The Block New Kids on the Block

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CD

  • Release Date: 09/02/2008
  • Sales Rank: 41,344
  • Label: INTERSCOPE RECORDS
  • UPC: 602517743137

Listener Rating: (3 ratings)

Detailed Rating: "Authenticity" See All

 
  • Overview
  • Tracks
  • Editorial Reviews
  • Customer Reviews
  • Details & Credits
Track List
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The Block

1LISTENClick Click Click 3:44
2LISTENSingle / Ne-Yo 3:56
3LISTENBig Girl Now / Lady Gaga 3:29
4LISTENSummertime 3:22
5LISTEN2 in the Morning 3:25
6LISTENGrown Man / The Pussycat Dolls 3:00
7LISTENDirty Dancing 3:37
8LISTENSexify My Love 3:30
9LISTENTwisted 3:09
10LISTENFull Service 3:56
11LISTENLights, Camera, Action 3:05
12LISTENPut It on My Tab / Akon 3:55
13LISTENStare at You 3:34

About this Artist

Editorial Reviews

The problem facing New Kids on the Block on their 2008 reunion The Block is the same one they had on their last album, 1994's Face the Music: the quintet are no longer kids and don't quite know how to be adults. That dilemma drove them apart back in 1994, as the group stumbled away from their clumsy stab at hip-hop on Face the Music, remembered chiefly for embarrassments like "Dirty Dawg" where the boys tried to be gangsta, as that was the style of the time. Fourteen years later, NKOTB are none the wiser, restyling themselves to fit into current trends and piling on guest artists by the dozens. Coming off the heels of the astounding multi-platinum success of Hangin' Tough and Step by Step, such desperate attempts to hang onto stardom made sense in 1994, but now that all the members save Joey McIntyre are pushing 40, it's awkward to hear the group abandon sprightly bubblegum for youthful rhythm-driven club music. At their peak, NKOTB only sang about puppy love -- how could they not, as their fans were almost entirely preteens too young to hear sticky songs of seduction, the kind that comprise the entirety of The Block. Two of these are pitched directly at those older fans -- "Big Girl Now," where the Kids sing to Lady GaGa about what they can finally do now that they're all growed up, and "Grown Man," where they sing pretty much the same thing with the Pussycat Dolls. They also turn an homage to "Dirty Dancing" into a bump and grind that is far, far from the innocence of the Patrick Swayze original, or the New Kids music, for that matter. Draped in washes of chilly analog synths straight out of Justin Timberlake's FutureSex/LoveSounds, Autotune inspired by Akon (who appears on the barroom pickup anthem "Put It on My Tab"), chanting choruses, and brittle, skittish rhythms, The Block sounds nothing like the New Kids, nor does it feel like them, either. [The CD was also released with bonus tracks.] Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Music Guide



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Customer Reviews

Back and Better Than EVER!by Anonymous

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March 20, 2009: This album is so good that even the early twenty-somethings I know that didn't grow up a New Kids fanatic LOVE IT! Their new songs have a great grown up feel without being vulgar like so many songs you hear today. They sound better than ever and this is definitely worth the buy!!!!

Fun, entertaining, enjoyable pop effort!by Anonymous

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September 12, 2008: This is a solid pop effort from New Kids on the Block! Very infectious and funky numbers from Click, Click, Click, to Single, to Lights, Camera, Action, to Dirty Dancing to Twisted! They were smart to stay contemporary, as the songs have this pop edge with shades of hip-hop beats everywhere. The ballads are nice, especially 2 in the Morning and Stare at You. Most of all the group sounds comfortable with these songs than the structured and conservative nature of the Maurice Starr-helmed albums of the '80s/90s. RedOne's 6 songs that he produced give the group a whole new energy. And Akon, Polow Da Don, Timbaland and others have hot numbers here, but let the group have the control. Donnie Wahlberg co writing 9 of the songs give the project more originality. Lastly, the strong leads from Jordan Knight &amp quot love that falsetto&amp quot , Joey McIntyre and Donnie make the album exciting. People need to check this album out. They want their respect back as a pure pop group.


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