Why Elvis Presley’s Friend Didn’t Like His Cover of Neil Diamond’s ‘Sweet Caroline’
Elvis Presley covered numerous songs over the curse of his career, including Neil Diamondβs βSweet Caroline.β During an interview, his friend Marty Lacker revealed why the King of Rock βnβ Roll decided to cover the song. Lacker said he was greatly disappointed in Elvisβ βSweet Carolineβ for a very specific reason.

Marty Lacker felt Elvis Presley lost the plot after these famous studio sessions
According to Goldmine, Lacker was a friend, confidant, and employee of Elvis. He was present for the January/February 1969 sessions at American Sound Studios where the King of Rock βnβ Roll produced four of his most acclaimed late-period hits: βIn the Ghetto,β βSuspicious Minds,β βKentucky Rain,β and βDonβt Cry Daddy.β Lacker saw these sessions as an artistic rebirth for the βHeartbreak Hotelβ singer following years of lackluster songs. Lacker felt this rebirth was short-lived.
βIn my opinion, after the American sessions in β69, from 1970 onward he lost it again,β Lacker said. βHereβs a good example. When Elvis finally started to do songs onstage, what does he do? He picked songs that were cut at American.β
Why Marty Lacker felt Elvis Presleyβs cover of βSweet Carolineβ by Neil Diamond was lacking
Lacker expressed disappointment with two of the cover songs Elvis released in the early 1970s. βHe did βI Just Canβt Help Believingβ by B.J. Thomas and βSweet Carolineβ by Neil Diamond,β Lacker remembered. βHe heard those songs on the radio and did them because he liked them. However, when he did them with the TCB band, βSweet Carolineβ and βI Just Canβt Help Believinβ came nowhere near the originals because they lost the feel. I canβt emphasize enough how creative the American Studio musicians were.β
How the public reacted to the 2 versions of βSweet Carolineβ
The original version of βSweet Carolineβ was a massive hit. The track reached No. 4 on the Billboard Hot 100, staying on the charts for 14 weeks. Diamondβs βSweet Carolineβ earned a sort of immortality through its association with the Boston Red Sox. This association became a plot point in Seth MacFarlaneβs comedy Ted.
On the other hand, Elvisβ version of the song languishes in obscurity. His rendition appeared on the album On Stage, also known as On Stage: February, 1970. On Stage features many cover songs, including Elvisβ versions of The Beatlesβ βYesterday,β Creedence Clearwater Revivalβs βProud Mary,β and Joe Southβs βWalk a Mile in My Shoes.β
Elvisβ βSweet Carolineβ was not released as a single, so it didnβt chart on the Billboard Hot 100. It never became an anthem for Red Sox fans the way that Diamondβs rendition did, even though Elvis is arguably a lot more famous than Diamond. On Stage, however, was a modest success. It reached No. 13 on the Billboard 200, staying on the charts for 20 weeks. While Lacker was not a fan of Elvisβ βSweet Caroline,β it certainly made its way into many listenersβ hands.