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Born in Belgium, raised in Italy, Lara Fabian is now ready to conquer the world from her current perch in Montreal. Indeed, she's already topped the six-million mark in sales in the French-speaking world, and it's easy to see why on LARA FABIAN, the young singer's commanding English language debut. Her passion-fueled vocal pop traces its roots not only to another French-speaking diva, Celine Dion, but back to the root: the soulful, stylized gushings of Barbra Streisand. Fabian isn't afraid to charge each breath and note with all-cards-on-the-table emotion, her booming, cathartic voice soaring above clean, studio-bred arrangements that effortlessly fuse keys, strings, and rock-based elements. As if to show that she's a serious vocalist, Fabian begins the album with an interpretation of the familiar classical theme "Adagio" and closes with an even more sumptuous Italian version that will leave goosebumps on your neck as she surges toward -- and captures -- the high notes. Fabian flirts with the contemporary R&B world on the slinky "Till I Get Over You," produced with help from ex-Color Me Badd member Sam Watters, and the punchy, resolute "I Am Who I Am," which could be her anthem. Piano accompaniment and a sax run lend "Part of Me" a light-jazz sensibility, but the lush choir backing Fabian on the resounding final chorus makes it big enough to fill a stadium. Another show-stealer is the dramatic "To Love Again," which could go head-to-head with Dion's "My Heart Will Go On" if it weren't for the bombastic guitar solo stealing some of Fabian's thunder. This singer doesn't need such studio flourishes to make her point -- her voice does all the work for her. This may be the first you hear from Lara Fabian, but it certainly won't be the last. Lydia Vanderloo, Barnes & Noble