Music review: Celine Dion at Glasgow Hydro
Celine Dion ****
Hydro, Glasgow
It’s a foible of having a monumental hit that an artist might find themselves hemmed into that style, and Dion’s career has never been short of lung-filling torch songs to match My Heart Will Go On, the love theme to the movie Titanic, for which she will no doubt be remembered long after she’s gone; she even got to parody herself here with the first few lines delivered as a creaky old lady in her mid-80s, which the fans loved. Yet as her late husband and manager Rene Angelil – he died of cancer last year, and the standing ovation when she first mentioned his name was lengthy and genuine – used to tell her when she was starting out: “you don’t want a hit, Celine – you want a career.” This concert was an eye-opener, in the sense that Dion didn’t thoroughly demonstrate how that career had been achieved on the back of her repertoire of big-budget ballads, but on a vigorously hard-working representation of herself as a first-rate interpreter of other’s music.
She doesn’t write her own songs, she pointed out, but she’s happy to accept gifts like the bittersweet ballad Recovering, written by Pink in commemoration of Angelil. With an orchestra, a small brass section and a full band around her, Dion switched to crowd-pleasing type on Think Twice, Because I Love You and the inevitable encore of My Heart Will Go On.
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Hide AdYet it was the covers which elaborated on her range with a striking flourish, from Jennifer Rush’s The Power of Love to I Drove All Night and a strident, chin-up take on Queen’s The Show Must Go On. These and her indefatigable physical vitality while catwalking in trouser suits and performing a lithe dance piece with a Patrick Swayze lookalike on Pour que to m’aimes encore, to levels which came close to those of Jackson or Turner.