Whether fact or fiction, the Fuentez myth serves a larger truth: “I Want It That Way” was not the work of a single genius but a collision of talents—Swedish precision, American soul, and one anonymous guitarist whose three minutes of work helped define a decade. In 2024, the Backstreet Boys performed the song on their DNA World Tour. Nick Carter, now 44, introduced it: “This song has no real meaning. That’s why it means everything.” The crowd roared.
“I Want It That Way” began as a ballad. Martin and Carlsson had a chord progression and a title: “I Want It That Way.” Carlsson later admitted the phrase was deliberately ambiguous—a breakup song where the narrator insists on emotional distance, or a love song about accepting a partner’s flaws? Both readings work. Neither is fully satisfying. That’s the point. Backstreet Boys - I want it that way -Fuentez -...
Musicologist Nate Sloan calls this “emotional prosody mismatch”: the music says I love you , the lyrics say This hurts . That tension is why the song works as both a swooning prom slow-dance and a cathartic breakup anthem. It’s a Rorschach test in 3/4 time. Whether fact or fiction, the Fuentez myth serves