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- <text id=94TT0495>
- <title>
- Mar. 07, 1994: The Arts & Media:Music
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Mar. 07, 1994 The Spy
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- THE ARTS & MEDIA, Page 73
- Music
- The Power Of Celine Dion
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Canada's star chanteuse sang hits from Beauty and the Beast
- and Sleepless in Seattle; now she's reached No. 1 on her own
- </p>
- <p>By Charles P. Alexander
- </p>
- <p> Would a young Barbra Streisand make it big in show business
- today? The question is not as stupid as it sounds. Much to the
- annoyance of baby boomers, their kids often prefer rapping to
- singing and consider rhythm and riffs more important than melody.
- And dowdy Broadway, the birthplace of Streisand's fame, is not
- producing pop stars these days. To the MTV generation, a videogenic
- image can count more than musical talent.
- </p>
- <p> But exceptional talent is not at the mercy of fashion. Witness
- the rise of Celine Dion, the 25-year-old French Canadian singer
- whom some top people in the music industry are touting as the
- next Streisand. Till now, her voice, pouring out of the silver
- screen as well as the radio, has been more familiar than her
- face or name. She won a Grammy last year for singing the theme
- from Beauty and the Beast, a duet with Peabo Bryson, and is
- nominated again this year for her collaboration with Clive Griffin
- on When I Fall in Love from Sleepless in Seattle. Now, though,
- she's denting the charts on her own. Her new single, The Power
- of Love, jumped to No. 1 on Billboard magazine's Hot 100 without
- any help from a Disney cartoon or a Tom Hanks.
- </p>
- <p> The power behind the song, from Dion's new album The Colour
- of My Love (550 Music/Epic), is her bring-the-house-down voice,
- which turns an old, schmaltzy ballad into a soaring pop aria.
- That voice glides effortlessly from deep whispers to dead-on
- high notes, a sweet siren that combines force with grace. And
- it is not just a studio creation--as Americans have had a
- chance to see. Dion has a concert special running on the Disney
- Channel through March and is just wrapping up her first U.S.
- tour as a headliner--a 17-day, 10-city trek from San Francisco
- to New York City.
- </p>
- <p> Says David Foster, who produced The Power of Love: "I truly,
- truly believe in my heart that Celine is the world's next superstar."
- That could be dismissed as so much hype, except that Foster
- knows quite a bit about superstars. He produced Whitney Houston's
- I Will Always Love You and has also worked with Streisand, Natalie
- Cole and Frank Sinatra in the past three years. "Celine is right
- there," he says. "She's in that company."
- </p>
- <p> Like Houston and Streisand, Dion got an early start. The youngest
- of 14 children in a musical family, she belted out French songs
- at the age of five, standing atop tables in a restaurant owned
- by her parents in a small town near Montreal. At 12 she made
- her first recordings and soon became la p'tite Quebecoise (little
- Quebecker), the darling of the whole province. Dion admits to
- losing a big chunk of her childhood, but not to any regrets.
- "My favorite game was to sing," she recalls. At 15 she dropped
- out of school because, she says, "it was taking me away from
- music, from my happiness, from my dreams."
- </p>
- <p> When she turned 18, with seven French albums to her credit,
- Dion and her manager, Rene Angelil, who has orchestrated her
- career since she was 12, decided it was time to introduce her
- to the English-singing world. There was just one p'tit problem:
- the chanteuse had hardly ever spoken, much less sung, a word
- of English. Even as she rapidly learned the language, she was
- sometimes baffled by nuances. Producer Foster recalls a recording
- session in which he cheered Dion's best moments by shouting,
- "That's bitchin'!" Unfamiliar with the slang, Dion grew upset:
- she thought Foster was cursing her performance.
- </p>
- <p> Though Dion had feared that recording in English would alienate
- her French-speaking fans, she has bridged the cultural divisions
- of her homeland. After three hot-selling English albums, the
- Canadian press has crowned la p'tite Quebecoise Queen Celine.
- Even the somewhat startling news that the 25-year-old star plans
- to marry her 52-year-old manager has played well to her fans.
- </p>
- <p> Can Dion be as big across the border in the U.S.? Not unless
- she broadens her audience, which has been firmly anchored in
- the "adult-contemporary" market--mainly baby boomers who favor
- soft rock and took their kids to see Beauty and the Beast. Dion
- wants to keep those fans--her Disney special is as family-friendly
- as a rock concert gets. But in her Power of Love video, she
- slips out of the G-rated image and into some clingy white lingerie.
- The remodeling will only go so far; "I would look stupid trying
- to do like Madonna," Dion says. But with a voice that big, she
- won't have to.
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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