9.01.2009

Backstreet Boys Lean on Classic Influences, Fresh Collaborations on October LP “This Is Us”

8/28/09, 11:49 am EST

Photo: Ray Kay

Call them pop’s longest-running, most persistent group. Call them men, not boys. Just don’t call it a comeback. “We almost named the album that,” jokes Nick Carter, one-fourth of the Backstreet Boys, whose seventh studio effort, This Is Us, is slated for release on October 6th. “We’re the Brett Favres of the music industry.” Clearly, he and his bandmates are fed up with the public perception that they’ve taken an extended time out. They’re not ‘NSync, after all. “It does frustrate me,” says Brian Littrell. “Everybody asks, ‘Where have you been? What have you been doing?’ When we’re, like, ‘We’ve been touring the world, and working our butts off!’ ”


OK, so maybe the boy-band racket isn’t what it used to be. There are no million-plus first week sellers in today’s music business, and so many outlets vying for your attention that it’s easy to miss a respectable showing like Backstreet’s 2007 album, Unbreakable. Which is one reason why A.J. McLean, Howie Dorough, Carter and Littrell are looking back to a proven formula with This Is Us. “The idea was going back to those great R&B ballads as well as dance songs you can shake your butt to,” McLean explains. “And we were fortunate enough to work with some amazing writers and producers who got our concept and everything fit perfectly.”


Among the industry heavies to lend a hand: Ne-Yo, T-Pain, Pitbull, Ryan Tedder, Max Martin, RedOne, and beatmaker Jim Johnson. “The production on this record has been pushed a little more,” says McLean. “It’s edgy and current but also shows our love for the pop-R&B that we grew up on.” Carter interjects: “Jodeci, Boys II Men, Shai, New Edition… we had to go back and remember our influences and what taught us in the years when we were developing into a band.” And Littrell adds that if you were to take away all the bells and whistles, the basics of the song with that Backstreet sweet spot is what defines their raison d’etre. “That’s why Michael Jackson was a true artist,” he says, “because you could take away every beat and every layer and just dance to his voice. That vocal instrument is what we’ve always known, and I can honestly say without this sounding egotistical: when we sing collectively, there is a magic.”


Of course, they weren’t always in control of their instruments. Dorough likens recording sessions in the group’s early days in Florida to a “cold audition.” “We were all trying to find ourselves and our sound and working with producers that didn’t know any of our voices,” he recalls. Says Littrell: “We’d go in the studio, sing the whole song and we wouldn’t know who was singing what until we got the final mix from the label. We were kids and it was, like, ‘Wow.’ ”


Having seen their share of highs and lows over a 17-year career, the guys say that they’re now in a good place. “There’s really no conflict at all,” says Carter. “Our chemistry flows, we know what our strengths and weaknesses are, our goals are all the same and we work as a team.” Adds Dorough, “There’s no egos, no competition, we just want to make the best record we can.”


And aside from Carter’s brief stint as a TV star on E!’s House of Carters, the group hasn’t resorted to the usual promotional ploys — not that reality shows haven’t come knocking. “We had one offer to do a show about replacing Kevin [Richardson, who left the group in 2006], which we would never do,” McLean scoffs. For now, Aaron Carter will keep a foot in that world by competing on Dancing With The Stars this fall. “I’m so proud of him from coming out of such lows,” says the elder Carter, who’s lost 56 pounds in the last two years. “I’ve been there — I’ve changed my physical appearance and done things to better myself and he’s doing the same thing. I think he’s going to show a large amount of people how talented he is and that he really does deserve to have a shot in this industry.”


To that end, Carter and crew have some wisdom to impart on their presumptive successors, the Jonas Brothers. “Have a good balance and perspective on what you do,” offers Littrell. “I call it clocking in and out — I clock in to be a Backstreet Boy and at the end of the day, I wanna clock out, go home and be a husband and father. We rode a wave for, like, 10 years straight that was just go, go, go! We knew nothing different and we were sacrificing relationships with our own families because we were working all the time.” Adds Carter, “And invest your money wisely. Everybody knows you have your peaks and valleys and you need a good foundation.” Litrell couldn’t agree more. “Have a backup plan of who you are as a person,” he says. “Because once you get to the top, there’s only one way down and you have to land like a little butterfly — softly. That’s what we’ve done.”

SOURCE: Rolling Stone

7.07.2009

Backstreet Boys will not perform in Bucharest

The American band Backstreet Boys, initially scheduled to perform at the Polyvalent Hall on November 28, has canceled the show in Bucharest, the website of the band announced, following last week’s news that Bucharest would be on the list of the cities where the band plans to promote its latest recording.

According to the latest entry posted on the official blog of the band, Backstreet Boys has scheduled a show in Bamberg, Germany, on November 28.
This autumn, the band will kick of the “This Is Us” World Tour, promoting the homonymous album, due to be launched this year. The band will perform in cities such as Lisbon, Madrid, Manchester, Glasgow, London, Munich, Berlin, Dublin, Zagreb, Warsaw, Helsinki, etc.

The band Backstreet Boys was nominated to the Grammy Awards and sold over 100 million copies of their albums throughout their career, and was one of the most popular boy bands of all times.

The band was set up in 1993 and has sold over 75 million albums all over the world. Their first two albums, ‘Backstreet Boys’ and ‘Millennium’, were sold in over ten million copies in the United States alone.

Backstreet Boys rocketed to fame in the formula Nick Carter, Howie Dorough, Brian Littrell, AJ McLean and Kevin Richardson. In 2006, Richardson decided to leave his colleagues.

SOURCE

The band’s most famous songs include “Quit Playing Games (With My Heart),” “As Long As You Love Me,” “Everybody (Backstreet’s Back)” and “All I Have To Give”.

5.08.2009

Backstreet Boy Becomes Backstreet Dad

7-May-2009
Written by: Kelcey Bridges

Backstreet Boy, Howie Dorough welcomes a baby boy. Backstreet Boy, Howie Dorough welcomes a baby boy. Backstreet Boy Howie Dorough welcomes a baby boy.

It’s a Backstreet Boy for Howie Dorough and wife Leigh. The couple's son, James Hoke Dorough came into the world on May 6, at 2:30 p.m. The baby was not due until June, but decided to make his grand debut a little early weighing in at 4.5 lbs. and 16 1/4” inches long. James’ middle name will honor Howie’s father who passed away from brain and lung cancer last year.

According to a statement released on the Backstreet Boys website,

“Both Mommy and baby are doing great and Howie D is an ecstatic new daddy. They’d like to thank everyone for their well wishes!!”

Baby James is number three in the tradition of little boy Backstreet babies. Fellow band mate Brian Littrell has a son Baylee, 6, and former band mate Kevin Richardson also has a son, Mason, 22 months.

Currently the Backstreet Boys are recording their seventh studio album, slated for release later this year.


Source: Celebrity Cafe

Backstreet's Howie Dorough and Wife Leigh Welcome Baby Boy

HOLLYWOOD, Calif. — Howie Dorough is now a father!

The Backstreet Boy and his wife, Leigh, welcomed a baby boy Wednesday afternoon in Los Angeles, a rep for the pair confirmed to People.


The couple's first child, James Hoke Dorough, was born at 2:30 p.m. He weighed in at 4½ pounds and measured 16¼ inches, the magazine said.


Dorough met his future wife in 2000 when she was hired on to manage his band's official Web site. They were married on Dec. 8, 2007.


Dorough and his wife, both 35, announced the pregnancy in January.


"I know she's going to be a great mother," he told People when announcing the news. "If she can take care of me, the biggest baby in the entire world, I think she's going to be okay with the little one coming along."

Source: American Superstar

Backstreet Boy Howie Dorough Welcomes First Child

Singer Howie Dorough and his wife Leigh, both 35, became first-time parents yesterday afternooon with the birth of their son, James Hoke Dorough, PEOPLE.com reports.

According to the article, the couple announced the pregnancy in January and said they were hoping for a boy who could carry on the family name.

James was born healthy, despite arriving about a month early. He weighed 4 1/2 pounds and measured 16 1/4 inches at birth.

Both Dorough and his fellow Backstreet Boys announced the news on Twitter.

Source: Breaking Tweets