..

“I don’t think it was a break,” she says politely but firmly. “I worked for five years.”

Indeed, Dion’s “A New Day” concert extravaganza on the Las Vegas strip may have been more demanding than a pop star’s life. The French-Canadian chanteuse performed several days a week in the ambitious show, 카지노 룰렛 게임 which was heavy on dancing, theatrics and, of course, Dion’s booming voice.

The career of Celine Dion the Entertainer was vibrant and thriving. But for all practical purposes, the career of Celine Dion the Pop Diva was all but dormant where it once had its biggest impact, in the recording industry.

2While thousands packed Caesars’ Palace to hear her sing every night, Dion — who has sold 50 million albums in the United States alone since her 1990 debut and had one of the biggest songs in pop history with “My Heart Will Go On” –disappeared from the charts.

Though she released a French-language album and a CD to accompany an Anne Geddes photo book titled “Miracles,” Dion decided not to put out a pop disc during her Las Vegas tenure. Her last proper studio album release was 2003’s double-platinum “One Heart,” released just as the show began.

So, as “A New Day” winds down this year and she releases her comeback record, “Taking Chances,” Dion is trying to reclaim her place after being a pop queen in exile.

“She’s more nervous than she was before. The fact that she hasn’t been in the pop arena for five years, she’s pretty nervous about it — and me too by the way,” says her husband and manager, Rene Angelil. “We don’t know if people will accept her, if the fans are still there. We know that she has fans … (but) a lot of things have changed in the music business in the last five years.”

Something else has also changed as well: Dion’s sound. The woman known (and often parodied) for her bombastic love ballads now has a harder edge to her music. Some of the songs are decidedly up-tempo and would fit in easily on a Kelly Clarkson CD, with their emphasis on heavy guitars. And on the album’s most intriguing track, “The Woman in Me,” Dion sounds like she’s singing in some nefarious dive bar. Growling her way through the blues belter, she blows away her reputation for sometimes saccharine material.

Even the album’s first single, the ballad “Taking Chances,” seems more mainstream pop than her usual adult contemporary vibe — like a calculated attempt to capture new listeners.

But Dion, 39, says she wasn’t intentionally trying to change her sound.

“I picked those (songs) without knowing that it was very different, to be honest with you,” she said via phone after taping an episode of “The Oprah Winfrey Show,” part of a high-profile media blitz planned for the week of the CD’s release. “When I went in the studio and I sang them I just enjoyed myself so much. And now I listen to it and I notice it’s definitely edgier but this is where I am right now,” she adds. “I’m not a new Celine but it’s just that I’ve evolved and this is where I am in my life and my career right now. … the feeling that I feel. I’m definitely more mature and more grounded.”

John Shanks, who produced several songs on “Taking Chances,” including the title cut, says her new sound shows “she’s viable and that she is competitive.” “It shows that there are many sides to her and it’s just how she’s been showcased in the past. … I don’t think she’s chasing anything at all, she’s not chasing a sound. I think it’s a very natural growth.”

But after being gone from the pop scene for so long, even a new sound may not be enough to connect with listeners. So far, the acoustic-leaning single “Taking Chances” hasn’t registered on the pop charts, although it’s at No. 11 on the adult contemporary charts.

One station that is taking a chance on “Taking Chances” is New York’s top 40 radio station Z100. Sharon Datsur, the program director, says the typical response from listeners is “shock that it’s Celine Dion, first of all, and then they say, ‘Wow, I love the song.”‘

Though the first single has been slow to catch on at other radio stations, Datsur said the album, which includes production by R&B singer-songwriter Ne-Yo, rocker Ben Moody and Linda Perry, is the smart way to reintroduce Dion and create a different identity with the audience.

“I’ve listened to the whole album and they did this really smartly. They are working with some of the top producers that have produced some of the biggest pop hits in the last five, 10 years,” she says. “For so many years, a lot of people kind of associated her with adult contemporary, an older audience.”

While Dion admits to being “more nervous” about her new album than past one, she’s also quick to assert that she’s not obsessed with trying to recapture the multi-platinum status of her glory years. Part of the reason for that is also the reason she planted herself in Las Vegas for five years: her 6-year-old son, Rene-Charles.

“I do worry, but for the important things,” she says forcefully before a recent performance at Caesars Palace. “My priorities changed since I became a mommy. I love to sing. I love to perform. It is not my life.”

To that end, Dion and Angelil are already looking past the next year, during which she plans a major world tour, and planning to add to their family. “This is our big project,” Angelil says.

In fact, Dion, who is quick to point out that she has been working pretty much straight for the past 25 years, is looking forward to her next hiatus from the pop arena, when she will truly have a real break.

“I miss to be home, we’re building a house right now,” she says wistfully. “I’m about to meet my life soon, you know, so that’s what I miss the most.”

By Nekesa Mumbi Moody

Tags: 마카오 픽,

Related Posts

The other surprise was how many kinds of violence have decreased in frequency. I wasn’t surprised that we no longer keep slaves or disembowel heretics–I already knew that. But I never expected to learn that homicide in the US, war in Africa, rape, spousal abuse, child abuse, spanking, hate crimes–you name it–have all been in decline since records were first kept.
Emmy- and Golden Globe-winner Tina Fey has earned international acclaim as a comedy writer, actress, author and producer, but she’s always wanted her name in a copy of the Broadway publication Playbill, she tells Jane Pauley in an interview for CBS’ “Sunday Morning,” to be broadcast April 8
A U.S. official told CBS News that Nafis considered targeting President Obama before settling on the Federal Reserve building just blocks from the World Trade Center site but those considerations never got beyond the discussion stage. On “CBS This Morning” Thursday, CBS News senior correspondent John Miller reported that Nafis had made statements that he was in contact with a Qaeda network before he arrived in the United States in January. But there was no allegation that Nafis actually received training or direction from the terrorist group. In conversations recorded by the FBI, Miller reports Nafis allegedly said he admired the radical U.S.-born cleric Anwar al-Awlaki, who inspired the “underwear bomber,” Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab, and the accused Fort Hood shooter, Maj. Nidal Hasan. Even after Awlaki was killed in a drone strike, his magazine, called Inspire, supplied Nafis with the outlines for his plot. Prosecutors said Nafis traveled to the U.S. on a student visa in January to carry out an attack. Hours after his arrest, Bangladeshi detectives were at his family’s three-story home in the Jatrabari neighborhood in south Dhaka. “We are just collecting details about Nafis from his family,” one officer said, speaking on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak to the media. Nafis’ family said he was incapable of such actions and he went to America to study business administration, not to carry out any attack. Nafis was so timid, he couldn’t even venture out onto the roof alone, his father said. “He used to take someone to go the roof at night. I can’t believe he could be part of it (the plot).” “He is very gentle and devoted to his studies,” he said, pointing to Nafis’ time studying at the private North South University in Dhaka. However, Belal Ahmed, a spokesman for the university, said Nafis was a terrible student who was put on probation and threatened with expulsion if he didn’t bring his grades up. Nafis eventually just stopped coming to school, Ahmed said. Ahsanullah said his son convinced him to send him to America to study, arguing that with a U.S. degree he had a better chance at success in Bangladesh. “I spent all my savings to send him to America,” he said. CBS News reports that Nafis was enrolled at Southeast Missouri State University for the spring semester earlier this year and that he was pursuing a degree in cyber security; he is no longer enrolled there. He was pursuing a bachelor’s degree in cybersecurity. University spokeswoman Ann Hayes told The Associated Press that Nafis requested a transfer of his records in July and the university complied, though she couldn’t say where the records were transferred. Mohammad Arif Akunjee, a childhood friend, said Nafis wanted to be a businessman. Just a few hours before his arrest, Nafis talked to his mother over Skype to update her on his plans, Bilkis said. “My brother told my mother that he was doing well in studies in the U.S. and was transferring to a college in New York,” said his sister. Early Thursday, a relative living in Switzerland called to tell the family Nafis had been arrested. “We woke up with this terrible news. We just can’t believe it,” she said. Ahsanullah called on the government to “get my son back home.” Bangladesh does not have the same record of involvement in global terrorism as Pakistan, with which it once formed a nation before winning its independence in 1971. At least one Bangladeshi was among those detained by the U.S. at Guantanamo Bay Naval Base in Cuba.

No comments

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *