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Backstreet’s back, alright! Kevin Richardson, Brian Littrell, Nick Carter, Howie Dorough and A. J. McLean, or better known as the Backstreet Boys, are set to perform at Stadium Negara, Kuala Lumpur on May 3.

So, they weren’t playing games with our hearts when they said they’d return after their performance at Twin Towers Alive two years ago…

As it’s part of its In A World Like This tour, the chart-topping band will make its first stop in Taiwan on April 30, Singapore on May 2, Malaysia and then the Philippines on May 5.

Tickets will be on sale this Friday at 10am on Ticketpro and are priced from RM208 to RM688. Early bird tickets are also available.

1539425_983836_BackstreetBoys_poster

So, what are you waiting for? Time to give your fellow BSB fans/friends the call they’ve been waiting for because you’d feel incomplete if you don’t. Or be drowning in tears. Or know how it feels to be lonely. You wouldn’t want it that way now, do you? 😉

Anyway, lets check out some of their hits throughout the years!

About

Our entertainment and celebrity news expert who happens to be disturbingly good at laser tag. Graduated with a degree in communications at 21 and went straight into the magazine business. She not only writes for R.AGE now, but also coordinates our long-running BRATs young journalist programme.

Tell us what you think!

BTW…

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I lost my mother to the Japanese war

 Whenever Allied planes bombed Sandakan town as part of its campaign to liberate Borneo, Daniel Chin Tung Foh’s grandfather would rush the whole family into a bomb shelter behind their house.  During its heyday, the British North Borneo Company had developed Sandakan into a major commercial and trading hub for timber, as well as […]

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A witness to the Double Tenth revolt

 Chua Hock Yong was born in Singapore, but his grandfather moved the family to British North Borneo (now Sabah) to establish their business in 1939 when he was a year old.  The Japanese invaded Borneo shortly after, but the family continued living in their shophouse in Gaya Street, Jesselton, now known as Kota Kinabalu.  […]

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An encounter with victims of the Sandakan Death Marches

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Sarawak’s only living child prisoner of war

 Jeli Abdullah’s mother died from labour complications after giving birth to him and his twin brother. To his Bisaya tribe, this was seen as a bad omen, and his father did not know what to do with the twins.  Fortunately, an Australian missionary couple decided to adopt the newborns. But misfortunate fell upon the […]

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Lest we forget

AFIO Rudi, 21, had never thought much about his grandfather Jeli Abdullah’s life story until an Australian TV programme interviewed the 79-year-old about being Sarawak’s last surviving World War II child prisoner of war (POW). The engineering student then realised that despite living in Sarawak all his life, he also didn’t know very much of […]

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A native uprising against Japanese forces

 Basar Paru, 95, was only a teenager when his village in the central highlands of Borneo was invaded by the Japanese Imperial army.  “The Japanese told us not to help the British. They said Asians should help each other because we have the same skin, same hair,” Basar recalled. “But we, the Lun Bawang […]

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Left behind in wartime chaos

 Kadazan native Anthony Labangka was 10 years old when the Japanese Imperial Army invaded Borneo during World War II.  Sitting in the verandah of a modern kampung house on a hot afternoon in Kampung Penampang Proper, where he has lived his whole life, Anthony recalls the hardships of the Japanese Occupation.  The villagers were […]

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