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Track Listing 1. Intro 2. Everything But Mine 3. Inconsolable 4. Something That I Already Know 5. Helpless When She Smiles 6. Any Other Way 7. One in a Million 8. Panic 9. You Can Let Go 10. Trouble Is 11. Treat Me Right 12. Love Will Keep You up All Night 13. Unmistakable 14. Unsuspecting Sunday Afternoon
Album Notes Additional personnel: John Shanks (guitar, keyboards); Mitch Allan (guitar, bass guitar); Dave Schuler, Billy Mann (guitar); Emanuel Kiriakou (acoustic guitar, electric guitar, piano, keyboards, bass guitar, percussion, programming); Chuck Butler (electric guitar, bass guitar); Josh Muckala, Adam Lester (electric guitar); David Davidson (violin); Stevie Black (strings); David Hodges (piano, keyboards); Pete Wallace (piano); Dan Muckala (keyboards, programming); Jamie Muhoberac (keyboards); Paul Bushnell (bass guitar); Jeremy Lutito, Lee Levin, Dorian Crozier, Vinnie Colaiuta (drums); Neff-U, Zukhan Bey (programming); Dan Chase, Jeff Rothschild (drum programming). By 2007, the Backstreet Boys weren't exactly boys anymore, but UNBREAKABLE, the group's seventh release, proved they still had the easy-breezy boyish charm that made them darlings of the late-1990s teen-pop set. Here a quartet (Kevin Richardson left the band while they were recording UNBREAKABLE), the Boys are streamlined, and the fact that the members are older is reflected in the album's lean toward adult contemporary material. The lead-off single, "Inconsolable," a romantic ballad with a dramatic punch, is a case in point; as is the sweet, mid-tempo ballad "Something I Already Know." Ballads and love songs were always one of the Backstreet Boys' specialties, and UNBREAKABLE plays to that strength, with six of the album's tracks sounding tailor-made for adult contemporary radio. But the group hasn't abandoned its dance-pop roots, as the energized "Everything But Mine" and the edgier-sounding "Treat Me Right" attest. A strong statement by the last classic boy band still standing, UNBREAKABLE will satisfy longtime devotees who have grown up right alongside them.
Industry Reviews [T]hey come close to recreating the sheer euphoria of their biggest pre-Y2K smashes on many of the up-tempo dance-pop numbers...
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