A Beautiful Noise
Earlier this year, we were supposed to see the Neil Diamond musical biography, A Beautiful Noise. We had a family diversion and gave the tickets away, promising to return to it.
Last night we did. Thank God.
Unlike say, Six, which is six women screeching to non-memorable, jet-engine decibel, atonal music—pandering to the audience with “identity” invitations—A Beautiful Noise uses Diamond’s actual experience with therapy (an alter-ego during the entire performance) to chronicle his rise from introverted songwriter to extroverted superstar performer. There are 30 songs in the two-hour show, and there’s probably another 30 not used.
But the unstoppable force in this show is Nick Fradiani, a great looking doppelganger of Mr. Diamond with a brilliant set of pipes. He looks and sounds like Neil Diamond, and I could simply listen to him in concert all night. (He won American Idol seven years ago for those of you keeping score.)
The supporting case and the band/orchestra (from bongos to cello) are outstanding. THIS is Broadway, THIS is a musical based on the fascinating story of a troubled man and his untroubled art. (One of the executive producers is Bob Gaudio of the Four Seasons, one of the powers behind the wonderful Jersey Boys musical.)
If you love Neil Diamond, or great music, or great performance, go see this while Fradiani is still with it. If you like all three, you’ll have a night to remember