My introduction to the Backstreet Boys was courtesy of Beatrice and eugenie one day on the way to school. "Cute group, great clothes," said Eugenie, "One of them wears a hat," said Beatrice. "Great voices," they both chorused from the back of the car.
A few weeks later I found myself at MTV studios, all set to interview the heart-throbs of the teen pop scene. Never one to miss out on a challenge, I soon realised I had quite a task ahead of me.
Several years ago, the boys - AJ McLean, 20, Howie Dorough, 24, and Nick Carter, 17, from Florida, and cousins Kevin Richardson, 25, and Brian Littrell, 22, from Kentucky - were still struggling to find an audience in the US. Now they are mega-stars in Europe where they have clocked up seven To Ten singles, including the number-one hit "Quit Playing Games With My Heart" and their current release "All I Have To Give". Indeed, QPG rose to number two in US and marked their first victory on home turf.
The boys have also won numerous awards including the 1997 European MTV Select Award and the highest accolade in the teen scene - the SMASH HITS award for being the best band in the universe. Their latest album "Backstreet's Back" has sold more than nine million copies worldwide. This was not a group to be taken lightly.
I hadn't planned what questions I was going to ask as I felt spontaneity to be the best course of action. Any fears I had were quickly eclipsed when I met the boys. Their professionalism, maturity and solid views on life were immediately apparent and uplifting.
I first asked them to sing their biggest hit for us. They readily agreed and performed "As Long As You Love Me" acapella. Afterwards each explained his role in the band.
BRIAN: I do vocals and have
been dabbling a bit with the guitar since last Christmas
KEVIN: I've been playing keyboards
since I was about nine years old, and I also do background vocals.
HOWIE: I play a little guitar
and do background vocals.
AJ: Bass and vocals.
NICK: I've been playing the
drums for the last two years.
HOW DID
THE GROUP COME TOGETHER?
H: AJ and I met eight years
ago at a talent contest and we ran into Nick at various auditions. The
three of us tormed a trio, then we met Kevin and Brian, who are cousins.
We've all been together now for five years.
YOU'VE
TRAVELLED ALL OVER THE WORLD. WHERE HAVE YOU ENJOYED PLAYING MOST AND WHERE
DID YOU GET YOUR BEST RECEPTION?
BSB: Wembley.
H: We really enjoyed it and
we're getting ready to play there again in March.
WHAT
DO YOU HOPE TO ACCOMPLISH AS A GROUP?
B: Just to make good music,
respectable music, music for people of all ages to enjoy. We're not about
a market or an image, we're about good quality music. We believe that as
long as we focus on the music and don't get distracted by other things,
we'll hopefully be around for a long time.
WHAT
KIND OF IMPACT HAS FAME HAD ON YOUR LIVES?
B: It definitely changes your
schedule.
AJ: We have less time off
and we have had to get used to a lot more work. It's been lots of fun and
really worth it, even it it's taken a lot of dedication and patience. But
we all have strong family backgrounds. With the support of our families,
friends and each other, it's been great.
WHAT
IS IT THAT KEEPS YOUR FEET ON THE GROUND?
H: The five of us.
BSB: Our moms.
N: The best thing is that
our mothers aren't afraid to tell us anything.
K: Our management and record
company. Our family and friends.
YOU COME
ACROSS AS BEING VERY CENTRED AND SHOWING GREAT INNER STRENGTH. WHERE DOES
THAT COME FROM?
H: Again, that's from our
families. We all come from middle-class backgrounds, hard-working wholesome
people. We've all worked very hard to get where we are today and we appreciate
very much what we have. We never take anything for granted. We know that
we still have a lot of goals to reach.
WERE
YOU PREPARED FOR THE SUDDEN LOSS OF PRIVACY THAT COMES WITH FAME?
N: We knew that was something
that was going to come with the territory. But I also think we're big hams.
We love the attention.
H: It's not such a bad thing
to have lots of screaming girls out there.
K: It was sort of strange
at first. Our popularity in Europe was so big and the number of fans was
amazing. Our success started there. We would leave Europe and have a couple
of hundred fans at the airport. Then we would come home to the US and have
no one know who we were. Now our music and popularity in the States is
beginning to grow, so that gap is getting smaller and there are fewer places
we can go and not be recognized. It's bery exciting, but scary at the same
time.
HOW DO
YOU FEEL ABOUT THE TABLOID PRESS?
B: It's funny. When you see
things in the paper at the supermarket, you wonder how it's possible they
can write such stuff. And when you realise that what they write about you
isn't true, it's pretty hard to even look at what they write about anyone
else.
SO MANY
BANDS BREAK UP SOON AFTER THEIR INITIAL SUCCESS. HOW WILL YOU AVOID THAT?
N: That's one goal which goes
against odds. But I believe that as long as we keep communicating, we will
beat them.
K: There are five of us. We
know that we are five individuals and we have to allow each other to be
himself as well as a group. Eventually, there may come a time when we might
want to take a break and each do our own thing for a while. When that time
comes, we'll sit down as a group and decide what will happen.
B: We'll never call it quits,
that's just not possible.
WHERE
DID THE NAME BACKSTREET BOYS COME FROM?
K: A place in Orlando called
the Backstreet Market where we used to perform. When there wasn't anything
going on there, kids would still go in their cars and just listen to music.
The word "boys" is also slang in the States for friends, and that's what
we are.
HOW DO
YOU FEEL ABOUT YOUR RESPONSIBILITY AS ROLE MODELS TO THE YOUNGER GENERATION?
H: We never set out to be
role models. We're just five guys who love music. The Man Above has blessed
us with talent and we're just trying to share that with the rest of the
world.
MUSIC
CAN BE SO HEALING, CAN'T IT? THE BOYS: It's the universal language.
K: Absolutely. We received
a letter once from a woman who had recently lost her husband and she wrote
that our music helped bring her and her daughter closer. That's the kind
of thing that maked it worthwhile.
A LOT
OF PEOPLE MAY SAY THAT WHAT YOU'RE DOING IS EASY. WHAT HAS IT TAKEN FOR
ALL OF YOU TO GET WHERE YOU ARE TODAY?
H: Two years of practise six
days a week, small tours of schools around the States and then, after we
signed with Jive records, there were three years of touring. People have
this misconception that we do a show, go to a party, sleep in the next
day, go shopping, lie by the pool and go do the next show. But we haven't
seen that yet. Mostly when everyone else is at the party, we're on our
way to the next gig, getting there with barely enough time to shower and
rehearse before going on. Not to mention the photo shoots, promotions and
interviews that have to be squeezed in between.
WHERE
DO YOU SEE YOURSELVES IN THE YEAR 2000?
B: Hopefully, performing for
about 250,000 people somewhere. Still working together, still wirting and
still at the top of the charts.
WHY DO
YOU THINK PEOPLE LIKE YOU SO MUCH?
BSB: Hopefully it's the music.
H: It's all about the music.
WHAT
WOULD YOU MOST LIKE PEOPLE TO KNOW ABOUT YOU?
K: That we've had the benefit
of co-writing our songs with good songwriters and producers who we've learned
a lot from - their experience has helped us to grow. That we are not just
pretty faces. That we sing and that we are artists who are constantly striving
to get better.
H: We are simply five normal
guys and what you see is what you get. The people that you see on the cover
of the CD are the same people that you see on stage and even more importantly,
the same people you would meet at the side of the road. We keep it simple
and honest. Honesty is the biggest part.
B: There are not 'fronts'
about us.
WELL,
IT'S 'FRONTS' THAT ULTIMATELY FAIL.
H: That's why we plan on being
around for a long time.
IF YOU
HAD A CHANCE TO SPREAD A MESSAGE TO YOUR AUDIENCE, WHAT WOULD IT BE?
N: Dreams. If you have one
and want to succeed, just don't give up. That's how we got to where we
are today. We kept striving and working and never gave up.
H: We also hope to bring universal
harmony to all countries through our music and help bring them closer together.
Harmony and peace.