USA TODAY US Edition

Backstreet Boys are in business

They’re set to return with album, single, tour

- Patrick Ryan

Backstreet’s back, all right.

Six years, two newborns and one hit Las Vegas residency later, the Backstreet Boys are plotting their return with their 10th studio album, “DNA,” out Jan. 25.

It’s the pop group’s first full-length effort since “In a World Like This” in 2013, in which time the guys have expanded their families, released a documentar­y (2015’s “Show ‘Em What You’re Made Of ”) and charted their 18th song on the Billboard Hot 100 chart (“Don’t Go Breaking My Heart,” which peaked at No. 63 in July).

“After 25 years, to be played on the radio and get as much love as (“Heart”) has gotten, is still overwhelmi­ng,” says AJ McLean, who makes up one-fifth of the band with Nick Carter, Kevin Richardson, Brian Littrell and Howie Dorough. “We feel extremely blessed to know that the past 5-7 years of us doing everything we can to rebuild the brand and get us back to this place has definitely paid off. This (song) has really been setting things up perfectly and we’re about to be off to the races soon.”

First up there’s anthemic new single “Chances,” out Friday. Co-written by Shawn Mendes and OneRepubli­c’s Ryan Tedder, the gushy love song talks about the “two-in-a-million” chance you’ll meet the love of your life in the most precarious, everyday scenario.

“You don’t necessaril­y have to be set up on a date or go on a dating app to meet that special someone,” McLean says. As illustrate­d in its dance-heavy music video, which the Boys co-directed and appear in, “you could literally miss your train and happen to lock eyes with this person, and just lose yourself in that moment and go to whatever lengths to actually be with that person.”

“Chances” was one of the last songs the group recorded for “DNA,” which aims to go back to basics while pushing their sound forward in new and interestin­g ways. “Honey, I’m Good” singer Andy Grammer, Lauv (Charli XCX’s “Boys”) and Mike Sabath

(Liam Payne & J Balvin’s “Familiar”) have writing credits on the album, which was recorded over the past three years in Vegas, Los Angeles and Nashville.

The latter city informed the country/ blues-rock feel of tracks such as “No Place,” which is largely autobiogra­phi- cal.

“I’ve been all around the world, done all there is to do, but there’s no place like home,” says Richardson, 47. “That’s a song that we were inspired by our families and children to make.”

Backstreet’s broods will travel with them for portions of their 71-date world tour, which marks their biggest arena trek in 18 years and kicks off its North American leg July 12 in Washington, D.C., after a two-month European run. Tickets for the tour, which lasts through mid-September, go on sale Nov. 14 at LiveNation.com, and a list of dates can be found on the official website.

Coming off their record-breaking “Larger Than Life” residency in Vegas, which wraps its 21⁄ 2- year run next April, “we have to go big,” McLean says. The show will have a live band, as opposed to dancers, and run 11⁄ to two hours. 2

“You’ll get to hear all the hits and probably half of the new record, with some little surprises sprinkled in as well,” McLean says. “We just locked in the stage design recently, and it’s going to be mind-blowing.”

 ?? CHARLES SYKES/INVISION/AP ?? The Backstreet Boys — from left, Brian Littrell, Kevin Richardson, Nick Carter, AJ McLean and Howie Dorough — are plotting their return with their 10th studio album, “DNA,” out Jan. 25.
CHARLES SYKES/INVISION/AP The Backstreet Boys — from left, Brian Littrell, Kevin Richardson, Nick Carter, AJ McLean and Howie Dorough — are plotting their return with their 10th studio album, “DNA,” out Jan. 25.
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