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Life is never quiet for the Jonas Brothers

Quiet time is a rarity for the Jonas Brothers these days.Following a special performance for more than 500 screaming tween and teen girls at Apple’s downtown Manhattan store on Tuesday night, the brothers — Kevin, 20, Joe, 18, and Nick, 15 — huddled in a stairwell, trying to find a quiet space to conduct an interview with The Associated Press.Good luck with that.Even as they spoke, their wor
/ Source: The Associated Press

Quiet time is a rarity for the Jonas Brothers these days.

Following a special performance for more than 500 screaming tween and teen girls at Apple’s downtown Manhattan store on Tuesday night, the brothers — Kevin, 20, Joe, 18, and Nick, 15 — huddled in a stairwell, trying to find a quiet space to conduct an interview with The Associated Press.

Good luck with that.

Even as they spoke, their words were almost drowned out by deafening, doglike shrieks from girls still trying to find a way to get at their idols, who have set off a boy-band pop craze not seen since the lofty days of ’N Sync and the Backstreet Boys.

“You kind of either just look around and laugh, or just, like, enjoy it,” Joe, the band’s lead singer, says of the frenzy. “We’re in awe. ... It’s a whirlwind, and we’re happy to be on the ride.”

The fandemonium for the Jonas Brothers reached a fever pitch this week with the release of their third CD, “A Little Bit Longer.” The CD arrives just as the sibling trio finished a three-night, sold-out stint at Madison Square Garden, which was also the site of filming for their upcoming 3-D concert flick.

“We are just really living the dream right now,” Kevin said. “For us, having this album finally hit stores and having them sing the songs, knowing that they can actually hear them and have it in their possession is the most amazing thing for us. We’re so excited.”

The path to megastardom

When the Jonas Brothers released their first CD two years ago, the CD barely made a blip on the pop scene. But thanks to a tour with Miley Cyrus on her “Hannah Montana/Miley Cyrus: Best of Both Worlds” tour last fall, the success of their sophomore record and their own best-selling tour this year, the brothers have now become bona fide superstars, matching the teen queen on the path to world domination.

They recently signed a multimillion dollar, two-year pact with concert promoter Live Nation, Rolling Stone magazine put them on its cover, and they are one of the headline performers of this year’s MTV Video Music Awards in September. They also co-starred with up-and-comer Demi Lovato (who also opens for them on their tour) in the Disney Channel movie “Camp Rock,” which premiered in June.

Billboard.com reported the new CD is likely to top the charts next week with sales of over 600,000 copies; figures show it sold just over 200,000 copies in its first day in stores.

Kevin, the elder Jonas, credits their popularity explosion to the diligence of their fans.

There was a line of 1,000-plus screaming fans — some of whom stood outside the Apple store for two days — singing Jonas songs in unison and braving a sudden downpour for the chance to see the brothers, though only about 500 got inside to see them up close (including Harry Connick Jr. and his daughter).

“We’ve been here since Monday afternoon at twelve, so we’ve been camping out all night and it was so cold when it hit 3 a.m.,” said Priscilla Huang, 17, of Brooklyn, N.Y., huddled under an umbrella with her friend Suzanne Hassan, 17.

“We just kept on hanging on ’cause we love the Jonas Brothers so much. We’ll do anything for them,” Huang said, staking the No. 1 spot behind a barricade as she waited for the doors to open.

The Jonas Brothers have two songs in top 15 on Billboard’s Hot 100 chart: “Tonight” at No. 8 and “Burnin’ Up” at No. 11. They also made history after being the first band to sell more than 100,000 digital downloads for three consecutive singles — “Burnin’ Up,” “Pushin’ Me Away” and “Play My Music.”

Though their sound is primarily guitar-fueled pop-rock, Nick Jonas, said he’d like to write songs under an alias to switch things up — and see what happens.

“Maybe one day I’d write a song and somebody would sing it and then no one would really know that I wrote it,” he said. “It would be kind of exciting, and I had heard that Prince did that, and it was just kind of a goal for me.”