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List Price: $11.98 | | Label: Sony
Salesrank: 123564
Released: May 31, 1994 |
| Our Price: $4.53 |
| Used Price: $0.88 |
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| Media: Audio CD |
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Dion Chante Plamondon Track Listing:
1. Des Mots Qui Sonnent
2. Monde Est Stone
3. Fils de Superman
4. Je Danse Dans Ma Tête
5. Blues du Businessman
6. Garcon Pas Comme Les Autres (Ziggy)
7. Zuelqu'un Que J'Aime, Quelqu'un Qui M'Aime
8. Uns Contres Les Autres
9. Oxygene
10. Amour Existe Encore
Dion Chante Plamondon Reviews:
Celine Dion la Amour a Francaise et Etats-Unis 
2008-12-22 - Well what can I say about the exquisite ear shattering vocals of the supreme French prima donna.... I like many other Celine Dion fans love her French and English music. She could sing the phonebook and it would still sound like a sweet melody. Anyway my favorite song from this cd would have to be ziggy... i love how a young celine has a romantic interest in the most unavailable boy a gay, extremely hot man. Well I would recommend this to anyone who loves great music that comes from the soul.
Celine's best 
2007-09-01 - I've listened to everything Celine's ever recorded and if you want to hear her at her very best, buy this CD. Her voice defies description and Plamondon's lyrics will tear your heart out. I've heard Blues du Businessman hundreds of times and it still kills me. I'm beginning to think artists are so much better in their native tongue and this CD proves it. Celine has become a caricature of herself and how I wish she'd go back to this unaffected style. It is perfection.
Not her best, but still good :-) 
2007-08-14 - Celine brings it to us in french once more and as usual her voice reverberates beautifully. A worthwhile buy if you love her music!
80's Rock 
2007-03-07 - This CD is a not only a great example of the diverse talent of Céline Dion, but also a wonderful example of 1980's rock. It has many catchy tunes, several you'll hear again many years later on other Céline Dion CD's re-recordered into another language. I highly recommend this CD.
Buy this one...and D'eux (The French Album) 
2003-10-09 - Generally Cline gets lost in translation. Her English recordings vary from classic to awful, but too often feature middle-of-the-road, saccharine pop pablum (I love pop, but good pop). And for the first 10 years or so she recorded in French the same was largely true. Songs about Mum and Dad and God and teenage crushes on boys. Though to be fair she started recording when she was 12...and never really had a childhood as a result.
This is the album that made teh francophone world take notice of Cline as a chanteuese. The range of songs is impressive (rock, pop, dance, ballads). She takes artistic risks too: Le Blues du Businessman is a song written for a man to sing, and Le Monde est Stone has traditionally been recorded as a more airy, ethereal paen to confusion in modern times--Cline rips it with passion and gusto. And it works.
With Dion Chante Plamondon we got our first glimpse that Cline is perhaps the greatest song interpreter of her generation. Her next album en franais, D'eux, is the one that made her an artistic force in the French speaking world. It's a shame she can't sing the sorts of songs here and on D'eux in English--but English record buyers don't seem to be very open to songs about waitresses confused by her weed-whacked customers (Le Monde est stone here), or the obsessive rants of a rejected lover (Pour que tu m'aimes encore, on D'eux). Buy these records