Show Me the Meaning of Being Lonely

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“Show Me the Meaning of Being Lonely”
“Show Me the Meaning of Being Lonely” cover
Single by Backstreet Boys
from the album Millennium
Released January 11, 2000
Format CD Single
Recorded 1999
Genre Pop
Label Jive
Writer(s) Max Martin

Herbert Crichlow

Producer Max Martin

Kristian Lundin

Backstreet Boys singles chronology
"Larger Than Life"
(1999)
"Show Me the Meaning of Being Lonely"
(2000)
"The One"
(2000)

"Show Me the Meaning of Being Lonely" is the third single off Backstreet Boys' 1999 album, Millennium. It is a significant hit, second only to the first single I Want It That Way from the same album, becoming one of the most successful singles of the boy band. It was released in 2000, and peaked at #3 in the UK Singles Chart, #6 in the Billboard Hot 100, and #1 in the United World Chart. It also reached #2 in Switzerland, the Netherlands, Sweden and New Zealand, and #3 on Finland and Norway. [1]

[edit] Track listing

Standard

  1. Show Me the Meaning of Being Lonely
  2. I'll Be There for You
  3. You Wrote the Book on Love

Remixes double vinyl

  1. Show Me The Meaning (Soul Solution House Of Lonliness Vocal)
  2. Show Me The Meaning (Jason Nevins Crossover Instrumental)
  3. Show Me The Meaning (Soul Solution Mixshow Version)
  4. Show Me The Meaning (LP Version)
  5. Show Me The Meaning (Jason Nevins Crossover Remix)
  6. Show Me The Meaning (Remix A Cappella)
  7. Show Me The Meaning (Soul Solution Dub Of Lonliness)
  8. Show Me The Meaning (Bonus Beats)

[edit] Music video

Brian Littrell seen walking out of the main door of a hospital.
Brian Littrell seen walking out of the main door of a hospital.

The music video for "Show Me The Meaning of Being Lonely" was directed by Stuart Gosling. It follows each of the band members separately until the instrumental break and final choruses.

The video begins at a hospital, in which Brian Littrell watches doctors try to save a patient, also portrayed by Littrell. A. J. McLean's scenes take place on a coach bus, mourning the loss of a girl whose photo he carries. He sees her appear on the bus, but she fades away. Kevin Richardson watches film of himself and his father in an apartment. Nick Carter walks down a city street in the rain and saves a girl from almost being hit by the bus McLean is on. Howie Dorough drinks from a teacup at an old-style bar as a girl in red runs towards him, but fades away before she reaches him.

Richardson arrives to meet Dorough and the two leave the building together. McLean's bus arrives, and Littrell exits the hospital. The five band members congregate and begin walking down the street together.

The five Boys walking together out of the city, filmed using the contre-jour technique.
The five Boys walking together out of the city, filmed using the contre-jour technique.

Most of the video is shot in a desaturated scheme in which only certain red elements were brightly colored, until the very end of the video when the band walks out of the city into a brightly coloured field. Whereas each band member has a lead vocal part in the song, each of their separate scenes is introduced at or just before their verse begins.

The video, somewhat darker in tone than any of the band's previous releases, touches on several of the band's real-world issues. Littrell had undergone open heart surgery the previous year for a defect he'd had since birth. The video used actual footage of Richardson and his deceased father. Additionally, the bus McLean rides is marked for "Denniz St.", and is driven by an actor who resembles Denniz PoP; PoP had died in 1998.

A second cut of the video was released some time after the first. The video added a dedication before the video: "This video is dedicated to Denniz POP [sic], and to all those who have lost a loved one". The second cut also altered the special effect used when the girls disappear from a fade in which the girls' shape distorts in a "ripple" effect to just fading away.

[edit] References


Preceded by
"What a Girl Wants" by Christina Aguilera
United World Chart number one single
March 11, 2000
Succeeded by
"American Pie" by Madonna

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