The
‘Back Street Boys’ are back on streets
It's been nearly five years since the Backstreet Boys had released
a new album, but as the all-too-literal title of 2005's Never Gone
makes clear, they don't want fans to call their fourth LP a comeback
- in their mind, they've been here for years.
That's
not strictly true, since all five members have disappeared from
the charts, if not the tabloid headlines, since their 2000 flop,
Black & Blue. While fellow teen pop icons like Justin Timberlake
and Christina Aguilera has successful transitions into adulthood,
while Jessica Simpson turned reality TV star and Mandy Moore turned
genuine actress (for pity's sake, we will ignore Britney Spears'
horrifying descent into white trash abyss), Kevin Richardson, Howie
Dorough, and Brian Littrell all faded away as A.J. McLean suffered
a very public addiction to various substances.
Nick
Carter also suffered at the hands of the tabloids, in large part
due to a very stormy relationship with Paris Hilton, but he also
had the distinction of being the only Backstreet Boy to deliver
a solo album - Now or Never in 2002 - which meant that he was the
only BSB with an ignoble flop to his credit, as well Now or Never
had the distinction of being an old-school teen pop album being
delivered too far after the craze.
Carter's
peers were changing their stripes, but he stuck to the tired and
true BSB formula and was punished by the fickle public accordingly.
Given that public humiliation, it shouldn't come as a surprise that
Carter and the other Boys are wise enough to try something new on
Never Gone: they've abandoned the teen pop of the late '90s for
anthemic adult contemporary that sounds a bit like Bryan Adams circa
1990.
It's
not a reinvention as much as a lateral move, shifting from one kind
of pop that's not selling to another that's not selling, but to
their credit, Backstreet Boys acquit themselves reasonably well
here. First of all, there's a bit of pleasure in hearing a group
throw itself into the big, resolutely square sound of '90s adult
contemporary, since nobody else is doing this sound in 2005, but
also it fits the group well, particularly Carter, with his newly
raspy lead vocals.
Second,
this is by and large a well-made record, with a handful of standout
tracks, notably the first single "Incomplete," the John
Ondrasik - written "Weird World," which is a lot more
fun than any Five for Fighting tune, the Max Martin - helmed "Just
Want You to Know," and "Lose It All," which Bizarrely
and appealingly sounds like an MOR version of an Oasis ballad. Although
the rest of the record is essentially well-made filler, it does
sound good; this is one time that a pop record benefits by having
a different production team for nearly every one of the album's
tracks, since the sound of each tune is just different enough to
keep things interesting yet unified enough to make it pleasant background
music.
This
is all enough to make Never Gone a solid adult contemporary album,
which will please both BSB diehards and the dwindling ranks who
wish that the glory days of Jon Secada never ended, but its relative
strength does highlight one problem with the album: this kind of
music doesn't sound quite as convincing when delivered by a group
of guys as it does by one singer.
If
Never Gone had been released as Nick Carter's second solo album
or A.J. McLean's first, it would have felt more genuine, since these
(marginally) more mature songs of love and relationships would have
more resonance sung by a solo singer instead of a pack of guys.
But
that's nitpicking, because even if it never sells as well as millennium
did at the turn of the century, Never Gone is at the very least
a successful musical makeover from the onetime teen pop kings. Never
Gone was released in two editions: a copy-protected CD that will
not play on your computer without installing a separate media player,
and a DualDisc, containing a CD on one side and a DVD on the other.
The
DualDisc has a 5.1 mix version of the album on the DVD side, along
with the video for "Incomplete" as well as a brief documentary
about the making of the video for "Incomplete". The CD
side of the DualDisc may not register on some computers. The CD
"Never Gone" is marketed and distributed by M-Entertainment
(Pvt) Limited. For online sales log on www.me.lk.
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