![]() While it was a big fat hit almost immediately upon its release in late ’98 and swiftly established the group as the premier rival to kings among men the Backstreet Boys, it was a record that was perfectly content to tow the line and follow the formula of pretty much every late-90s teen pop record that came before it (most notably, the Backstreet Boys’ first record in America). ![]() We remember ‘N Sync’s first album, right? Sure we do. You think Millennium was the Biggest Boy Band Album Ever? You do? Is the snow sucking the brain out of your ears too hard for you to notice ‘N Sync’s butt-crushing megahit No Strings Attached waiting right around the corner? It’s almost spring where I’m at, doggo! I got sweet sunlight and I am in the right. You know what’s more fun than that, mid-February Sean Rose? Mid-March Sean Rose pointing out that you are wrong and a God-fucked dummyhead. “Boy Band History after Millennium is mostly just malaise, earth-tones and soul-crushing anonymity. While we’re at it, I would like to submit a formal apology for the following excerpt from that review: Here’s the lesson I learned this week: my trepidation in reviewing the Backstreet Boys’ Millennium a few weeks back? Thinking it was The Biggest Boy Band Album Ever (TBBBAE) and that it was all downhill from then on? Wrong. Every new review I write, I learn something new.
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