Tag Archives: Jordan Knight

[ New Kids on the Block ] Video: TODAY Show – New Kids on the Block are back and ‘committed’

For anyone who grew up in the late 1980s and early 1990s, New Kids on the Block were almost impossible to avoid. The five-member onetime boy band (Donnie Wahlberg, Danny Wood, Jordan Knight, Jonathan Knight and Joey McIntyre) sold over 80 million albums worldwide and sold out stadiums around the world when they toured.

Of course, they’re all grown up now, with a new album (“10”) and preparing to join fellow former teen heartthrob bands 98 Degrees and Boyz II Men on a tour that kicks off May 31. But before that, they dropped by the TODAY studio Wednesday — all dressed alike in gray suits and skinny ties (looking very “Jersey Boys”) — to chat with Matt Lauer about rebooting the band after so many years of downtime.

Check out the video for more — including a performance of their new song “Remix.”

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Read full article at TODAYEntertainment.TODAY.com.

[ New Kids on the Block ] Germany – Comeback-Album in den Startlöchern

Mit ihnen begann die Ära der Boybands: Die New Kids On The Block waren die ersten, die durchgestylet, mit minutiös choreografierten Tanzeinlagen und ohne Instrumente die meist weiblichen Massen zum Kreischen brachten.

Nun melden sich die Ur-Väter aller Boybands mit einem neuen Album zurück. Am 5. April wird es erscheinen und den Titel „10“ tragen. In Originalbesetzung haben Donnie Wahlberg und Co. zwölf brandneue Songs aufgenommen, die in modernem Sound daherkommen, ihre musikalischen Wurzeln aber klar in den 80er und 90er Jahren haben.

Sowohl alte als auch neue Fans sollten damit mehr als auf ihre Kosten kommen. „Wichtig ist, dass sie mit dem zufrieden sind, was sie heute bekommen. Sie sollen wissen, dass sie damals ihr Herz an die richtigen verloren haben und dass es sich für sie gelohnt hat, auf das Comeback zu warten“, so Donnie Wahlberg.

Source: TIKonline.de

[ Donnie Wahlberg ] Donnie Wahlberg Misses New Kids On The Block Signing To Film Blue Bloods

Singer/actor Donnie Wahlberg pulled out of a promotional appearance with his group New Kids On The Block in New York City on Tuesday (02Apr13) after filming over-ran on his hit U.S. Tv show Blue Bloods.

The boyband was forced to attend the album signing at music store J&R as a four-piece because Wahlberg was held up on set, but the star has promised to make it up to disappointed fans during the group’s upcoming tour.

He first alerted followers to his potential no-show with a post on his Twitter.com page which read, “On set of Blue Bloods signing 500 pics (sic) in case they don’t wrap me in time for J&R appearance tonight!”

Read full article at ContactMusic.com.

[ New Kids on the Block ] Lyrics Analysis: “Remix (I Like The),” the Group’s Deepest-Ever Track

Almost by definition, boy bands don’t age well. The older the groups get, the harder it is to recapture the magic of when they were at their prime, capturing the hearts of the country and helping define the sound of the era’s popular music. The trick of how to stay relevant, contemporary or interesting as a boy band approaches middle age is one that countless such groups have struggled with over the years—and one which New Kids on the Block, one of the longest-running male vocal group phenoms still making music (and who released their new album 10 today), tackle in a rather clever way with their new single, “Remix (I Like The).”

The song’s title, which also comprises the entirety of the songs hook, is one of the year’s most intriguing you’ll see in passing this year, posing far more questions about the song it represents than it answers. Is it a song about dance music appreciation? Is it supposed to be a remix of itself, with the “original” version still to come? Or is it just a remix of one of their older songs, with the parenthetical and the non-parenthetical parts of the title reversed? Even if you don’t care about the song or about NKOTB themselves, you almost have to listen just to find out the answer.

And the answer, in the most literal sense, is that the song is actually an ode of appreciation to a ladyfriend of the New Kids, a former bookworm type (“She was that girl in the corner / Thick-rimmed glasses…ever the outcast”) who has come out of her shell (“She went from wallpaper / To heartbreaker”) much to the group’s delight (“Went straight from a 2 / To an I just wanna own ya…baby I just wanna own ya.”) The word “remix” is used in a way to imply a new-and-improved version, one that the New Kids prefer to the girl’s original edit. (Basketball analyst Jalen Rose would undoubtedly approve.)

Read full article at PopDust.com.

[ Jordan Knight ] New Kids on the Block’s Knight: Band Has ‘Gone Back Home On This Album’

“We were like, ‘Let’s just give the fans what they want, and put a twist on it,'” Jordan Knight tells Billboard about new album “10.”

The last time New Kids on the Block released an album was in 2008, and the late 80s/early 90s superstars’ first comeback LP was not entirely their own. “The Block,” which followed a 14-year hiatus for the vocal group responsible for hits like “Hangin’ Tough” and “You Got It (The Right Stuff),” was stuffed with collaborations, including guest appearances by Ne-Yo, Timbaland, New Edition, Akon, the Pussycat Dolls and a then-little-known Lady Gaga.

“The Block” has sold an impressive 332,000 copies to date, according to Nielsen SoundScan, but follow-up “10,” released through Kobalt on Tuesday (Apr. 2), finds NKOTB singing with a singular vision — that is, with nary a vocal collaborator on the entire LP. For Jonathan Knight, Jordan Knight, Joey McIntyre, Danny Wood and Donnie Wahlberg, the first NKOTB album with all the members firmly in their 40s is a delightfully close-knit showcase.

Read the full article at Billboard.com.

[ Jordan Knight ] On Justin Bieber’s Recent Bahavior: ‘He Needs To See That There’s Consequences’

Video –

Jordan Knight of New Kids on the Block joined Gregg Daniels live in the Mix studio last Friday afternoon, and one of the best moments of the interview involved his thoughts on Justin Bieber and the negative attention he’s been receiving in the media lately over his behavior.

While he wasn’t very familiar with what actually happened, he did hear about Bieber’s alleged battery and believes it’s understandable for someone not used to tabloid scrutiny to get angry. He acknowledged that photographers and people from sites like TMZ will provoke celebrities into angry reactions, which Bieber apparently fell for.

“For him to react that way is really only human,” he explains in the video above.

Knight added that Bieber will likely learn from the mistakes he’s made in the way he’s treated people recently, especially since he now knows that TMZ and other paparazzi want the exact reactions they’ve gotten from him.

“He has to go through it and see that there’s consequences, and then he’ll change his behavior,” he said.

Source: Mix1041.CBSLocal.com

[ Jordan Knight ] NKOTB hunk Jordan Knight talks making sweet music again in exclusive

WHEN the email landed in our inbox asking if we’d like to interview New Kids On The Block, we must admit we were excited to say the least!

Those handsome boys set our world on fire when they burst onto the pop scene back in the mid-’80s with hits such as Hangin’ Tough, Step By Step and You Got It (The Right Stuff).

Now, almost 30 years on, the sound of handsome frontman Jordan Knight’s voice – this time not on the radio but on the other end of our actual phone – is still setting OK!’s heart aflutter.

‘Hello, how are you?’ he drawls in his sleepy Massachusetts accent. ‘Where are you, London? I’m in Boston.’ In true Jerry Maguire style, our childhood pop heart-throb still has us at hello.

Looking back on a long, successful career, it’s easy to see how it could’ve all ended so differently for the singer.

Now 42 and happily settled with his wife of eight years, Evelyn, and their sons, Dante, 13, and Eric, six, Jordan faced a well-publicised battle with alcoholism, famously saying it was one particularly bad hangover seven years ago that made him realise he had to grow up for the sake of his kids.

And grow up he has. After the band split in 1994, Jordan went off to pursue a successful solo career, before reuniting with NKOTB – brother Jonathan Knight and pals Joey McIntyre, Donnie Wahlberg and Danny Wood – in 2007.

Now they’re back with their sixth studio album, 10. And boy it’s a corker.

Here, speaking exclusively to OK! from his home in Boston, Jordan offers his advice to Justin Bieber on avoiding the pitfalls of fame, reveals how bandmate Donnie is stopping NKOTB from coming back to the UK and the line of questioning that made the ‘prudish American’ singer choke on his water midway through our interview…

Did you ever think starting out in 1984 that you’d be here, with such a huge fan base, almost 30 years later?

No, actually, I didn’t. I kept things open and I thought, anything is possible, but I didn’t force-feed it. For a couple of years before we reunited, of course I envisioned it, we all did. But 20 years ago I didn’t think we’d still be doing this in our forties. It’s more of a fun, joyful experience now. It’s not as crazy as it was before.

You were 14 when you joined the group – do you have any words of wisdom for Justin Bieber? He’s had a tough time recently…

I think Bieber’s doing the right thing. Don’t take any junk from nobody! [Laughs] No, I think lately Justin’s had a bad time of it. But nobody really sees what the guys are saying to him before he lashes out at them. The paparazzi say really mean, cruel things to you so they get that reaction. He’s young, he doesn’t know like, maybe I shouldn’t take the bait on this one.

Read the full interview at OK.co.uk.

[ New Kids on the Block ] Chart Highlights: NKOTB Return With ‘Remix’ On Adult Pop Songs

The Boston boy band returns with the first single from its album ’10,’ due tomorrow.

Debut No. 39 “Remix (I Like The)” New Kids On The Block

Twenty-five years after their breakthrough, Boston’s New Kids on the Block (still New … and still Kids) enter Adult Pop Songs at No. 39 with “Remix (I Like The).” The song previews their 10th album, aptly titled “10,” due tomorrow. While 1988 marked their first of nine Billboard Hot 100 top 10 hits (all in a row through 1990) and first of five Billboard 200 top 10 albums, they actually dented Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs as early as 1986, when their debut single “Be My Girl” spent two weeks at No. 90.

Source: Billboard.com