6.03.2010

Vocal group performs Saturday at Wild Adventures

In reality, the vocal group was never really gone, and they will prove that Saturday night when they take the stage at Wild Adventures.

The group has sold over 130 million albums worldwide and is one of the best-selling vocal groups of all time. Their sophomore U.S. release, “Millennium,” which featured the singles “I Want It That Way” and “Larger Than Life,” is one of the top 10 best-selling albums of all time.

While they may not be the boy band that they were in the late 1990’s, the group has matured — not only in age but in sound.

The group’s “This Is Us” tour, named after their latest album, which takes the guys back to their original rhythm and blues-influenced pop music style, has already hit many places around the world — Europe, Russia, Japan, India, Korea, Australia, China and even a show in the United Arab Emirates.

The United States/Canadian leg of the tour, according to Backstreet’s Howie Dorough, will be the same.

“We put together a great tour that we’re really proud of and we’re (taking)

it all around the world with us,” Howie told The Valdosta Daily Times. “It’s a very entertaining show for our fans, to come out and hear some of our greatest hits, as well as the new album, and hopefully take them on a trip down memory lane. Hopefully, (we can) give them a chance to get them away from whatever is happening at home for a good experience.”

The tour, while simple, features the four members of the group — Howie Dorough, along with Nick Carter, Brian Littrell and A.J. McLean — a DJ and four back-up dancers. There is a lot of dancing and theatrics. The show is a mix of new songs and old songs, including their very first single, “We’ve Got It Goin’ On,” which they haven’t performed live in years.

The first single off the album, “Straight Through My Heart (Soldier Down),” while catchy with a dark, vampire-themed video, didn’t top the radio charts, but the group has no doubts when it comes to their new music.

“I think we would have liked to have our song played a little more on Top 40 radio,” Howie said. “As an artist, you put your heart and soul in creating a body of work. You want people to hear it. Thank God we have our fans out there who will find our music wherever it is. It would be nice to once again have the masses out there hear our music. We believe in our music and we believe in our product and we have loyal fans that are there for us, and whether it’s radio played or not radio played, we’re fortunate to provide music that way.”

Howie, the oldest member of the group, also has a connection to South Georgia.

His father, the late Hoke Dorough, who passed away two years ago this month, is originally from Cordele. Howie also owns the new Country Inn & Suites in Cordele as a part of his expanding real estate ventures.

“I have family not far from you guys up in Cordele. We drive up from Florida, all the way up to Valdosta. We always get off at that exit every so often and eat at the Japanese steakhouse,” he said.

He expects his family to come down to the concert since it’s the first time the group has performed in South Georgia.

“They would always have to drive to Atlanta to see me. I don’t know what they’re going to do. All the woodwork is going to open up and it’ll be all Doroughs,” he laughed.
For Howie, family has become much more important to him since the arrival of his son, James Hoke Dorough, last May.

Touring has also been a drastic change for him.

“My wife (Leigh) and son come out with me every so often,” he said. “They were on the tour with me over in Europe. We shared a bus together with Brian and his family. It was during the time when ... (my son) was a little bit younger and he would wake up during the night. My sleep has definitely lessened a little since he’s been around ... but it’s great. I’m enjoying the tour in a different light now. It’s almost like we have an extra body with us. Now, it’s not just about me and my wife, enjoying our days off. Now, we have a child and we think about things that we can do with him.”

In April and May, the Backstreet Boys performed two live and up-close acoustic shows in California and New York while in the area doing promotion for the new tour.

“This was just a little thing for the fans to see us more than just on TV,” Howie said. “We all had so much fun with them ... We love doing the private, intimate concerts that give the chance for the fans to get close to us.”

Since “This Is Us” was released last fall, the group has already started talking about their next album.

While their main focus right now is the tour, they have discussed writing songs and coming up with concepts and directions for the new albums.

“We haven’t gotten into the studio yet, so it’s all prep work right now,” Howie said. “We haven’t really reached out to any producers in particular right now. Everybody’s enjoying the break right now, but when we get back out on tour, the ideas will start flowing.”

Unfortunately, that album will not be with their longtime label, Jive.
In an announcement that was posted on their official site, www.backstreetboys.com, on May 27, the band announced that the split was “amicable” and the group was very excited for what the future holds for the Backstreet Boys.

Source: Valdosta Daily Times

THIS IS US TOUR: Backstreet Boys Host After Party In Ultra 88 At Mohegan Sun

Official after party hosted by some of the members of the Backstreet Boys following their performance on June 15th at Mohegan Sun

The Backstreet Boys keep the party going with their official after party in Ultra 88 Night Club following their performance on Tuesday, June 15th in Mohegan Sun Arena. The party starts at 9:00pm, and appearances by some members of the Backstreet Boys will take place after their show in Mohegan Sun Arena.

Tickets are $25.00 and go on sale Tuesday, June 8th at noon at the Mohegan Sun Box Office. Tickets can be purchased over the phone through the Mohegan Sun Box Office at 860.862.8499 or in-person at a ticket window. Tickets purchased after Monday, June 14th at 8:00pm must be purchased through Ultra 88 directly. To purchase tickets after June 14th at 8:00pm or for VIP Table reservations with bottle service, please call 860.862.7042. Ticket purchasers and attendees of the event must be 21 or older.

Mohegan Sun, owned by the Mohegan Tribe, is one of the largest, most distinctive and spectacular entertainment, gaming, shopping and meeting destinations in the United States. Situated on 240 acres along the Thames River in scenic southeastern Connecticut, Mohegan Sun is within easy access of New York, Boston, Hartford and Providence and located 15 minutes from the museums, antique shops and waterfront of Mystic Country. More information is available by calling 1.888.226.7711 or visiting mohegansun.com.

Source: Mohegan Sun.Com

THE BACKSTREETBOYS: Forming The Backstreet Band

The Backstreet Boys started out as an idea from Orlando businessman and entrepreneur, Lou Pearlman who had an interest in the music business. After seeing the huge success of New Kids, a group of five boys taken from the streets of Boston to form a band, Pearlman knew he could achieve the same feat here in Orlando. Advertisements for 'male teen singers that move well between 16-19' were soon appearing at local high schools, drama schools in the Sentinel and the Florida Blue Sheet.

With hundreds of applications, auditions for the band were soon underway. The Backstreet Boys, as we know them today, were not the first group that was selected. Originally the first five were AJ McLean, Howie Dorough, Nick Carter, Charles Edwards and Sam Licata. Artistic differences lead to a breakup with Charles and Sam in 1993, leaving The Backstreet Boys 2 short. This short-lived group's first job was performing at the Fashion Square Mall.

In desperation to re-form the The Backstreet Boys, auditions were immediately restarted. Through mutual friends, Kentucky native, Kevin Richardson, who was working for Disney at the time, was recruited into the band. Pearlman tried to stay with his original plan of having a group of Orlando teens, but after several unsuccessful weeks of scouring Orlando for a fifth member, Kevin called Brian Littrell, his cousin in Kentucky, to come to Orlando for an audition. He was immediately taken into the group, that contrived it's name from the Backstreet Market, a teen hangout off of International Drive.

The current members of the Backstreet Boys had their first big concert at SeaWorld Grad Night, just 2 weeks after Brian joined the group. For exposure the group continued working at local malls, Pleasure Island, area nightclubs and restaurants. Within 6 months of forming, they were considered to be one of Florida's hottest acts.

The 1995, release of their single "We've Got It going On" was an instant hit in England and throughout Europe. By the end of 1996, the group had won multiple awards in Europe and Canada, achieved fame throughout Asia and Australia and sold nearly 10 million CDs worldwide. They returned to Orlando to work on new tracks for their U.S. album, BACKSTREET BOYS, which took the US by storm, and brought along a string of live TV appearances. But this fame was nothing compared to what their Millennium album brought, a record breaking 1,133,505 in sales, setting a record for the most albums sold in one week, ever!

AJ
Alexander James McLean
Born January 9, 1978
West Palm Beach, Florida

Local Schools - Denn John Middle, Osceola High School

First job as a model at the age of 7 at a local Boca Raton shopping mall, after that he began acting at local civic theaters. Moved to Kissimmee at the age of 12 - receiving several breaks with parts on Nickelodeon and the Disney Channel.

Howie
Howard Dwaine Dorough
Born August 22, 1973
Orlando, Florida

Local schools - Fern Creek Elementary, Winter Park Junior High, Edgewater High School
Attended UCF & Valencia Community College
First time on the stage was at the age of 6, when his older sister brought him to a community theatre where she was rehearsing for a production of The Wizard of Oz with the hopes of him getting a part as on of the munchkins. Ended up with a singing part, and four years later appeared in a different production of The Wizard of Oz, this time playing the tin man.

Nick
Nickolas Gene Carter
Born January 28, 1980
Jamestown, NY
Local Schools - Miles Elementary, Orange Grove & Young Junior Highs, Private tutors for high school

His family moved to Tampa when Nick was 4 years old. He was offered a job with the Mickey Mouse Club at the same as the Backstreet Boys. (He made the right choice, since the Mickey Mouse Club disbanded a couple of months later.) Nick is the youngest member of the group, having auditioned when he was only 12 years old. His first stage performance was in a small production of Phantom of the Opera at the age of 7. By 10 he was singing in front of 55,000 at pre-match and half-time shows for the Tampa Bay Buccaneers.

Kevin
Kevin Scott Richardson
Born October 3, 1972
Lexington, KY

At the age of 18, Kevin moved to Florida in 1990 working first as a tour guide at Walt Disney, then moving into the entertainment section working as one of the Ninja Turtles as well as Aladdin in the street parades. Kevin also worked at local dinner theaters and as a model before joining the Backstreet Boys.

Brian
Brian Thomas Littrell
Born February 20, 1975
Lexington, KY
Living in Kentucky when he received word from his cousin Kevin that he needed to fly to Orlando as soon as possible to audition for the fifth member of The Backstreet Boys.

Source: Article at orlando.com

THIS IS US TOUR: Backstreet Boys Turn Back The Clock For Faithful @ Hard Rock Live

For anyone around for the boy-band hysteria in Orlando in the 1990s, there’s something a little sad about a Backstreet Boys homecoming that fits into the relatively cozy confines of Hard Rock Live.

It’s hard to shake that mental image that the aging “boys” are only a couple tweaks away from becoming Elvis in Vegas or launching a dinner show in Branson, Mo.

Maybe it’s just the circle of life in pop music.

But if being downsized is a bummer for the remaining group members – Nick Carter, Howie Dorough, AJ McLean and Brian Littrell – it wasn’t apparent in a visually splashy sold-out show on Tuesday at Hard Rock. If anything, the guys delivered an arena-sized spectacle at point-blank range, a 95-minute production that was consistently fun to watch even if you don’t want to admit it later.

Hakuna Matata!

Yeah, a fair amount of the choreography is still laughable, especially all those semaphore-style hand signals. And most of the two dozen makeup artists listed in the closing credits on the big video screens must have been assigned solely to slathering on AJ’s mascara.

And songs such as the monotonous “PDA” are mind-numbing reminders that not all of the Backstreet Boys catalog comes equipped with big, lovable choruses. Inexplicably, the group decided to extend that clunker on Tuesday, inciting one of those tired competitions to see which side of the room was louder.

They really needn’t have bothered. Although it was a smaller crowd than in the old days, the screaming was formidable from a mostly female audience that looked to be twentysomething and beyond.

Some of the songs were worth the excitement: The medley of “Quit Playing Games (With My Heart)” and “As Long As You Love Me” was a blend of voices, dance moves and infectious hooks descendant from the Motown tradition.

And the elaborately produced video spoofs that put the Backstreet Boys into films such as Fight Club and The Matrix turned a costume-change time-killer into a nice showcase for the group’s sense of comedy.

A little more of that personality in the actual performance would have been nice, especially in place of a few of the sappy ballads that made the singers (especially Nick) go all goofy with melodrama.

Maybe he was just caught up in the moment.

“This is where it all began,” Brian said, waxing nostalgic. “It’s been 17 long years, but it’s gone by so fast.”

If the glory days are gone, the Backstreet Boys can still turn back the clock at least for a night.

Source: Orlando Sentinel

4.16.2010

THE BACKSTREETBOYS: Warn Lady Gaga To Watch Her Finances On 'The Bonnie Hunt Show'

It seems like these days everyone is worried about Lady Gaga. Janet Jackson and Ryan Tedder have both warned Gaga that she may need to slow down a little before she burns herself out. And, when the MTV Newsroom's favorite boy band Backstreet Boys stopped by "The Bonnie Hunt Show" on TWednesday (April 14) to hang out and have a little fun (which they did), they wanted to share some of their music industry wisdom with the superstar.

"I think we were actually in New Zealand where Lady Gaga was," Brian Littrell recalled. "The reason I mention Lady Gaga because our production manager was talking to her production manager. I wanted to tell her when you over budget yourself [for a tour], you come home broke."

Nick and the guys joked that the man in the group who is the money honey is Howie "Trump Jr." Dorough. Nick added that the guys had to learn all on their own how to handle their finances. "We had to learn ourselves. Who needs a two million dollar video anymore?" he joked about the band's high-tech "Larger Than Life" clip. "We learned along the way and the only people we could trust was ourselves. We can't tell people out there what to do."

With that more serious topic out of the way, the guys shared photos of their kids (Howie and Brian have babies — adorable ones!) and even shared what they do when they hit the road, joking that most of the time all that they can do is hang out with each other, even on days when that doesn't seem like the best idea. Brian laughed, "We don’t always wake up on the right side of the bed."

Lucky for us BSB fans that guys did perform their track, "Bigger," off their album This Is Us. Was it amazing? Why yes. Yes it was.

Source: MTV News Room