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Post by Admin on Nov 13, 2019 17:46:11 GMT
Céline Dion needs her courage more than ever. On Tuesday, the Canadian music icon dropped the new music video for her single “Courage” from her upcoming album of the same name. After opening with a segment of Dion being made up for the video, the singer is then left to perform alone, all shot in stark black and white. Fans first got to hear the song when it was released on Sept. 18, the same day she set out on her “Courage” world tour. Dion’s Courage album is set for release this Friday, Nov. 15.
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Post by Admin on Nov 14, 2019 18:32:16 GMT
And on this episode of Celine Dion Is Iconic, please watch this entire short clip of her talking about her favorite "meal" from an interview with CBS this morning. First Celine acknowledges that what she's about to say is not quite a meal. And then she goes into singing the "Peanut Butter Jelly Time" song really fast.
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Post by Admin on Nov 15, 2019 17:41:53 GMT
Céline Dion - Lovers Never Die (Official Audio) What was predictable, and warranted, was the fact that Dion’s next album, “Courage,” would be dedicated to mourning and un-mooring, to loss, to the universal feelings all of us have when we lose someone/anyone dear. That’s Dion’s role in the music world: take an intimate moment, be it a lover’s kiss or a child’s cry, shout it out loud, and do it with enough drama and treacle that Andrew Lloyd Webber would get a nosebleed at the very thought. Dion’s best moments, be it “All by Myself” or “My Heart Will Go On,” are nothing if not a combination of moody mawkishness, grandstanding theater and syrupy bombast. With Dion’s comfort zone well established, the best thing that she and her production team (or, rather, teams, as word has it the vocalist had nearly 50 tracks from which to choose, not counting songs penned for her since 2016 from Diane Warren and Pink) could do was freshen her sound. That’s understandable. The currency of ’90s nostalgia is part of Dion’s resurgence, even if anything too retro would fall flat or seem desperate. The most glorious, and authentic, moments on “Courage,” then, address bereavement, fear and finality in that pearl-clutching, gasping-for-air singing style that is Dion’s, and Dion’s alone. Co-written by Sam Smith and produced by Stargate, “For the Lover That I Lost” grabs loss by the collar, draws it close and shouts it down, gorgeously.
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Post by Admin on Nov 16, 2019 18:29:13 GMT
Céline Dion weighs in on the heated debate about whether Rose could have saved Jack at the end of Titanic by making room on that door, and Jimmy helps her take her first selfie.
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Post by Admin on Nov 17, 2019 20:49:32 GMT
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