[ old news archives. . . ]
Saturday, February 24, 2001
Kevin Grounded By Weather
The Backstreet Boys were forced to take the stage at Denver's Pepsi Center on Feb. 20 without group member Kevin Richardson, who never made it to the gig thanks to weather-related airport delays. Although some fans sought out refunds, a Pepsi Center spokesperson says none will be offered since the show was performed as scheduled. Richardson is due to rejoin his bandmates in time for a Friday (Feb. 23) show in Vancouver.
Source: Billboard
Wednesday, February 21, 2001
Fans expect BSB mania to last awhile
By Paulette Tobin
Herald Staff Writer
Even if Rachael Olson weren't going to the Backstreet
Boys concert tonight, she wouldn't have to leave her
bedroom to see the faces and hear the songs of her
favorite group in the world.
That's because Olson, 16, has 14 Backstreet Boys CDs,
including albums, singles and imports, three Burger
King BSB action figures and stacks of books about the
Boys. One whole corner of her room is plastered from
floor to ceiling with color posters.
"I used to have about 400 posters. Every inch of my
walls were covered," she said. She would have put some
on the ceiling, too, but her mother, Darlene, said no.
Rachael has taken down many of the posters because her
father, John, plans to remodel her room.
Olson, a sophomore at Red River High School who sings
in the choir and works part-time at Hugo's, may be
typical of many of the BSB's devoted teen fans.
She's female, she can't get enough of the Boys, and
she's not swayed by BSB critics, especially teen-aged
boys who often seem as vehement in their dislike of
BSB as teen-aged girls seem enthusiastic in their
adoration. (Those boy critics would include Rachael's
13-year-old brother, Derek.)
"They're jealous," Olson said flatly of the group's
detractors. And she said she has a sure-fire way to
end any anti-BSB rants.
Source: Grand Forks Herald
Wednesday, February 6, 2001
Backstreet blab
Boys spill beans about Millionaire gig during MuchMusic talk-fest
By JANE STEVENSON -- Toronto Sun
TORONTO -- Call them the slow-fingered Boys. Or possibly trivia-challenged.
Backstreet Boys Kevin Richardson and Howie Dorough appear on two upcoming "rock star" episodes of Who Wants To Be A Millionaire -- airing Sunday night and one week from tonight -- but neither got to actually vie for the big bucks for their respective charities.
"We didn't get in the hot seat," Richardson let slip during an hour-long, live chat at MuchMusic last night with his four bandmates prior to the group's sold-out show tonight at SkyDome.
"I would have got in the hot seat if I was there," joked Nick Carter, who was originally going to be a Millionaire contestant but was called away to join his younger brother, Aaron, for a Disney special in Orlando, Fla.
"We actually drew Q-Tips and french fries to be in the hot seat," explained Dorough.
Normally Millionaire contestants, whose round to get into the much-desired hot seat is answered with a finger-controlled remote, are told to keep quiet about their tapings of the Regis Philbin-hosted show until the episodes are broadcast.
But Richardson made the admission last night after a fan, one of hundreds wielding stuffed animals and cameras on the street outside MuchMusic, asked why he subbed for Carter at the last minute.
Hey, it's not like they're perfect.
When the Boys were queried by a fan in the studio about what they "sucked at," four of the five admitted their weaknesses.
It ranged from basketball for Dorough to Monopoly for Carter.
But it was Richardson's blab about Millionaire that was probably the most interesting thing about the Boys visit to MuchMusic, which was dominated by lots of high-pitched screams and a station giveaway of two front row tickets to their Black & Blue show at SkyDome. (Eventually the group generously donated tickets to the four other qualifiers in the Backstreet trivia contest.)
Needless to say, while it all appeared to be enormously exciting for those on the front lines, it didn't exactly make for rivetting TV.
One e-mailer wanted to know if the group's five members were stranded on a desert island would they eat each other and, if so, who would be first?
The Boys all immediately looked at Carter, the biggest Backstreeter of the bunch.
"First of all, I don't know if we could eat each other man, I really don't think we could," said Carter. "I think we'd all have to die. I mean I know I wouldn't. If y'all ate me, I'd be mad."
Added A.J. McLean, the skinniest member: "They could use me as a toothpick once they're done eating someone else."
The visit by the Boys to MuchMusic prompted fans to begin camping outside the studio three days ago.
"I think it's pretty incredible that people have been waiting out here in the cold for three days," Richardson commented. "Not that we want you to do that all the time. It's nice but we don't want you to freeze to death."
The group's SkyDome show, where 55,000 fans are expected tonight, sold out in 75 minutes. There is a chance the Backstreet Boys might return sometime between July and September when they will perform a second leg of North American dates in stadiums.
Their world tour will see the Backstreet Boys perform 110 dates in 11 months and Carter says the bond between them has never been stronger.
"It's tighter than ever, honestly," he said. "We're going on eight years right now. You know, me and (Backstreet Boy) Brian (Littrell), we just talked about it. We've gone on this long and we just want to keep going. We want to be one of the longest groups of our kind to ever last. That's what we want to do."
Source: Allpop.com
Tuesday, February 6, 2001
Let the Screaming Begin
Let the screaming begin
On Wednesday, The Backstreet Boys bring their Black & Blue tour to the SkyDome
By JANE STEVENSON -- Toronto Sun
When the Backstreet Boys released their album, Black & Blue, last November, they probably didn't think that a group that broke up three decades ago would steal their thunder.
Or did they?
It wasn't just any band, after all, but The Beatles, whose collection of No. 1 hits was released one week before Black & Blue, and now appears destined to become the best-selling disc of all time.
"Well, I don't think we feel worthy of comparison to The Beatles," said band member Kevin Richardson during a press conference in New York the day of Black & Blue's release.
"I think that a lot of the hysteria that surrounds us, there's some similarities there, because they had quite a following and quite a young following."
No doubt both young and old members of the Boys' dedicated followers will be screaming their lungs out when the band's five members -- Richardson, Brian Littrell, Howie Dorough, Nick Carter and A.J. McLean -- take the stage at SkyDome on Wednesday night for a show that sold out in a mere 75 minutes.
The Black & Blue world tour kicked off with a three-night stand in Ft. Lauderdale on Jan. 22 with a 90-minute show that included a seven-piece band, 10 dancers, five costume changes -- one of which the audience gets to see -- a smaller stage closer to the fans, and 21 songs.
The show also has "the largest indoor concert set ever constructed," according to the Boys' label, Zomba Records.
The Associated Press described the tour launch as "a show mixing harmony-driven pop and dance with playful asides that worked fans into a frenzy."
The Boys opened the evening with Everyone, and returned for one encore, Shape Of My Heart, both songs from Black & Blue.
While Black & Blue -- along with the rest of the big pre-Christmas releases -- was left in the dust by The Beatles, it is by no means stiffing.
To date, it has sold 700,000 copies in Canada and 15 million worldwide. (Comparatively, 20 million copies of the Beatles' 1 album have been shipped worldwide.)
"I mean obviously we're all grown up, we're all getting older," said McLean of the band's more mature sound on Black & Blue. "But musically, we've definitely grown on this album. We took a trip down to the Bahamas with just us five in May or June. It was a writing trip. We didn't know how it was going to go, if we were going to try to kill each other or we were going to work together. And we came out with nine songs that we wrote, two of which were on the Black & Blue album -- Time and Answer To Our Lives.
"Just the fact that we wrote songs on this album shows a lot of growth for us personally. There's a lot more inspiration and a lot more participation from our side on this album. That shows growth musically, production-wise, and the same thing with our tours and everything. We're trying to just grow slowly with our fans and as a family and as a group. We're just taking it step by step and I'm sure the next album will be more of a growth."
And maybe some mini Backstreet boys -- or girls -- running around.
Both Richardson and Littrell have married since the last time the Backstreet Boys were in town.
In fact, Littrell's wedding will be part of InStyle: Celebrity Weddings airing on NBC tomorrow at 8 p.m.
Fans will get a chance to ask all of the group's members questions -- personal and otherwise -- when they pull into MuchMusic on Tuesday for an hour-long chat starting at 8 p.m.
Following their Toronto appearances, the group leaves for a Thursday night show in Pittsburgh. The first leg of the North American tour wraps up on March 18, but they are expected to return for a second leg of stadium dates from July through September.
Their world tour also takes the Backstreet Boys to Mexico and South America in April; Europe in May and June; and Japan, Australia and New Zealand in October and November.
"We've never taken our tour to Japan or to Australia," said Richardson. "And that's why with this Black & Blue world tour, it will first and foremost be an official world tour. We will go everywhere for the first time, and that's important to us."
And they'll apparently be doing it as a tight unit.
"The Black & Blue record is probably the most focused we've ever been as a group, the tightest we've ever been as a group," said Littrell, "and what's to come, we let that be."
Added Carter: "So to all those people out there, in the press community, that don't want pop music to continue on -- sorry."
-----------------------------
The BACKSTREET BOYS File
Kudos: Just won best pop-rock band honours at the American Music Awards. Their single, Show Me The Meaning Of Being Lonely, has garnered them a Grammy nomination for best pop vocal performance by a duo or group. The Grammys take place Feb. 21.
Millionaire contestants: Backstreet Boys' Kevin Richardson and Howie Dorough will appear on Who Wants To Be A Millionaire on Feb. 11 & 14.
Good Will: Backstreet Boy Kevin Richardson recently launched Just Within Reach: An Earth Foundation, a fundraising group for environmental issues.
Recent Dis: They "can't sing, can't play, can't dance ... they should be shot." -- Oasis braintrust Noel Gallagher during a press conference in Caracus, Venezuela.
Source: Toronto Sun
Monday, February 5, 2001
Few Tricks, Lots Of Treats
The Backstreet Boys deliver guilty
pleasures right up front
No one could accuse the Backstreet Boys of forgetting their fans. For the
opening number of their stirringly silly new tour, which glitzed its way
through the Meadowlands Saturday and razzle-dazzles Nassau Coliseum
tonight, the Boys sang "Everybody," the chorus of which endlessly declares,
"This one goes out to you."
They followed that with "Larger Than Life," in which the Boys credit their
very lives to the screaming millions. In addition, they featured countless
shots of adoring fans projected onto giant video screens, and shouted
things
into the pitch-dark arena like, "I'm so glad to see so many familiar faces
out
there!!"
Yes, fans, the Backstreet Boys do it all for you - even if that slogan was
cooked up by the burger company rival to the one that sponsors this tour.
Regardless, their show was the perfect equivalent to the entire fast food
industry. Both offer products that are oily, cheesy, most likely bad for
you
and utterly irresistible.
For every corny element of the Boys' production — and there were plenty
— the fivesome offered an expertly crafted piece of pop. In terms of
material, the Boys remain the Cadillac of the teen set. Over their four
albums, they've amassed so much strong material that, for this tour, they
could omit one of their best songs ("Quit Playing Games With My Heart")
and place no filler in its stead.
Clearly, the guys know their strength. While the competition ('N Sync,
Britney) have lately gone for more stridently upbeat material, the Boys'
specialty remains ballads with a backbeat.
Three quarters of their 21-song show, which runs an hour and 40 minutes,
centered on mid-paced material with killer choruses. This included "Show
Me The Meaning Of Being Lonely," "Shape Of My Heart," "More Than
That" and the impeccable "I Want It That Way" (even if the lyrics to "Want
It" are more indecipherable than the Dead Sea Scrolls).
Like all teen acts, their faster numbers show the unfortunate influence of
Michael Jackson's fake-sounding '80s rock tracks, circa "Bad." Small
wonder that songs like "Shining Star" and "Get Another Boyfriend" sounded
so forced.
But at least the Boys' voices have improved — especially A.J.'s, which
circumvents the others' squeakiness to add grit. They're writing well, too.
Two of the night's best songs, "Time" and "The Answer To Our Lives," are
their own.
On the other hand, their choreography constantly shuns sensuality for
bumbling athleticism. Their costumes are so tacky, they'd probably get
rejected by Siegfried and Roy. And their theatrics prove that while you can
take the Boys out of the theme parks, you can't do the reverse.
Then again, at least these Boys come by their bad taste honestly. And while
they may revel in cliches, they helped create them. Perhaps the best way to
view them, then, is as the modern equivalent of middle-of-the-road '70s
acts
like Bread and The Carpenters. In the end, there's as much to admire as to
lampoon.
Original Publication Date: 2/5/01
Oh Boys! A Crafty Show
Monday, February 5, 2001
By DAN AQUILANTE
WHEN the lights went out at the Meadowlands, before the Backstreet Boy's
took the stage, the arena's expanse of darkness peppered with thousands of
cobalt blue glow-sticks stood as a brilliant, yet subtle billboard for the
band's
latest album - "Black and Blue."
The night's color scheme wasn't lost on the kiddies too young to have
mastered
their ABCs, their moms and dad to whom they clung or their big sisters
screeching in adolescent glee awaiting this Saturday night date with the
objects
of desire - all five of them.
Right from the start, the Backstreeters - Nick, A.J., Brian, Kevin and
Howie -
looked dangerous in black long-rider trench coats (lined in blue velvet)
as they
spread out on the narrow deck of the arena-wide ship-shaped stage.
Not that the BSB needed any help to announce their arrival at the hall,
but the
pop superstars took no chances. The opening number was a no-holds-barred,
gee-whiz spectacle during which the band performing under a barrage of
indoor
fireworks that rained from the rafters. The eye candy lent the tune the
impression that the band was under attack.
That production number unglued the fans from their seats, which went mostly
unused for the remainder of the show. While the opening songs enjoyed their
share of banshee wails from the estrogen-charged audience, the highest
peaks
mounted by the Boys came during renditions of their best-known hits such
as "I
Want It That Way" and "Show Me the Meaning of Being Lonely," for which
they received a Grammy nomination this year.
You have to give the Backstreet Boys credit: They worked every tune as if
they
were hungry young boxers trying to deliver a knockout punch. On song three,
the funky "Shining Star," the Boys connected and had the adoring girls on
the
mat. After the intense calisthenics of the first three tunes, Backstreet
relaxed
with a bump 'n' grind ballad that allowed everyone to catch their breath.
That proved to be the basic formula of the concert, three fast numbers with
fancy footwork, then a ballad. It's interesting to note that the star of
the show is
the Backstreet Boys, not an individual Backstreet Boy. That isn't to say
each
member of this vocal group doesn't have his own following, but in concert
they
share the spotlight with an unexpected lack of ego and a sense of
democracy.
That leads to confusion as to who is actually a song's lead, - especially
when the
group is bopping around stage surrounded by their dance troupe.
Since nearly every song in the 20-song set received a costume change,
the band disguised these dead moments with a number of ploys. The most
memorable was the ancient vaudeville trick where the Boys, one at a
time, entered a single steamer trunk on stage to the pleasant piano strains
of Scott Joplin's "The Entertainer."
Kevin had the night's funniest line after his four cohorts were "in" the
trunk. He turned to the roadies in the wings and said, "OK, boys, toss it
into the Hudson." He then entered the box himself. From there the action
was directed to the dressing room via video where the Boys offered the
girls peeks at pecs and Monkee-ed around in the locker room.
What the fans didn't realize was that the horseplay was a tape, allowing
the band enough time to change clothes, stop sweating and head to the
other side of the arena to emerge from the floor of a secondary stage
singing their romantic ballad "Shape of My Heart," the debut single from
"Black and Blue."
At the close of the tune, an elaborate arena-long bridge was lowered
from the ceiling, which not only solved the problem of getting the lads
back onto the main stage, it served as a way for the entire house - even
those in the nosebleed seats - to get a view of these teen idols.
Between the infectious dance pop, precise hoofing and terrific staging, the
show was good entertainment that titillated but never ventured into the
risque. This is a band that works at its craft, and their effort shows in
concert.
Source: New York Post
Source: New York Post
Saturday, February 3, 2001
Grammy Predictions from Wall Of Sound
Best Pop Performance by a Duo or Group With Vocal
Who Should Win: The Backstreet Boys. The Barenaked Ladies just aren't quite Grammy material yet; The Corrs are gorgeous but are they really the Best?; Steely Dan has the outsider's chance (though the thought of a song about lusting after one's own kin winning a Grammy is slightly disturbing); and the members of 'N Sync now have enough cash to buy themselves multiple Grammies. This year, the Backstreets took the high road in the boy-band wars, their harmonies are solid, and they're so gosh-darned earnest. Let's hear it for the Boys.
Who Will Win: The Backstreet Boys. If the category is taken literally, the five lads truly did turn in the best pop performance with the melodramatic "Show Me the Meaning of Being Lonely."
Chill Factor
Despite the sales of teen acts such as the Backstreet Boys, many radio stations are giving them the cold shoulder as they envision the trend coming to end.
By GEOFF BOUCHER, Times Staff Writer
Roll through the nation's radio dials these days and listen closely--you just might hear the sound of the youth-pop wave beginning to ebb. You won't be hearing it in what the Top 40 stations play, but in what they're not playing.
The bonanza of boy bands and teen queens--led by Britney Spears, the Backstreet Boys and 'N Sync--has been the dominant success story in pop the past two years, but for months industry leaders at record companies, retail and radio have whispered: "How long can this last?"
At radio, the groundswell opinion now says the end is near.
"It's as if there's a sense by a lot of radio programmers that now is the time that they're supposed to end the cycle," says Sky Daniels, general manager of Radio & Records, an industry trade publication. "It's definitely out there, you can see it in the numbers."
Take Spears' new song, "Stronger," which has been one of the best-selling singles in the country for weeks and reached No. 1 last month. On the newest Billboard magazine airplay chart, though, it's nowhere to be found among the 100 top songs at pop radio.
The newest songs from 'N Sync and the Backstreet Boys have fared better at Top 40 radio, but neither is dominating the playlists as their hits did just a few months ago. And it's not just the old familiar faces getting the chilly treatment--the new youth-pop squad O-Town is No. 5 on the album chart, and its song "Liquid Dreams" has been a fixture at the top of the sales chart for a month. But you won't find that song among the top airplay songs either.
All of this prompted Billboard to write recently that radio has "turned up its nose" at the pop stars and that "times, they are a-changin' in the world of youth-oriented pop music, even for seemingly untouchable heroes."
Considering the still-strong album sales of the genre, the radio trend may not be a response to any fan fatigue among those loyal to the acts, says Jeff Pollack, a consultant to more than 100 radio stations across the country.
"It's hard to say it's cooling off because it's still so enormously successful: the tours, the album sales, everything else. But if it's leveling off at radio, I think the reason is some Top 40 stations want to show more of a multidimensional sound so listeners aren't hearing the same thing every time they turn the radio on."
All this is creating headaches for Joe Riccitelli, the vice president of pop promotion at Jive Records, the powerhouse label in the youth-pop movement with Spears, 'N Sync and the Backstreeters on the roster.
Riccitelli spends much of his time lobbying pop radio leaders to play Jive acts, and that job has gotten harder, not easier, as Spears and 'N Sync have reached superstar saturation levels.
"The way I learned it, pop radio was supposed to reflect pop culture," Riccitelli said. "But I think sometimes programmers over-think things and lose their way. That's where we are with Britney. I don't see anyone questioning the [youth-pop] trend right now except for pop radio."
Riccitelli says radio programmers at pop stations are not as fervent about youth pop as their listeners are, which leads them to tire more quickly of individual songs. In addition, many programmers have watched the cycles of music fads through the years and assume that the current craze is short-lived. "That may be part of it," he says.
Riccitelli isn't the only one who sees an over-eagerness among radio programmers to prove their prowess as forecasters.
"Programmers are saying, 'At any moment this is going to go, and I want to be the first one to proclaim it,' " Daniels said. "They want to be trend-setting. They don't want to be the last one to pull out. . . . Sometime the cycles change because there is a backlash from the fans, but you have to ask yourself: Do you see any backlash from the fans right now toward Britney Spears? The answer is no."
Radio programmers, however, place much of their taste-making trust in "call-out research," their ongoing surveys of listeners, Pollack says. While the most ardent fans will barrage a station with requests for their favorite acts and scoop up all their albums, it's these surveys that the radio industry has found to be the most accurate antennae of their general audience's opinion.
"Sometimes records that sell don't research well, and that's the barometer," Pollack said. "What's happening with the Spears song, clearly, is it's not working. So radio decided to bail on it even though it's selling. . . . The research shows that while fans are buying it, they're super-young fans. If you want 18- to 34-year-olds and it's only teens, you don't play it. But that's the reason, not the personal feelings of programming people. These people are not in the business of avoiding things that are popular."
This apparent disconnect and the assorted theories about its cause have been a much-discussed topic in the music industry in recent weeks, says Jay Marose, a partner in the music management company Cherry Miller Kane. Marose had the vantage point of a front-row seat during the youth-pop explosion in his former job as publicity director for Trans Continental Records, the Florida hit factory that first delivered 'N Sync, the Backstreet Boys, O-Town and Aaron Carter to the pop scene.
Will Less Radio Play Hurt Album Sales?
"The people who program these stations are older and they are largely fans of rock, and I think they have some resentment toward these pop stars and their success," Marose said. "You have this situation now where the most passionate fans of music, the people that are buying the most records, aren't hearing the music on the radio."
Though Daniels predicts the radio flight from teen pop will prematurely end the genre's life, Marose sees the biggest stars chugging along on their own power.
"Established acts don't necessarily need radio to drive their album sales," Marose said. "But radio is vital to break new acts. O-Town isn't getting radio airplay, but they had their own TV show. How do you launch the next group that doesn't have that?"
MTV has not followed the radio reduction of teen pop, according to Tom Calderone, senior vice president of music and talent for the powerful music channel. Part of that is due to the increased variety of forums afforded to a video channel. Besides videos, MTV can present Spears and others in concert footage, talk shows, award galas, etc., which means artists don't "burn out" with the audience as quickly as they do from a radio station repeating the same single over and over.
Calderone, a former radio programmer and consultant, says an even more important distinction is audience goal: MTV is thrilled to tap a young audience while most radio stations aspire to get an older demographic.
"I think where Top 40 radio is right now is that Britney, Backstreet Boys and 'N Sync are still part of the fabric of those stations, but they have to look at the Lenny Kravitzes, the Jennifer Lopezes, the Matchbox Twenties of the world because they will bring that older audience to the radio station. . . . Our audience feedback is still extremely strong, and the economics of television as far as demographics go are different than what radio has to deliver."
But do these pop heroes even need Top 40 radio? Spears' name was the most-searched-for among music stars on the Internet, and she's about to begin work on a new film. Spears, 'N Sync and the Backstreet Boys are still staples on youth-embracing Disney Radio and Nickelodeon, and all three acts had a global stage last weekend as part of the Super Bowl.
"We still view pop radio as a big part of the plans for all of these artists, a very important part," Jive Records' Riccitelli said. "It's not the only thing, certainly, but I don't want to know if we can do without it."
New Photos
Left pic:Nick with his new dog!
Thursday, February 1, 2001
Backstreet Boys: Well-orchestrated for frenzied fans
By A.D. Amorosi
The noise level at a sold-out Backstreet Boys show is devastating. Strolling the First Union Center concourse on Tuesday, minutes before the opening of a two-night stand by the quintet, wee girls accessorized with cell phones, braces, and Burger King crowns bearing BSB likenesses screech excitedly about the impending show. Throughout the concert, when I'm not pummeled by signs declaring the girls' love, I'm stupefied by the jet-engine roar of their screams.
Frenzy on this level is teenybop legend: Elvis, the Beatles, 'N Sync. But none of their fans nearly threw up on me out of sheer, rabid anticipation. (Not that I haven't been barfed on at a concert. But that behavior is normally the province of Lynyrd Skynyrd fans.)
The show opened with Krystal, a 19-year-old BSB prodigy from Indiana who looks and sounds like a Mouseketeer Sinead O'Connor. The singer, who has a single ("Supergirl") but no album yet, has a screech that managed to be even more painful than the sound of the audience, which by this time had achieved the level of white noise.
The Backstreet Boys' steel-blue stage, which matched the eye shadow worn by most of the audience, is long and narrow, like a ship. The last time I saw nautical staging was at a Village People concert. But this ain't no disco, and the guys - emboldened by awe-inspiring rear projection, fireballs, and dancers in Druid paramilitary gear - ain't foolin' around.
Howie Dorough, Nick Carter, the listless Kevin Richardson (whose phenomenally ill-advised makeover has him looking like a cross between Satan and Robert Louis Stevenson), Brian Littrell (the crowd fave), and A.J. McLean entered to a pumped-up "Everyone," dressed in black leather and in black-and-blue shirts to go with the title of their new CD. The guys' costuming is as well-orchestrated as their songs. Soulful synth ballads and Spanglish mid-tempo romps such as "Shining Star" and the crisp "I Want It That Way" get relaxed-fit outfits in bright colors. Hard Euro-tech tracks, such as "Larger Than Life," "The Call" and "Everybody (Backstreet's Back)," that blend arching melodies, ABBA orchestration and Jam & Lewis rhythm, call for darker clothes.
But color coordination can't mask bad dancing, and BSB's moves - widely considered second to 'N Sync's - are still stilted and high-schoolish. Weirdly, that frailty comes as a relief. It lends the fivesome some humanity, always in short supply in processed pop, and is the group's most surprising trait.
BSB's ballads - guided mostly by Littrell, but lifted elegantly by the members' unified harmonies - were silken smooth, as always. Like the sleek '80s soul of DeBarge and the Jets, "Shape of My Heart," "Show Me the Meaning of Being Lonely," and "Time" soared with sweaty adult emotion and heaven-sent vocals while never losing the youthful zeal that makes the now-eight-years-running Backstreet Boys so screamy-dreamy to kids.
Bobby: Bristol Township boy's wish comes true
The student at the Easter Seal Society for Handicapped Children and Adults in Middletown and his family traveled in style via a white stretch limousine to the First Union Center to see the band perform the first of its two-show stop in Philadelphia on its Black and Blue World Tour. The band will perform again tonight at 7:30.
Excitement and anxiety built for Bobby, during the more than three-hour wait from the time he arrived at the First Union Center until the time he finally focused his big brown eyes on his five heroes.
The trip was set up by The Sunshine Foundation, which grants the wishes of terminally ill, handicapped and abused children.
Although tickets to the concert and the limousine ride were promised to Bobby weeks ago, a meeting between Bobby and his idols didn't come together until 4 p.m. on Monday.
According to Sunshine Foundation volunteer Kelly Dansky, tickets and the limo ride weren't enough. "That wasn't his wish, so we couldn't stop trying," Dansky said.
The Backstreet Boys has done more than just help Bobby become motivated with his schoolwork and socialization. His love for the band and its music has helped him with verbalization, something that doesn't come easy for him.
Bobby and others who have cerebral palsy have impaired muscle control caused by nerve or brain damage occurring about the time of birth. It has limited Bobby's motor skills and his speech, because he can't control the facial muscles needed for speech. In addition, he is unable to feed himself and can eat only soft foods.
According to his mother, Marie, Bobby's interest in the Backstreet Boys started when she purchased the group's "Live from Orlando" videotape for her daughter Brittany in 1998. Bobby immediately took to it, dancing and trying to sing with his toy microphone all summer. Come September, both his parents and his teachers at the Easter Seal Society noticed improvement with his verbalizations.
After Bobby watched the videotape repeatedly, his father, Rob Naylor, said, the child could pronounce B's. He could say Bobby and Brian.
Since the first time he watched the videotape, Bobby was hooked and wanted to meet the Backstreet Boys.
And at approximately 8:30 p.m. last night, Bobby got his wish when the five members of the boy band bent over to hug Bobby or shake his hand.
Brian Littrell is Bobby's favorite Backstreet Boy, and Bobby's happy to tell you just that verbally and also on his DynaVox.
A DynaVox is an augmentative communication device that lets Bobby speak through it by touching a computerized "touch screen." He has two pages of Backstreet Boys conversation starters programmed into his DynaVox so he can talk about his favorite band.
Littrell was visibly touched when Bobby pushed a symbol on his DynaVox which said "Do you know Brian [Littrell] had an operation on his heart? He is all better now."
"Wow," Littrell said.
Band member Kevin Richardson told Bobby," I like your outfit," referring to his Halloween costume, a copy of the outfit the Backstreet Boys wore during its Millennium Tour.
Bobby's mom, Marie, made the costume featuring Bobby as Brian. She didn't stop there. She created the rest of the group with papier-mache heads and matching costumes, rigging the four characters to his wheelchair.
The group had seen pictures of the costume, and Richardson told Bobby, "That was awesome."
And so is Bobby's social calendar, which doesn't end with last night's concert. He'll be one of seven children-guests at the Sunshine Foundation's Annual Ball in Cherry Hill on Saturday. The others will find out that their wish, like Bobby's, will come true.
Wednesday, January 31, 2001
Possible Next Single
According to the DJ on Kiis Fm 102.7 (L.A.) the next single from "Black and Blue" will be "Get Another Boyfriend". Note that this is NOT an official announcement!
Backstreets Booed
The Backstreet Boys were greeted by booing and heckling when they sung the National Anthem at the 35th American Super Bowl on Sunday.
The fivesome attended the grand Super Bowl ceremony at the Raymond James Stadium in Tampa, Florida and were shocked when sections of the 100,000 crowd vented their anger that the group had been bestowed such an honour.
Crowd members say the guys were not only eclipsed by the half-time show featuring Britney Spears, Nelly, Mary J Blige, Aerosmith and their rivals 'N Sync, with the latter two teaming up for Aerosmith's classic Walk This Way, but were even overshadowed by the pre-game opening act the legendary Ray Charles performing America The Beautiful.
However, there was some comfort for the heartthrobs when the announcer who introduced them did so with the words, 'the world's most successful singing group.'
Backstreet Boys' world tour, in support of their latest album Black & Blue, continues for 10 months. Jamaican-born Shaggy has confirmed his support slot on the summer leg of the tour alongside Destiny's Child, Jessica Simpson and Aaron Carter, younger brother of Backstreet Boy Nick. Shaggy showed his respect of the band when he argued in support of their success. 'They deserve it man,' he said. 'They work their asses off. But I tell you what, them boys, you should just call them shovels, cos they kinda paved the way for this whole boy band phenomenon.'
Watch Backstreet Boys Howie Dorough, Nick Carter and Kevin Richardson discussing their future and their views on stalkers in worldpop's video interview.
Source: Wall Of Sound
Source: latimes.com
Right pic:BSB in rehearsals in Los Angeles!
Source: Philly.com
FOR THE INQUIRER
Source: phillyBurbs.com
Last night was larger than life for 7-year-old Bristol Township resident Bobby Naylor, who got to meet his favorite band, the Backstreet Boys.
Source: Worldpop