| If Kristina Maria is one of Canada’s  hottest rising stars – and she most definitely is – it’s destiny. Really. Just  ask the rising star herself. “I think music picked me,” says Kristina Maria,  22. “It’s just something that I knew. I used to hum on key before I could even  speak.” She knew her destiny growing up in a  Lebanese-Canadian family in Ottawa and now thousands of Canadians know it too.  Her ultra-catchy first two singles, Let’s Play and Co-Pilot, have already  garnered digital sales of close to 100,000 units over the past year and nabbed  her mucho radio airplay right across Canada. Her infectious dance-pop has  netted this young over-achiever a record deal in France, with the noted Wagram  label, and the American record-industry scouts have begun to take an avid  interest in this talented young woman.
 She spent the past 18 months in  recording studios all around the globe – with pit-stops in Sweden, Anguilla,  New York City, Los Angeles, Montreal and Miami - working to get the musical  magic just right for her debut album, the appropriately-titled Tell the World,  which is due to formally introduce Kristina Maria to everyone with open ears in  March, 2012. She co-wrote 11 of the 14 songs and she’s collaborated with some  of the hotter writers and producers in contemporary pop, including Kristian  Lundin, Andreas Carlsson, Anders Bagge, Peer Astrom, Billy Steinberg, Josh Alexander,  and JC Chasez from ‘N Sync. Collectively these tunesmiths and knob-twirlers  have worked with Céline Dion, Madonna, Janet Jackson, Katy Perry, Britney  Spears, the Backstreet Boys and Jennifer Lopez.
 Kristina Maria was able to hook up with  all these A-listers thanks in large part to her manager Vito Luprano, the  Montreal music-man who was one of the key players in the Céline Dion success  story. Let’s just say Luprano has most of these folks on speed dial! A friend  slipped Luprano a demo recording two years ago and Luprano was immediately  smitten. The partnership was sealed the first time they met. “She started  singing a cappella and I stopped her and said – ‘You have a deal!’,” recalls  Luprano.
 In grade three, Kristina told her mother  – ‘I don’t need math. I’m going to become a singer.” And she wasn’t kidding.  She’d sing every chance she got – from family parties to talent shows – and she  began intensive vocal training at the Ottawa Conservatory. To unwind, she’d  sing with her brothers’ rap buddies. Kids at the high school would be partying  on a Friday night but she was always happier hanging at the Conservatory  developing her vocal chops.
 Now the hard work is paying off and  Kristina Maria still has difficulty believing her good fortune.
   “I still have a  hard time wrapping my head around it. It’s surreal.” No Kristina Maria – it’s real!
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