*NSYNC

One of the top boy bands of its era, *NSYNC helped to define the sound of danceable, R&B-influenced Y2K pop and launched the career of singers and former Mickey Mouse Club stars Justin Timberlake and JC Chasez. Working closely with producers like Max Martin and Denniz Pop, *NSYNC enjoyed almost immediate success, hitting the Top Five in the United States and Europe with their eponymous debut and spawning the hits ‘I Want You Back’ and ‘Tearin’ Up My Heart.’ 2000’s No Strings Attached and 2001’s Celebrity fared even better, both topping the Billboard 200. Soon after that release, however, they disbanded. While the group did reunite for a performance at the 2013 MTV Video Music Awards, the individual members of *NSYNC had all gone on to pursue their own varied opportunities, with Timberlake emerging as the biggest star, enjoying a highly successful, Grammy-winning music and acting career. A decade passed before the group reunited once again at the 2023 MTV Video Music Awards, launching a comeback with the newly recorded single ‘Better Place.’
Although *NSYNC emerged in 1995 in Orlando, Florida, singers JC Chasez and Justin Timberlake had previously co-starred on The Mickey Mouse Club before 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. Along with Chasez, the four agreed to form a boy band, and *NSYNC officially launched after the addition of bass singer Lance Bass. The group recorded its eponymous debut LP with help from a series of producers, including Denniz Pop (whose protégé, Max Martin, would later work with the band after Pop’s death in 1998). The album was initially released by BMG Ariola Munich, and *NSYNC became an overnight success throughout much of Europe, where the singles ‘I Want You Back’ and ‘Tearing Up My Heart’ were sizable hits. The album was then released in America during the spring of 1998. Accompanied by a tour of the nation’s roller rinks, it became immensely popular and eventually sold more than ten million copies, thus establishing the singers as teen pop titans. Home for Christmas followed later that same year and went double-platinum, while a similar version was released in Europe under the title The Winter Album.
Although already celebrated as one of pop music’s biggest acts, *NSYNC rose to greater heights with the release of No Strings Attached in 2000. The album was originally slated to appear in 1999, but a series of legal battles with former manager Lou Pearlman delayed its arrival by several months. After successfully escaping from Pearlman’s contract and signing with Jive Entertainment, *NSYNC happily watched as sales of No Strings Attached topped one million during its first day of release. Nearly two-and-a-half million copies were sold by the end of the week, and three singles soon cracked the Top Five in America: ‘Bye Bye Bye’ (which many viewed as a sendoff to the band’s old management), ‘It’s Gonna Be Me,’ and the ballad ‘This I Promise You.’ Supported by a 76-date American tour that grossed over $75 million, No Strings Attached proved to be the most popular album of 2000, selling nearly ten million copies.

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