<span>I</span><span> have just bought my tickets for the Backstreet Boys concert. It's a date – April 20, me, Nick, A J, Brian, Kevin and that other one whose name has eluded me since the mid-1990s.</span> <span>Admittedly, I'm not a particularly big fan of the "boys"; not big enough to cough up Dh350 for a standard ticket without </span><span>smarting slightly, anyway. But I grew up in Limassol, Cyprus, population: 101,000. You probably won't be surprised to hear that not many international superstars incorporated Limassol into their world tour schedules. </span> <span>So, my teenage years were a concert-free zone. Notable exceptions: Giannis Ploutarhos, a Greek singer who you may not have heard of, and the Scorpions, the German soft rock band of </span><span><em>Wind of Change</em></span><span> fame. You know… the one where they just whistle the whole time.</span> <span>As a result, I am now prone to overcompensating. Because nowhere is the pop-loving 90s child better catered to than in Dubai. Promoters in the UAE know exactly what they are doing. They have a captive audience of a certain age, that for the most part refuses to grow up, but has </span><span>enough disposable income to happily spend Dh350 on a little trip down musical memory lane.</span> <span>It's a win-win situation. Semi-retired performers that haven't been near a stage in decades can head straight for the supportive audiences in the UAE</span><span>.</span> <span>Some don't need to travel very far (it is rumoured that a few members of Ace of Base own property here). Meanwhile, the German-Trinidadian crooner Haddaway, who asked that most existential of questions, "</span><span><em>What Is Love</em></span><span>", is regularly to be found playing a round at the Emirates Golf Club, and Gary Barlow of Take That has holidayed in Dubai every year for the best part of a decade.</span> <span>Dubai has the ability to dredge up some serious has-beens. I was there at the first Mix Tape Rewind in 2012, when the aforementioned Haddaway took to the stage alongside No Mercy, who's hit single </span><span><em>Where Do You Go</em></span><span> has been cruelly forgotten in the annals of musical history. I was there when T Q, a rapper who last made a decent track in 1998, took to a tiny stage at The Lodge. </span><span>I'm not ashamed – I was new to the country and still marvelling at the fact that you could see even only marginally famous people in the flesh, singing live.</span> <span>I have learnt some lessons since then. I passed up on the musical genius of the girl band B*Witched, the last three remaining members of a now even more ludicrously named group 5ive, and of Peter Andre (even though he also hails from Cyprus and </span><span><em>Mediterranean Girl</em></span><span> was the soundtrack to my island upbringing).</span> <span>There is nothing like music to incite nostalgia – a sense of euphoria, sadness, regret and happiness mixed into one sweet ball of emotion.</span> <span>Which means that even the tiny sound of </span><span><em>Mr Vain </em></span><span>by Culture Beat can bring a smile to one's face.</span> <span>But it’s a double-edged sword. </span> <span>Last year, I went to watch Take That when they came to Dubai. It was a big day. A teenage me would have given her brand-new cherry-coloured Doc Martens to see TT live. I can still remember the words of every song they've </span><span>made. Any lyrics that weren't published in </span><span><em>Smash Hits</em></span><span> magazine were learnt by rote during hours spent listening to their albums on my bright-yellow Sony Walkman. I barely recovered from the trauma of Robbie Williams leaving the band in 1995.</span> <span>It’s my longest-running grudge.</span> <span>They put on a great show as consummate professionals. It was age-appropriate and featured all the old favourites. They were consummate professionals. </span><span>Problem was – what I really wanted to see was Take That live </span><span>at Wembley</span><span>, circa 1997. </span> <span>Instead, I had to settle for three blokes in their 40s (</span><span>Barlow has done okay, but Howard Donald and Mark Owen look like they had a hard paper round, as my dad would say) in Media City</span><span>. </span> <span>In short, they made me feel old. They were a reminder that I’m no longer a sprightly teen – and that, much like the lads themselves, my dance moves are not what they once were. This particular bout of nostalgia was tinged with more than a little regret.</span> <span>Which is why last weekend, I made a conscious decision to not see Dru Hill and Blackstreet when they made an appearance at Abu Dhabi's Zayed Sports City. I really don't think I would have been able to handle it if </span><span><em>No Diggity</em></span><span> had been ruined forever.</span> ________________ Read more from Selina: <strong><a href="https://www.thenational.ae/lifestyle/writing-dubai-off-as-one-dimensional-only-shows-your-own-blinkered-view-1.702881">Writing Dubai off as one-dimensional only shows your own blinkered view</a></strong> <strong><a href="https://www.thenational.ae/lifestyle/comment/why-ageing-in-dubai-is-a-particularly-painful-process-1.699213">Why ageing in Dubai is a particularly painful process</a></strong> <strong><a href="https://www.thenational.ae/lifestyle/comment/maybe-the-sisterhood-does-exist-after-all-1.694919">Maybe the sisterhood does exist, after all</a></strong> ________________