On the Way to the Sky explained

On the Way to the Sky
Type:studio
Artist:Neil Diamond
Cover:On the Way to the Sky cover.jpeg
Released:October 9, 1981
Recorded:1981
Genre:Rock
Length:42:09
Label:Columbia
Producer:Neil Diamond
Prev Title:The Jazz Singer
Prev Year:1980
Next Title:Heartlight
Next Year:1982

On the Way to the Sky is the fourteenth studio album by Neil Diamond, released in 1981. It contains the hit "Yesterday's Songs", which reached number eleven on the Billboard Hot 100 (and number one on the Hot Adult Contemporary Tracks chart), title track which peaked at number 27 in the US and a third single, "Be Mine Tonight", which also reached the Top 40, peaking at number 35.

Cash Box said of "Be Mine Tonight" that "from the full production to the singer's unique charisma and delivery, everything works here."[1] Billboard said that it's a "bristling midtempo rocker with much of the energy and sass of 'America' or 'Longfellow Serenade.'"[2]

For shipments of a million copies, the album was certified Platinum by the RIAA, but underperformed the previous year's 5× Platinum Jazz Singer, which reached number three on the albums chart and spawned three Billboard Top 10 hits.

Personnel

Production

Notes and References

  1. Reviews. Cash Box. May 15, 1982. 2022-07-07. 8.
  2. Billboard. May 15, 1982. 2023-01-21. 71. Top Single Picks.
  3. Book: Kent, David . . Australian Chart Book . 1993 . 0-646-11917-6 . St Ives, New South Wales . David Kent (historian).