June 12, 2001
Backstreet Boys Show Fan Love To Orlando Crowd
As the Backstreet Boys
neared the end of their pyrotechnics-filled, not-quite-sold-out tour kickoff
here Friday night, the group's A.J. McLean reached out to a fan — way, way
out. (Source: MTV)
As McLean slapped five with audience members over the gleaming edge of a catwalk
in the middle of the TD Waterhouse Centre, he noticed one straining hand out of
reach. The muscle-tee-clad singer dropped to the catwalk's floor and stretched
most of his body over the side, coming close to a painful fall as he managed to
grasp his fan's hand.
Despite the slick trappings of Friday's show — hydraulic lifts, trap doors,
indoor fireworks, nearly as many costume changes as songs — at its heart it
seemed all about such intimate moments, all about sealing the bond between fan
and Backstreet Boy.
The group began the show with requisite Jackson-family-style bombast — a video
clip of asteroids speeding toward the earth led to real explosions onstage and
the group's eventual emergence in long leather coats, with synthesized thunder
accompanying every movement.
Shaking their hips to a pop and slap bass line in the kind of synchronized
boy-band dance that they've avoided in their recent videos, BSB kicked into the
fan-worshipping song "Everyone" from Black & Blue. The track's
lyrics are tailor-made to open a concert: "Let's get on with the show/ Turn
the lights down low/ You were there from the start/ We know who you are/ and
this one goes out to you."
Shrieks from the crowd mounted as the group and its backing band — which ably
replicated and expanded the studio recordings of each song — moved into the
hit "Larger Than Life," which sports an identical fan-praising
message. BSB spiced it up with karate kicks and red-faced vocal intensity from
Nick Carter and Brian Littrell.
After a song that doesn't thank fans even once in its lyrics — the
cheating-woman track "Not for Me" — the group stopped the music for
an interlude in which each member got onstage alone and, yes, thanked the fans.
"I get to talk to you first — I feel so blessed," said Littrell, who
vied with Carter as the group's most scream-worthy member. "We wouldn't
have anything if it wasn't for the Backstreet fans."
Carter, resembling an Abercrombie & Fitch model with his new burly physique,
used his moment alone with the crowd to poke fun at the numerous pre-teens in
attendance: "I like your skirt. Did you get that at the Gap? Or was it the
Baby Gap?" To their credit, a good portion of the audience laughed.
From there, the Backstreet Boys — who also include Howie Dorough and Kevin
Richardson (who had his hair braided in tight cornrows) — ran through their
formidable battle chest of hits, from "Everybody (Backstreet's Back)"
to their latest chart-toppers, "The Call" and "More Than
That."
Despite Carter and Littrell's favored status, the group's performance was
meticulously democratic. All five voices — Dorough's sweet-toned belting,
McLean's nasal funk, Richardson and Littrell's smooth crooning, Carter's gospel
fervor — were featured in prominent solo spots.
Carter's only spotlight-hogging moments came on his infamous "am I
sexual" line in "Everybody (Backstreet's Back)," which he milked
more strenuously each time he repeated it. The crowd, needless to say, did not
mind.
The group even took up actual instruments for a while, with McLean banging away
at percussion instruments and Littrell and Carter briefly strumming — or at
least holding — guitars.
There were several pre-taped skits, mostly timed to allow the group to change
costumes or for the crew to prepare special effects. One particularly meandering
bit set in the dressing room appeared to be meant only to run down the clock
while the group got ready for the night's neatest trick — popping up on a
secondary stage in the back of the arena to sing "Show Me the Meaning of
Being Lonely."
The second stage was close enough to the fans that the group was probably able
to see some of the arena's dozens of empty seats, but the guys didn't sweat it.
Eight years after forming, the Backstreet Boys appeared comfortable with their
status as the longest-lasting vocal group.