Want It That Way -fuentez -... - Backstreet Boys - I

In 2017, a Reddit user claiming to be Fuentez’s nephew posted: “My uncle Carlos played the arpeggios. He said Max Martin made him redo it 40 times until it ‘felt like a heartbeat.’ They paid him $800 and a pizza.” The post was deleted, but screenshots remain.

Twenty-seven years later, “I Want It That Way” has been streamed over 1.5 billion times, named Billboard’s #10 greatest boy band song of all time, and inspired countless parodies, memes, and wedding first dances. But beneath its glossy, radio-friendly surface lies a tangled story of creative conflict, accidental genius, and a ghost credit that fan forums still argue about: the mysterious “Fuentez.” To understand the song, you must understand the factory that built it: Cheiron Studios in Stockholm, Sweden. In the late ‘90s, producer Max Martin and his team—Denniz Pop (RIP), Kristian Lundin, Andreas Carlsson, and Rami Yacoub—were refining a formula that would dominate pop for two decades. Their method: write 50 choruses, keep the catchiest one, and prioritize melodic “hooks” over lyrical coherence. Backstreet Boys - I want it that way -Fuentez -...

As Brian Littrell hits that final, suspended note— “I never wanna hear you say…” —the crowd finishes: “That you want it that way.” In 2017, a Reddit user claiming to be