valedictory. While he may have toured over the subsequent five years, this performance -- crafted as a career-topper and delivered with gusto -- finds
not only in fine voice, but enthusiastic. He runs through all his standards, which fill up the length of nearly the entire set, and he sounds nearly as vigorous as he did back in 1987, when
Hot August Night II
hit the stores. If this can be faulted, it's because the performance is perhaps a little bit too professional: it's clear that
and his band have performed these songs countless times, so the energy comes solely from
Neil
's excitement at being in front of an audience eager to celebrate their long history with him. Now that nights like that are no longer a possibility, this kind of big, splashy production is not only entertaining, it's somewhat poignant, too. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine
documents a concert
Neil Diamond
held at the Los Angeles Greek Theatre upon the 40th anniversary of
Hot August Night
in 2012. It was a glitzy celebration that bordered on a marathon: on record, which was released six years later, it runs a mammoth two and a half hours. Considering how
arrived several months after
Diamond
announced he was retiring from the road due to his diagnosis with Parkinson's disease, it's hard not to see this live album as valedictory. While he may have toured over the subsequent five years, this performance -- crafted as a career-topper and delivered with gusto -- finds
not only in fine voice, but enthusiastic. He runs through all his standards, which fill up the length of nearly the entire set, and he sounds nearly as vigorous as he did back in 1987, when
Hot August Night II
hit the stores. If this can be faulted, it's because the performance is perhaps a little bit too professional: it's clear that
and his band have performed these songs countless times, so the energy comes solely from
Neil
's excitement at being in front of an audience eager to celebrate their long history with him. Now that nights like that are no longer a possibility, this kind of big, splashy production is not only entertaining, it's somewhat poignant, too. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine