| Average Rating: |
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| Sales Rank: | 1932 (lower is better) |
| Price Used: | $5.24 |
| Shipping: | Free Shipping on most orders over $25* |
| Availability: | Usually ships in 24 hours |
| Release Date: | 1990-10-25 |
| Label: | Sony |
| UPC: | 074643255028 |
| Binding: | Audio CD |
| Published By: | Sony |
| ASIN: | B00000251N |
| Category: | Music |
Tracks on Jonathan Livingston Seagull: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack by Sony
- Prologue
- Be
- Flight Of The Gull
- Dear Father
- Skybird
- Lonely Looking Sky
- The Odyssey-Be/Lonely Looking Sky/Dear Father
- Anthem
- Be
- Skybird
- Dear Father
- Be
Customer Reviews
My favorite "non-greatest hits" album from Neil Diamond - Reviewed on 2008-08-11
I've had this CD for over 20 years now. It's a masterpiece in its own right. When you listen to a Neil Diamond song, you are focused on that one song as a great moment for Neil, even if the rest of his album may not impress you. But this album of "Jonathan Livingston Seagull" is something to be cherished from Neil Diamond as a whole concept, a project.
On this album, Neil Diamond's voice really is only merely another instrument in what can easily be perceived as an instrumental album. Although he sings or speaks on most of the tracks here, it's the instrumentation that makes this album more than just another Neil Diamond album. Two tracks barely charted on the radio from this album. The song "Be" charted #34, and "Skybird" even lower at #75. But the album charted #2 for one week, and it happens to be Neil Diamond's highest charting album of all time. So, what does that tell ya?
I'm surprised that an effort hasn't been made to remaster this album so that the orchestration can be made fuller and more glorified.
I've never seen the movie and I'm hearing mixed reviews on the film being either a great movie achievement or just a dull passage of non-exciting events that portray the life of a single seagull.
Well, whether the movie is great or not, this album is definitely a masterpiece. It came out in 1973. Alot of fantastic albums came out of 1973. The year for ground-breaking starts for many artists. Pink Floyd, Elton John, Abba, Paul McCartney and Wings, Steve Miller Band, etc. etc.
And even some more brave Pioneers of Technical Sound Invention got recognized in 1973, like Emerson Lake and Palmer, Tangerine Dream, Rick Wakeman, Mike Oldfield.....
Yeah, I know I drifted here, but you'd have to agree that Neil Diamond couldn't have release this album at a better time than the glorious year of 1973. And just after he left MCA to sign on with Columbia.
I'll bet that MCA cried that year. Because Columbia also picked up Pink Floyd the following year and they really began to soar.
But, too bad Neil's music wasn't maintaining its appeal after "Jonathan Livingston Seagull". Sure, he was still putting out hits, but he just wasn't that Aggressive Jewish Folk Rock Vocalist that he once was. I think he "Barry Manilow'd" on us and was performing "wussy pop suicide" which could only appeal to listeners his age and older. Much older.
"The Jazz Singer" was a remotely interesting comeback in 1980. But, I think nearly everything else on pop radio was pretty weak in 1980. 1980 was a bad year for everybody in music. 1981 and 1982 were pretty decent but MTV changed everything about how we listened to music.
Jeez, I can still go on and on, but I think I better end this review right here.
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Book Subjects
- Adult Contemporary
- Pop
- Pop Vocals
- Pop/Rock
- Pop/Rock Music
- Popular Music
- Soft Rock
- Vocal