This is
Diamond's equivalent of, say, one of
Barbra Streisand's
Broadway albums. Come to think of it, it's Broadway that
Diamond is returning to as well; specifically, the corner of 49th Street, where he and many others turned out songs for music publishers. Some of these songs were written there; most were only in the spirit of that modern Tin Pan Alley. Handling the work of his then-rivals, such as "Spanish Harlem," "A Groovy Kind of Love," and "River Deep -- Mountain High,"
Diamond adopts his usual hammy style (he always sounds like he thinks he's a much better singer than he is).
Peter Asher patented a neo-'60s production style in crafting oldies for
Linda Ronstadt in the '70s, and he does the same thing here, which is only to say that the album is not as overproduced as some of
Diamond's recent albums, not that
Asher's versions are any competition to
Phil Spector's originals. Actually, this record sounds exactly like you would expect it to: just call to mind a familiar song like "Will You Love Me Tomorrow" and imagine what it would sound like if
Neil Diamond sang it. While this is clearly a holding action from the point of view of
Diamond's recording career, fans can decide for themselves whether it's valid and, perhaps more problematic, necessary. You pays your money...
–
William Ruhlmann, Rovi