We rode the MAX into downtown Portland from Beaverton, which takes about 35 minutes. When we got to the Rose Garden, we had decent seats to the right rear of stage. The woman next to us was a bit tipsy even before the concert started, and started talking to me. She was from Bend and this was her first Neil Diamond concert. She realized that Emily and I were clearly younger than the mostly middle-age crowd (and, I'm guessing there were a good 15,000 people there), she asked if we *actually* liked Neil Diamond. We told her that, yes, we did like him, she said, "That's great! Have you seen "The Jazz Singer?"
Now, I studied film in college... so I immediately thought of the 1927 Al Jolson film, which is renowned for being the first feature film with synchronized dialogue (aka a "talkie"). Jolson shocked audiences in 1927 by breaking out in song during a conversation with his mother, in a scene from the otherwise silent film.
"The Al Jolson film... yeah, I've seen that," I said. She looked at me weird and said, "No... I was talking about the Neil Diamond movie. How do you know about Al Jolson?" I told her about my insane love of movies and the film studies courses in college and she proceeded to tell me that her dad's gravestone has an inscription about how he is now "singing in heaven with Al Jolson." Weird! (For the record, I haven't seen the 1980 Neil Diamond remake, but I was aware of its existence. The film buff in me just immediately thought of the original Jolson film).
The concert was a lot of fun... Neil Diamond, I'm happy to report, can still put on a good show at age 67. I didn't know every song, as his catalog spans four decades, but he sang plenty of hits, including "I'm a Believer," "Sweet Caroline," "Cherry, Cherry," "Coming to America," "Brother Love's Traveling Salvation Show," "He's Not Heavy, He's My Brother," "Cracklin' Rosie," "Forever in Blue Jeans," and more.
When he sang "Red, Red Wine," Emily, realizing that Niel Diamond wrote it, said, "Man, UB40 wouldn't even exist without covering other people's songs!" So true!

I'm gonna guess that the average age of a Neil Diamond concertgoer is about 52. Or more judging from the extremely excited ladies of somewhat advanced age in the front row.

Few people realize that Neil got his last name from his tendency to shine under bright lights.
It was one of those concerts that we wouldn't have normally attended... nothing against Neil Diamond... but tickets for shows of that nature tend to be in the $50-$200 range, which is a lot more than these two indie rock kids are used to paying (we love live music, but most of the band we like charge around $15-40 person). All in all, we had a great time... even if we didn't brawl with the security guards in the front row as they forcibly removed us from the arena (but, we had a fun time watching that happen to someone else...).

A reversed image of Neil on the big screen gave us a much better look at the venerable singer/songwriter, as we were seated behind the stage. I can't complain, though... the tickets were free.
Here are some videos from our seats at the concert:


1 comment:
You guys have all the fun. My favorite middle-aged concert was Davy Jones at Epcot. I really wanted to go to Foreigner when they came to SLC, but didn't want to shell out $60 each.
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