-40%

N'Sync Band On Tour 2000 Collector's Edition Puppets Dolls Marionettes Vintage

$ 316.78

Availability: 49 in stock
  • Brand: All Entertainment Inc.
  • Bundle Listing: No
  • Packaging: Original (Unopened)
  • Country/Region of Manufacture: China
  • Year: 2000
  • MPN: 20000
  • Recommended Age Range: 6+
  • Era: 1980-2001
  • AFA Graded: No
  • Artist/Band: N Sync
  • Features: Marionettes
  • Type: Action Figure
  • Original/Reproduction: Original

    Description

    NSYNC (/ɛnˈsɪŋk/, /ɪn-/; also stylized as *NSYNC or 'N Sync)[3] was an American boy band formed by Chris Kirkpatrick in Orlando, Florida, in 1995[1][2] and launched in Germany by BMG Ariola Munich.[4] NSYNC consisted of Kirkpatrick, Justin Timberlake, JC Chasez, Joey Fatone, and Lance Bass. Their self-titled debut album was successfully released to European countries in 1997, and later debuted in the U.S. market with the single "I Want You Back".
    NSYNC has been nominated for eight Grammy Awards. Among their awards, the group has won three American Music Awards,[98] five Billboard Music Awards,[52] seven MTV Video Music Awards[99][100] and they hold a Guinness World Record.
    Discography Edit
    Main article: NSYNC discography
    'N Sync (1997)
    Home for Christmas (1998)
    No Strings Attached (2000)
    Celebrity (2001)
    Filmography Edit
    Movies Edit
    NSYNC Bigger Than Live (2001)
    Longshot (2001)
    On the Line (2001) (Joey Fatone and Lance Bass)
    TV Specials Edit
    NSYNC In Concert (1998); filmed at Disney's Hollywood Studios at Walt Disney World for Disney Channel in Concert.
    Holidays In Concert (1998); performed songs from Home for Christmas as well as "God Must Have Spent A Little More Time On You" from their debut album.
    NSYNC 'N Concert (1999); pay-per-view concert filmed in Fort Lauderdale, Florida during NSYNC's Ain't No Stoppin' Us Now Tour.
    Walt Disney World Summer Jam Concert (1999); performed along with Britney Spears, Tyrese Gibson and 98 Degrees.
    NSYNC: Live From Madison Square Garden (2000); a concert special presented by HBO during the No Strings Attached Tour.
    Walt Disney World Twas The Night Before Christmas (2000); performed along with 98 Degrees, Monica, Jessica Simpson, Billy Gilman and many others.
    NSYNC Ntimate Holiday Special (2000); a Christmas special on FOX where NSYNC sang songs from No Strings Attached plus “You Don't Have To Be Alone" from the soundtrack to the film How the Grinch Stole Christmas and “O Holy Night” from their album Home for Christmas.
    NSYNC: The Road to Celebrity (2001); an MTV special from San Diego, California where NSYNC sang and previewed songs from their third album Celebrity. The special also included a countdown of the best NSYNC moments on MTV.
    *NSYNC: Live From Atlantis (2001); a Thanksgiving concert special on CBS filmed from Atlantis Paradise Island which aired before an airing of The Rugrats Movie & included duets with & a performance from special guest Tim McGraw.
    Guest appearances on TV shows Edit
    Sabrina the Teenage Witch (1998) Episode: “Sabrina And The Pirates”
    Clueless (1999) Episode: “None for the Road”
    Note: Tearin Up My Heart was performed in those two shows.
    Touched By An Angel (1999) Episode: “Voice of an Angel” (Also did an a cappella version of God Must Have Spent A Little More Time On You).
    Sesame Street (2000) Episode: “Elmo in Numberland.” Sang a song called “Believe in Yourself”
    Saturday Night Live (2000) Episode: Joshua Jackson/NSYNC. As guest performers and in sketches including as fake boy band No Refund
    The Simpsons (2001) Episode: New Kids on the Blecch Season 12 Episode 14
    Tours Edit
    Headlining
    For the Girl Tour (1997)
    NSYNC in Concert (1998–2000)
    No Strings Attached Tour (2000)
    PopOdyssey Tour (2001)
    Celebrity Tour (2002)
    As supporting act
    The Velvet Rope Tour (supporting Janet Jackson) (1998)
    After heavily publicized legal battles with their former manager Lou Pearlman and former record label Bertelsmann Music Group, the group's second album, No Strings Attached (2000), sold over one million copies in one day and 2.4 million copies in one week, which was a record for over fifteen years.[5][6] NSYNC's first two studio albums were both certified Diamond by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA). Celebrity (2001) debuted with 1.8 million copies in its first week in the US. Singles such as "Bye Bye Bye", "This I Promise You", "Girlfriend", "Pop" and "It's Gonna Be Me" reached the top 10 in several international charts, with the last being a US Billboard Hot 100 number one. In addition to a host of Grammy Award nominations, NSYNC performed at the World Series, the Super Bowl and the Olympic Games, and sang or recorded with Elton John, Stevie Wonder, Michael Jackson, Janet Jackson, Britney Spears, Phil Collins, Celine Dion, Aerosmith, Nelly, Lisa "Left Eye" Lopes, Mary J. Blige, country music band Alabama, and Gloria Estefan. The group received eight Grammy Award nominations.
    NSYNC last recorded new material in 2002 before undergoing an indefinite hiatus. The five members have reunited a couple of times, including at the 2013 MTV Video Music Awards and to receive a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame. The band completed five nationwide concert tours and has sold over 70 million records, becoming one of the best-selling boy bands in history.[7][8] Rolling Stone recognized their instant success as one of the Top 25 Teen Idol Breakout Moments of all time.[9] Justin Timberlake went on to become a ten-time Grammy Award winner throughout his solo career.
    Entertainment Weekly ranked NSYNC as the best boy band of the period late 90s and 2000s; editor Madelne Boardman stated, "the group has a spot in pop history more than a decade late."[86] The Washington Post stated it was one of the two boy bands "that dominated the late '90s and early '00s."[87] According to Billboard, No Strings Attached was the top album of the 2000s (decade),[88] with The Independent listing it among the albums "that marked the decade."[89] Billboard also ranked the group at number four on their list of the biggest boy bands (from the period 1987–2012) according to chart performance, with the staff writing, "despite having one of the most short-lived boy band careers, 'N Sync was arguably the most famous."[90]
    In a retrospective article for No Strings Attached's 20th anniversary, NPR's writer Maria Sherman said the album marked "the sound of a new millennium" and an "industry peak" commercially, while describing the group as "one of the last artists to benefit so greatly from the industry bubble before its spectacular burst," referring to the following post-9/11 era.[77] Sherman also noted their sophomore album to be relevant to the pop market of 2020: "a union of Swedish pop songcraft with R&B and hip-hop's flow and bounce; an eagerness to explore mature themes and styles; an understanding that dance and visual presentation can turn stars into icons."[77] Billboard stated that their sophomore album's production and writing "represented a sonic shift for all of pop music at the turn of the millennium," while noting, "before No Strings Attached, none of the major teen pop albums of the era had featured guest rappers or name producers from the R&B world, and virtually every one that came after did."[78] Writer Al Shipley commented that although NSYNC was not the first act to build an album "around the theme of taking control of their career",[78] the group took this theme a step further with the No Strings Attached cover art and the "Bye Bye Bye" music video.[78] Shipley further stated the album's pop, hip hop, and R&B elements helped NSYNC "climb to the top of the boy band heap."[78]
    A Stereogum article noted the group "were deeply ingrained within the TRL universe", the MTV fan-voted video countdown where they had the most number-one videos for a group and second-most overall, which became "ground zero" for "America's adolescent culture war."[91] The website's editor commented, "to be a teenager at the turn of the millennium was to be inundated with boy bands and pop princesses, and *NSYNC were among the most dominant of them all."[91] As NSYNC propelled the solo stardom of Timberlake, Consequence noted, "[his] solo success is the exception, not the rule", as other contemporary boy bands "failed to produce a solo star."[92] Several acts have cited the group as an influence, including Kelsea Ballerini,[93] Selena Gomez,[94] Meghan Trainor,[95] and Why Don't We.[96] Hayley Williams stated she learned harmonies through listening to the group in her teenage years.[