About The Song
“Play Me” is a 1972 song by Neil Diamond from his album Moods. The song, the first single from Moods, was recorded in February 1972 in Los Angeles. It was released as a single in May 1972 and peaked at #11 in the United States in September of that year. It was listed by Billboard as #27 of his best 30 songs.
The “catchy pop-rock” song is a medium-tempo waltz performed in 3/4 time at a standard tempo of 102 bpm. Play Me features broken chords played on the acoustic guitar, courtesy of Diamond’s long-time collaborator Richard Bennett. While Bennett had played on a few songs on Diamond’s 1971 album Stones, Moods was his first full collaboration with him, establishing Bennett as one of Diamond’s essential players, playing on every Diamond album until 1987 and touring with him for 17 years.
“Play Me” is an audience favorite, especially among women, who carry signs that read “Neil, Play Me” to his performances and scream “me, me, me” when he plays the tune, described as “an entreaty to romance”. Along with “Love on the Rocks” and “You Don’t Bring Me Flowers”, it is one of the “baritone ballads” that have “60-year-old women erupting in girlish screams;” it makes female audience members shriek and swoon. According to Melissa Ruggieri, writing for Media General about a 2008 concert, “Diamond [at 67] also still possesses the ability to charm, even though he didn’t need to do much except wiggle his prominent eyebrows at women in the crowd to elicit schoolgirl-like squeals—’Play Me,’ in particular, had a bizarre aphrodisiac effect.”
Singer/songwriter Mary Lee Kortes, while performing it in 2000 in New York, suggested that she had lost her virginity to the song. Nancy Sinatra said, “‘Play Me’ is my favorite [Neil Diamond] song, because it is sexy.”
It is widely praised by critics and musicians as well; it is among the top-ten favorite songs of American writer and critic David Wild. Wild was especially fond of the lines “You are the sun, I am the moon / You are the words, I am the tune / Play me”, and other writers have cited the lines as well. Diamond himself has referred to those lines, for instance in an apology to a 2008 Columbus, Ohio, audience, for performing with a raspy voice while suffering from acute laryngitis. Billboard described it as a “potent cut.” Cash Box described it as “a ballad about he, she and the music” and considered it to be “delicious”. Record World called it a “sweet and smooth ballad, seemingly born to be covered.”
Video
Lyrics
She was morning
And I was nighttime
I one day woke up
To find her lying beside my bed
I softly said, “Come take me”
For I was lonely
In need of someone
As though I’d done someone wrong somewhere
But I don’t know where
I don’t know where
Come lately
You are the sun, I am the moon
You are the words, I am the tune
Play me
Song she sang to me
Song she bring to me
Words that rang in me
Rhyme that sprang from me
Warmed the night
And what was right
Became me
You are the sun, I am the moon
You are the words, I am the tune
Play me
And so it was
That I came to travel
Upon a road that was thorned and narrow
Another place
Another grace
Would save me
You are the sun, I am the moon
You are the words, I am the tune
Play me
You are the sun, I am the moon
You are the words, I am the tune
Play me