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*NSYNC


Name: *NSYNC
born in :
Genre: Rock
Styles: Dance-Pop, Adult Contemporary, Teen Pop, Euro-Dance
Tones : Light, Party/Celebratory, Earnest, Stylish, Silly, Theatrical,
Cheerful, Happy, Confident, Refined/Mannered, Sweet, Playful, Gleeful
Labels: BMG International (20), Jive (16), Jive International (9),
RCA (7), Import (4), Sony International (3), Nervous (3)
Charts & Awards :

Year Album Chart Highest Position
1998 N Sync The Billboard 200 No. 2
1998 Home For Christmas The Billboard 200 No. 7
1998 N Sync Top Canadian Albums No. 4
1999 N Sync Top Canadian Albums No. 4
2000 No Strings Attached The Billboard 200 No. 1
2000 No Strings Attached Top Internet Albums No. 1
2000 No Strings Attached Top Canadian Albums No. 1
2001 Celebrity The Billboard 200 No. 1
2001 Celebrity Top Canadian Albums No. 1
2001 Celebrity Top Internet Albums No. 1
2001 No Strings Attached The Billboard 200 No. 1
2001 No Strings Attached Top Internet Albums No. 10
2002 No Strings Attached The Billboard 200 No. 1

Biography

Like the Backstreet Boys before them, the teenage male vocal group *NSYNC emerged from Orlando, FL; though formed in 1996, their roots trace back much earlier to singers J.C. Chasez and Justin Timberlake, who together previously co-starred on the Disney Channel's The Mickey Mouse Club before later relocating to Nashville, where they worked on solo projects with the same vocal coach and songwriters.

Timberlake soon returned to Orlando, where he befriended Chris Kirkpatrick and Joey Fatone; with Chasez, the four agreed to form a band, and with the addition of bass James Lance Bass, *NSYNC was complete. Hooking up with a series of producers including Denniz Pop, the group recorded its self-titled debut LP, initially released on BMG Ariola Munich; *NSYNC soon became an overnight success throughout much of Europe, with the singles "I Want You Back" and "Tearing Up My Heart" both becoming major hits.

The album was released in the U.S. in the spring of 1998, and — accompanied by a tour of the nation's roller rinks — it became an American hit as well; Home for Christmas followed later that same year, and in the spring of 2000, the group broke sales records with No Strings Attached, which sold close to 2.5 million copies in its first week of release. The kitschy-pop third album, Celebrity, appeared in summer 2001.

Albums

  • 1998 *NSYNC [Germany] BMG
  • 1998 Home for Christmas RCA
  • 2000 No Strings Attached BMG
  • 2001 Celebrity Jive
[split]

Artist: *NSYNC
Album Title: NSYNC [Germany]
Date of Release : Mar 24, 1998
Genre: Rock
Styles : Dance-Pop, Urban, Adult Contemporary, Teen Pop Time 56:19

Biography

Riding the wave of post-Spice Girls dance-pop groups and sounding suspiciously like a low-rent, American Take That, the Orlando, Florida-based *NSYNC came bursting out of roller rinks across the U.S. in the spring of 1998 with their eponymous debut. The group hired a number of producers, including the Backstreet Boys' Kristian Lundin and Denniz Pop & Max Martin, the team behind Robyn and Ace of Base, who help turn the album into a pleasing piece of ear candy.

They don't have the charisma or tunes of the Spice Girls or All Saints, nor do they have a visionary like Gary Barlow or a sex symbol like Robbie Williams in the group. The only thing the five boys of *NSYNC have is good looks, good producers, and a couple of catchy singles, like "I Want You Back." That's enough for a hit, and not quite enough for an album. Even so, the filler is well made and competently performed, which means their teen fans will enjoy the album while it's hot. Whether they return to it again — either out of affection or kitsch — is another matter entirely. — Stephen Thomas Erlewine

Album Songs

  1. Tearin' Up My Heart (Lundin/Martin) - 4:47
  2. You Got It (Renn) - 3:33
  3. Sailing (Cross) - 4:36
  4. Crazy for You (Hamm) - 3:42
  5. Riddle (Reiniz) - 3:41
  6. For the Girl Who Has Everything (Renn/Skinner) - 3:51
  7. I Need Love (Carolla) - 3:14
  8. Giddy Up (N Sync/Renn) - 4:09
  9. Here We Go (Aris/Cottural) - 3:36
  10. Best of My Life (Aris/Cottura/Toorn) - 4:46
  11. More Than a Feeling (Scholz) - 3:42
  12. I Want You Back (Martin/Pop) - 4:24
  13. Together Again (Green/Reynolds) - 4:11
  14. Forever Young (Fahrenkrog/Peterson) - 4:07
[split]

Artist: *NSYNC
Album Title: Home for Christmas
Date of Release : Nov 10, 1998
Genre: Rock
Styles : Dance-Pop, Christmas, Urban, Adult Contemporary, Holiday, Teen Pop Time 55:36

Biography

It's always a sign that a group is hot if they release a holiday album mere months after their debut. That's the case with *NSYNC. Their debut was released in America in late March, and in early December, Home for Christmas hit the shelves. Much of the album is devoted to newer material, with only a handful of songs qualifying as standards:

"The Christmas Song," "The First Noel" and "O Holy Night." All of it is given the familiar *NSYNC sheen, alternating between slickly produced adult contemporary ballads and lite dance-pop. Fans of the group will certainly find it reasonably enjoyable, even though it makes it clear that the group simply can't rival such peers as the Spice Girls or Backstreet Boys in terms of charisma. — Stephen Thomas Erlewine

Album Songs

  1. Home for Christmas (Haase/Moorehead) - 4:28
  2. Under My Tree (Peiken/Roche) - 4:32
  3. I Never Knew the Meaning of Christmas (Rogers/Sturken) - 4:45
  4. Merry Christmas, Happy Holidays (Chasez/Degiorgio/Renn/Timberlake) - 4:12
  5. The Christmas Song (Torme/Wells) - 3:15
  6. I Guess It's Christmas Time (Bliss/Peiken) - 3:52
  7. All I Want Is You This Christmas (Briley/Calitri) - 3:43
  8. The First Noel (Sandys) - 3:28
  9. In Love on Christmas (Bennett/Hailey/Hailey) - 4:06
  10. It's Christmas (Ries/Thomas) - 4:29
  11. O Holy Night [Acappella] (Adam/Dwight) - 3:33
  12. Love's in Our Hearts on Christmas Day (Haase/Lowell/Werking) - 3:54
  13. The Only Gift (Christensen/Franzell) - 3:51
  14. Kiss Me at Midnight (Lamb/Renn) - 3:28
[split]

Artist: *NSYNC
Album Title: Celebrity
Date of Release : Jul 24, 2001
Genre: Rock
Styles : Dance-Pop, Adult Contemporary, Teen Pop

Biography

*NSYNC is nothing if not literal. Last time around, they freed themselves from their manager and titled the record No Strings Attached. This time around, after that album moved millions of copies, they've released an album called Celebrity, none too subtly drawing attention to the fact that they're stars. That's right — this is a trials-n-tribulations of fame album, in the grand tradition of Bad, Use Your Illusion, and In Utero, complete with a garish cover that's a cross between Sgt. Pepper and a Sammy video.

The difference is, of course, that the boys have been thirsting for this attention since they were children, so they're entirely comfortable with their position as kings of teen pop, and they celebrate their celebrity. And, let it not be said that they're not clever, since "Pop" isn't just a defense of their music, it stands as a rallying cry for their fans. And that signals what is so right about the record too — *NSYNC is self-aware, not just of their position in the pop world, but how to consolidate their strengths while pushing forward. Since time immemorial (or at least since 1987), any pop group rounds up hot producers before making a new record, but

*NSYNC has found producers that accentuate different sides of their music, from Brian McKnight smoothly delivering JC Chasez's "Selfish" to the Neptunes' subtle harpsichord groove on "Girlfriend." Nobody sticks around for too long — only Riprock and Alex G are granted two tracks, with lead SYNC Justin Timberlake manning the board for no less than three songs, more than anybody else on the record — and that's a blessing, since it keeps the album moving. As soon as BT's "Pop" wraps up, we're in Rodney Jerkins territory for the skittering title track and, not long afterward, Max Martin returns with "Tell Me, Tell Me...Baby," just in case old-school fans are missing Martin's patented Euro-schtick. All this means, on at least a superficial level, is that it's the group's most varied album yet, but the emergence of Timberlake and Chasez as credible soulful singers and, yes, songwriters makes it their best album yet, and one of the best of the teen pop boom of 1999-2001 (and, if the first week sales of Celebrity are any indication, it will extend even longer). — Stephen Thomas Erlewine

Album Songs

  1. Pop (Robson/Timberlake) - 3:59
  2. Celebrity (Robson/Timberlake/Valentine) - 3:18
  3. The Game Is Over (Chasez/Daymond/Greggs) - 3:28
  4. Girlfriend (Hugo/Timberlake/Williams) - 4:15
  5. The Two of Us (Chasez/Daymond/Greggs) - 3:52
  6. Gone (Robson/Timberlake) - 4:54
  7. Tell Me, Tell Me...Baby (Martin/Rami) - 3:39
  8. Up Against the Wall (Chasez/Daymond/Greggs/Timberlake) - 3:37
  9. See Right Through You (Campbell/Robson/Timberlake) - 2:55
  10. Selfish (Chasez/Renn/Skinner) - 4:21
  11. Just Don't Tell Me That (Carlsson/Jake/Lundin) - 3:04
  12. Something Like You (Timberlake/Wiley) - 4:15
  13. Do Your Thing (Moss) - 4:21
[split]

Artist: *NSYNC
Album Title: No Strings Attached
Date of Release : Mar 21, 2000
Genre: Rock
Styles : Dance-Pop, Adult Contemporary, Teen Pop Time 47:08

Biography

Prior to the release of their second album, *NSYNC split from their manager in a bitter dispute and signed with Jive, the kings of teen-pop. For *NSYNC, the move provided them with an opportunity to, in the immortal words of George W. Bush, "define themselves," to prove that they were an independent unit — hence the title No Strings Attached.

To cynical critics, they very well might sound the same as ever, yet this really blows away their previous record. That much is clear from the storming lead single "Bye Bye Bye," a pile-driving dance number with the catchiest chorus they've ever sang. However, the album isn't really just singles-n-filler, it actually is well sequenced and fairly balanced, much like the Backstreet Boys' Millennium or Christina Aguilera's album. Like those records, No Strings Attached pulls away from the standard dance-pop formula, strengthening it with harder street beats, electronica flourishes, ballads with some grit, and well-crafted pop tunes. Nobody is going to mistake this for Fatboy Slim, Beck, or TLC — it's still lightweight teen-pop.

Yet, it's very good teen-pop, managing to not only work well within its limitations, but to push it slightly while retaining its breezy, hooky identity. *NSYNC still can seem a little ordinary, lacking a truly charismatic punch ala Britney or Christina, yet they do deserve credit for shaking things up a little bit, since it's resulted in an effervescent, ingratiatingly cheerful album that's a vast improvement on the debut. — Stephen Thomas Erlewine

Album Songs

  1. Bye Bye Bye (Carlsson/Lundin/Schulze) - 3:20
  2. It's Gonna Be Me (Carlsson/Martin/Rami) - 3:12
  3. Space Cowboy (Yippie-Yi-Yay) performed by N Sync / Lopes, Lisa "Left Eye" - 4:23
  4. Just Got Paid (Griffin/Hall/Kemp/Riley) - 4:10
  5. It Makes Me Ill (Briggs/Kandi) - 3:27
  6. This I Promise You (Marx) - 4:44
  7. No Strings Attached (Chasez/Daymond/Greggs) - 3:48
  8. Digital Get Down (Chasez/Nicoll/Renn) - 4:23
  9. Bringin' da Noise (Chasez/Renn) - 3:32
  10. That's When I'll Stop Loving You (Warren) - 4:51
  11. I'll Be Good for You (Antunes/Calloway/Calloway/Pendergrass/Timberlake) - 3:56
  12. I Thought She Knew (Wiley) - 3:22

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