He may no longer command arenas night after night, but Neil Diamond’s presence has only grown larger, softer, and strangely more intimate. His songs now arrive in different ways: a father humming “Sweet Caroline” while cooking, a clip on TikTok looping “so good, so good,” a film trailer swelling with “Song Sung Blue.” Distance from the stage has not dimmed him; it has turned him into something timeless.
As new generations discover his music without knowing his face, Diamond has quietly crossed from celebrity into folklore. His melodies are inherited rather than introduced, shared rather than sold. The man who once stood in spotlights now lives in echoes and choruses, in wedding receptions and football terraces, in headphones on late-night trains. At 85, Neil Diamond doesn’t need to appear. The world keeps singing his name for him.