About
About Rob Garrett and his Tribute to Neil Diamond
Born and raised in New York City Rob started playing the guitar at the age of 14. He had many musical influences growing up, including Elvis, The Beatles, and quite naturally Neil Diamond. Rob and his family moved to Las Vegas in 1974 and formed the group “Rock ‘n’ Roll Heaven” in 1980. The group was the city’s premiere “oldies” & classic rock group for the next 15 years with Rob achieving prominence as the leader and front man.
Neil Diamond has sold more than 135 million records since the start of his career in the mid ‘60s, and is one of the world’s best-selling artists of all time with 38 top 40 songs to his credit.
Rob Garrett has received numerous awards over the years for his tribute to Diamond including “Male Tribute Artist of the Year” in Las Vegas in 2013. He also has performed his show at more venues in Las Vegas than any other tribute artist in the industry.
Both Diamond & Garrett were born in Brooklyn, NY. In 1974, Garrett moved from New York City to Las Vegas along with his parents and younger brother.
In 1980 he formed the group Rock ‘n’ Roll Heaven and for 15 years achieved prominence as the leader and front man of one of the city’s premiere oldies and classic rock groups.
Garrett saw Diamond in his first Las Vegas concert engagement when he made his Las Vegas debut opening the Theater for the Performing Arts at the Aladdin Hotel/Casino in 1976. “He held the audience including myself spellbound, and broke all existing Las Vegas concert
records at that time,” Garrett stated. “I had been a fan since 1969 and I’d always thought that he had written some of the most poignant & passionate lyrics I’d ever heard and I knew he had a way of expressing his lyrics in a way that no other singer/songwriter had done before or since.”
In 1995, Garrett was personally hired by Paul Revere (of The Raiders) to portray Neil Diamond in the “Legends In Concert” show in Honolulu, Hawaii, the city’s biggest theatrical show and the world’s most popular impersonation. What was to be a two-month “trial” engagement for Garrett ended up being a three year run.
“I’m never going to play the sizes of places he’s played, but in my own little cubbyhole, wherever I am, I’m going to do my best to give people an idea of what it was like to see Neil Diamond in concert during the late ’70s or early ’80s”. “After seeing him 17 times, I’m pretty familiar with his on-stage persona and his personality. Hopefully it’s something I get to do for a long, long time,” he said. “I’ve been doing this for
23 years, and the shows in Vegas and around the country, everywhere I go, they all appear to sell out, which means people still love him.”