She has a huge fan base, is at the top of the figures worldwide, and has won numerous awards for songs like Think Twice and My Heart Will Go On.
But after auto drivers joined the trend of blasting out Celine Dion’s songs at 2am, one New Zealand. town claims it has had enough.
Porirua citizens have started a petition to stop the commotion.
However, those who take part in the so-called alarm fights claim that they serve as a form of self-expression.
The fights involve large crowds of people congregating in a location with their cars while blasting songs from lights, which are more frequently used for emergency warnings.
The plan is to play songs from the lights as loudly and clearly as possible.
Paul Lesoa, one of the members of a group that runs alarm wars in Auckland, told the website that Celine Dion is well-liked because it is such an obvious song.” We try to use audio that has great treble, is obvious, and not much bass ,” he said.
The events are typically held all night long, and the cars may have anywhere from seven to ten sirens. As individuals source sirens electronically and wire speakers and amplifiers to car frames, it takes them weeks to get ready.
Mr. Lesoa expressed to The SpinOff his opinion that the stigma associated with the wars was unjust.
We simply enjoy dance and song, and doing so is preferable to nightclubbing or drinking in a city bar where fights break out, he claimed.
He claimed he had requested a licence from Auckland Council but had not heard back.
Everyone has a pastime, and while we are aware of how upsetting it can be, we simply want our own private, secure place to engage in it.
Citizens are” tired of the silence and condescending attitude shown by the government and the governor regarding this issue ,” according to Wes Gaarkeuken, the creator of a petition calling for an end to the sound wars in Porirua, on the North Island.
The petition, which has received hundreds of signatures, asks the Porirua City Council to put an end to the nighttime audio blasts.
Stephen Lewis, one of the men, wrote next to his name,” Nap is a basic human right.”
Diana Paris, a different person, acknowledged that while she enjoyed listening to Dion” in the comfort of my sofa and at my level ,” she did not enjoy hearing snippets of it sporadically between 7 p.m. and 2 am.
The Porirua City Council and those taking part in the siren battles had recently come to an agreement that required groups to travel to industrial areas and finish by 10 p.m. However, the city is once again plagued by wars.
Mayor Anne Barker expressed her” sick to death” of the wars to Radio New Zealand. and urged listeners to go back to places where no everyone would have to talk to them.
There isn’t a single place in our area where there are no houses that would listen to everything.