Black & Blue – Christopher Thelen

Black & Blue
Jive Records, 2000
Reviewed by Christopher Thelen
Published on Nov 21, 2000

Uh-oh, I can hear people thinking right now. He’s taking on the
Backstreet Boys, they’re thinking. He’s going to rip them up like a
piece of rice paper in a knife factory, they’re thinking.

Believe it or not, I happen to like the Backstreet Boys. I
realize that’s about the equivalent of admitting that one likes to
knock off squirrels with a revolver – and, no, that’s not the
reason the squirrel population in Gurnee seemed to nosedive in the
last few weeks. No, I happen to admire the vocal work of this
quintet, even if the music sounds pre-fabricated at times. Say what
you will about the dearth of boy-bands right now, the Backstreet
Boys have a knack for choosing quality pop songs and singing the
absolute daylights out of them.

Their latest release,
Black & Blue, doesn’t veer too far off the formula that
has made the band staples of top 40 radio and of young girls’
walls, but even with a more mature approach to the songs and their
sounds, one wonders how much longer the streak can continue. (Side
note: I am reviewing this album via MP3s, so I don’t have the liner
notes to work off of. You work with what you can in this business,
sometimes.)

The first area of concern comes on the track “Time,” which was
produced by Kenneth “Babyface” Edmonds. Now, I’m not knocking the
song, for it’s quite beautiful. What concerns me is that a group
like this – who have absolutely decimated the charts with their
sales – would need to rely on a name such as Babyface’s to pull a
rabbit out of the hat. Maybe this is nitpicking, I admit – but when
you don’t need to prove anything, why go out of your way to prove
something?

Area of concern number two is the general direction the
songwriting is taking on
Black & Blue. If you’re looking for tracks in the vein
of “Quit Playing Games With My Heart” or “As Long As You Love Me,”
you’re probably going to be disappointed. If you’re looking for
songs that are similar to “Larger Than Life” from
Millennium, well, you’d be closer to the mark. The
difficulty is that tracks like “Get Another Boyfriend,” “Shining
Star” and “The Call” don’t have the musical richness that a song
like “Larger Than Life” has – and I’m at a loss in that I can’t
quite put my finger on what is missing.

So far, sounds like a real loser, eh? I don’t mean to come off
sounding like
Black & Blue is a downer album. In fact, this disc is as
enjoyable as the Backstreet Boys’s previous two releases, and
there’s plenty to celebrate on this one. There’s the gentle
balladry of “Shape Of My Heart” that almost guarantees this track
will have a short trip to the top of the charts. Same goes for “The
Answer To Our Life,” another track I found myself gravitating back
to on more than one occasion.

And if you’re a fan of the pure love songs that the Boys are
known for,
Black & Blue does not disappoint. Songs like “Yes I
Will,” “I Promise You (With Everything I Am)” and “It’s True” all
celebrate the joy of love and the pleasure these guys take in
bringing this music to their fans.

You can pooh-pooh boy bands all you want, but you have to give
credit when it’s due… and the Backstreet Boys have yet to hit a
landmine in their recording career. Yet I can’t help but question
how much longer this level of success can continue for the group.
It’s not that I want to see the group suffer a drop in popularity,
and it’s not for lack of trying to bring in some new styles, like a
song about cheating on your girlfriend (“The Call”). But I know how
fickle tastes can be… and the Backstreet Boys are coming up on
five years in the limelight. That’s about the same amount of time
it took New Kids On The Block to go from heroes to zeroes. Just
worth noting.

Black & Blue is another success feather in the cap of
the Backstreet Boys, and they may as well enjoy the success that is
bound to come with the release of this album. Do they deserve it?
Yes. Is it a promise of more to come? Only time will tell.

Rating: B

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