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Step by Step | 
| Artist: New Kids On The Block Label: Sbme Special Mkts. Category: Music
List Price: $6.99 Buy New: $2.77 You Save: $4.22 (60%)
New (26) Used (7) from $2.77
Rating: 41 reviews Sales Rank: 1063
Media: Audio CD Discs: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2 Dimensions (in): 5.6 x 5 x 0.5
MPN: 724280 UPC: 886972428024 EAN: 0886972428024 ASIN: B0012GMYZK
Release Date: March 1, 2008 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: Expedited shipping available Shipping: International shipping available Condition: BRAND NEW, Factory Sealed items direct from the Studios. 30 Day Satisfaction Guarantee. Quick International Airmail!
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| Tracks:
| • | Step by Step | | • | Tonight - New Kids on the Block, Lancellotti, Al | | • | Baby, I Believe in You | | • | Call It What You Want | | • | Let's Try It Again | | • | Happy Birthday - New Kids on the Block, Jonzun, Michael | | • | Games | | • | Time Is on Our Side - New Kids on the Block, Lancellotti, Al | | • | Where Do I Go from Here? | | • | Stay with Me Baby | | • | Funny Feeling | | • | Never Gonna Fall in Love Again - New Kids on the Block, Aleem, Taharqa |
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| Customer Reviews: Read 36 more reviews...
I'll Be Loving New Kids (Forever) April 26, 2000 Freeda (Quebec, Canada) 4 out of 4 found this review helpful
I remember owning this album when I was 5 years old, and for a five year old I didn't really know that much on music, so I taped it over. But now I'm 15 and I SHOULD be loving the BSB or 'N Sync, but NOPE! I've still kept a place for the new kids. Eventhough HANGIN' TOUGH was the greatest album they've ever made, Step by Step has many hit singles that I'm sure many BSB and 'N Sync fans can still remember, maybe not clearly but enough. "HAPPY BIRTHDAY" "TONIGHT" "FUNNY FEELING" "LET'S TRY IT AGAIN" "BABY, I BELIEVE IN YOU" "CALL IT WHAT YOU WANT" and the still very popular pop anthem "STEP BY STEP." If I was to suggest the greatest pop album, BESIDES FROM THE GREAT HANGIN' TOUGH, it would definitly be STEP BY STEP by the unforgettable boy band THE NEW KIDS ON THE BLOCK!
Re-visiting my youth September 24, 2005 Robert Petersen (Durban, South Africa) 4 out of 5 found this review helpful
I played this CD the other day and was amazed that after all these years, it still appealed to me. Wow! In their heyday the boys were magic and this album shows why.
New Kids Start to fade July 12, 2002 3 out of 5 found this review helpful
The New Kids On The Block were the hottest bands around 1988 to 1991. They had 9 top ten hits and had countless gold and platinum awards. This album "Step By Step" debuted at number 14 which was a big deal before soundscan made albums debut at 1. This album hit 1 the next week and was quicly knocked off by MC Hammer. This album includes "Step By Step" hit 1 for 3 weeks and "Tonight" there highest debuting single at 27 which hit 7. This album shows the signs of being a teen idol and how hard it is to follow up such a huge album. The album sold 3 million copies.
13 years ago, I would have given this 6 stars February 8, 2004 Jean Anne Miller (Portland, OR) 3 out of 4 found this review helpful
I used to listen to this album every day. I knew all the words. Hell, I even choreographed a dance to "Step By Step" and tried to convince my dad that "Tonight" sounds like a cross between "Ob La Di, Ob La Da" and "Penny Lane." Although there are no limits to Step by Step's missteps, I have to give them credit for stepping outside the bounds of gooey bubble gum pop and into the kind of territory that will end your teen idol career as fast as it began. Unlike the Kids' self-titled debut and Hangin' Tough, this swan song to teenage stardom incorporates a surprising diversity in music styles... "Step By Step" reassures the Kids' loyal audience that they're still in the pop game, but it really serves as a Trojan Horse to dupe those dumb teenagers into shelling out their parents' dough for the rest of Step by Step--essentially, a collection of failed experiments the session musicians couldn't even save, like the Rico-Suave-esque reggae swamp, "Stay With Me Baby," and the softcore rap, "Games." And let "Tonight" and "Where Do We go From Here" serve as a extreme caution to any boy bands foolishly ambitious enough to make any attempt to musically pay homage to the Beatles...please take heed of these atrocities and aspire to more attainable standards, like, say...Bananarama. Another bonus: whereas on the previous albums, Joe and Jordan took the Lennon-McCartney vocal-hog reins, on Step By Step, all five New Kids are utilized to their fullest potential. Danny Wood can (sort of) rap! And he's not the only one...judging by Donnie's searing, dis-filled rhymes on "Never Gonna Fall in Love Again," he would probably school his younger bro Marky Mark in a rap-off on 8-mile Road, yo. And contrary to popular belief, Jonathan Knight is not a mute...like you and me, he can sing a lame-o hack job of "Happy Birthday" really really badly...who knew? So what brought on this sudden collective effort on the mic? In some circles, it was believed that the New Kids overthrew Maurice Starr's authority over their careers and kicked him to the curb, thus allowing Jordan and Joey to go on tour with the Stylisitics and the rest of the New Kids to step into the recording studio for the first time ever. Another branch on the grapevine contended that because Joey had ventured past the age of 14, suddenly his soprano pipes lost in a battle with a new, deep, ugly voice called puberty, and the other Kids had to make up for his absence, since Jordan couldn't do it alone (what with his inevitable fledgling solo career on the wings). The New Baritone Joey was brave enough to go on the record with "Where Do We Go From Here," but try to get through the track without cringing and longing to listen to "Please Don't Go Girl" on repeat. With Joe all grown up and forbidden to sing, Jordan single-handedly carries the group vocally with his stellar Barry Gibb impersonations, particularly on "Step By Step." As usual, it is his voice that makes the New Kids. I can't help feeling cheated that he didn't do a Justin Timberlake-style rise to solo stardom. He could have really rocked my body. Like watching old Baywatch episodes while tight-rolling my stone-washed jeans, tucking the cuffs under my socks, and slipping on my lace-free Keds, I always find a buried fondness in my heart for treasures I onced loved but am now embarrassed to admit it. This is the way I feel about the New Kids on the Block's Step By Step. Please let the one-star rating I've bestowed upon this album serve as a testament to its enduring significance in the boy band genre for generations to come.
Talk about a flashback March 29, 2004 3 out of 3 found this review helpful
I was with my best friend and her boyfriend this past weekend and her boyfriend put this CD in their player. It brought back a flood of memories. During step by step we still knew who sang what step and the words to it. I remember I went to see them on July 14, 1990 it was raining and I was on a hillside I fell and broke my ankle and I cried so hard because I didnt get to see "my donnie" and I was on crutches for the rest of the summer. But I did end up getting to see them that November. Because of my parents telling my story they moved us 6 rows back from the stage.
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