Is there life after ‘MMMBop’? Hanson — yes, that Hanson — turns 25.

By | August 30, 2017

Washington Post

One day, during a recent rehearsal with his brothers, Zachary Hanson used the “F” word. This, in itself, should not be notable. Hanson has four children. He drives a pickup. He recently shed 35 pounds with Lose It! And lots of people use the “F” word.

Except, for many, he is still Zac, the adorable, shaggy-haired preteen pounding out “MMMBop.” The drummer in a boy band that sold 10 million copies of its 1997 debut album, performed on “Saturday Night Live” and the Grammys and at the World Series (all in the same year), and appeared on the cover of Tiger Beat with teen heartthrob Jonathan Taylor Thomas.

Zac isn’t reminiscing as he talks over a new song, “I Don’t Want to Go Home,” with his brothers, Taylor and Isaac. He’s contemplating the opening verse. The narrator, in a bar during last call, sings, “I’m feeling dangerous.”

Could he switch “feeling” to that more profane word with the same first letter?

In the end, Zac leaves the lyrics alone.

“You put it in there and it feels really good, but it just colors the whole song,” he says. “There’s a certain point when I’m like, ‘I like this song more than I like singing f—.’ ”

As Hanson rehearses on this Sunday afternoon, it’s hard to believe the brothers are preparing for a tour celebrating a quarter century as a band. Isaac, the eldest of the brood, is 36. The work, on this afternoon, is not particularly glamorous. They tighten the breaks in “Tragic Symphony.” They smooth out a new song, “I Was Born.”

Finally, as Isaac noodles through the intro to “Johnny B. Goode” and Zac offers up a figure-skating analogy that doesn’t particularly make sense, Taylor grows impatient.

“Let’s not try to reinvent the wheel right now,” he says, and they begin to play again.

At one time, Hanson’s rise, from flyover Oklahoma to mega stardom, may have seemed stunning in itself. But the band’s greatest feat may be how it has survived — and without a scandal, rehab or “Sharknado 4.” The Hanson way has been marked by the brothers’ special ability to say no — always politely, of course — to record execs who didn’t get it; to a culture desperate for confessions; even, at times, to each other.

As they embark on the American leg of their anniversary tour, the brothers haven’t so much reinvented themselves as merely grown into older versions of their teenage selves.

“They beat the system,” says Danny Goldberg, who signed Hanson while chairman of Mercury Records, and both praises them and laments that they didn’t listen to him more.

“They used it, they got what they wanted out of it and then they’ve done things completely on their own terms, without worrying about any other metrics except their own. They could have done other things to make more money, but they put their personal happiness and contentment first.”

‘Why would you do rock-and-roll?’

If you were there that summer, you couldn’t avoid it. “MMMBop” arrived April 15, 1997. By May, it had knocked off the Notorious B.I.G. and taken the top slot of the Billboard Hot 100. The single remained at No. 1 for three weeks and topped the charts in 27 countries, from Australia to Sweden.

Hanson mania hit. David Spade pretended to be the fourth Hanson brother at the MTV Movie Awards. Oprah had them play her talk show and, as she cut to a commercial, found herself singing the chorus. Will Ferrell and Helen Hunt took the brothers hostage in an elevator, at gunpoint, during a skit on SNL.

“Did you write the song ‘MMMBop?’” Hunt shouts after the doors close.

Ferrell hands her a pair of earplugs. He looks at the boys.

“You will now listen to the song as long as it takes for you to feel the pain that we felt this past summer,” he tells them before the music kicks in.

Twenty years later, Hanson doesn’t shy away from “MMMBop,” even if they’ve had to shift it from the key of A to E to accomodate Taylor’s no longer being 14. But they embrace it. After starting a beer company in 2013, they even named their signature pale ale “MmmHops.”

“People will often ask us the question with that tone,” says Isaac. “ ‘Well, do you play that song?’ Of course we do.”

There is one secret he shares about “MMMBop.” As much as it’s catchy pop candy, the song also is about losing friends and always feeling a bit different. To make his point, he speaks some of the lines.

“So hold onto the ones that really care. In the end they’ll be the only ones there. When you get old and start losing your hair, can you tell me who will still care?”

“That song,” he says, “was basically about getting the stink eye from a bunch of folks at our church because we wanted to do rock-and-roll, and they were like, ‘Why would you do rock-and-roll? Why wouldn’t you just sing gospel songs?’ ”

This explains an important part of the Hanson dynamic. It’s why they never totally let their guards down, never completely trust outsiders. That’s what happens when you’re always somewhere between embraced (by your still obsessive core of fans) and misunderstood (by the adults). The answer, for Hanson, has been to pull back, compartmentalize, to keep some spaces for themselves. Consider their approach to faith — one of the more polarizing subjects in modern culture and certainly pop music.

As kids, the boys would overhear the whispers among the mothers at their church. It’s just a phase. They’ll get over it. As teen stars in a secular field, they knew people wouldn’t understand why they still went to church. They dodged when asked whether they prayed. They made it clear that music and religion were separate entities in their lives.

In 1997, when famed director Gus Van Sant approached Hanson as a fan and proposed making their next video, Goldberg put in a call to their father, Walker. He wanted to make sure they were okay being associated with the director of “My Own Private Idaho.”

“I told them about Gus and explained that he was gay and told them about some of the movies he’s made,” Goldberg says. “Without hesitation, Walker says, ‘If you think he’ll make a great video, that’s the right person.’ ”


From left, Isaac, 11, Taylor, 9, and Zac Hanson, 6, perform in front of a panel of local judges for the chance to do their first public show at the Mayfest Arts Festival in their home town of Tulsa in May 1992. (Walker Hanson)

The Hanson Brothers perform at the Arthur Ashe Stadium in the USTA National Tennis Center in New York in 1997. (Adam Nadel/Associated Press)

Hanson at a party after hosting the MTV Movie Awards in 2001. (Mark J. Terrill/Associated Press)

Hanson approaches interviews and publicity with a guarded warmth. They’ll welcome you to their home town, chat for hours at a restaurant and let you scour their merch room. They won’t take you home to hang with the family or to church on Sunday. They certainly won’t let your reality show in.

That’s what A&E discovered, 10 years ago, after greenlighting a pilot for a Hanson family show. The deal fell apart when the production company suggested a staged argument between the Hanson wives over what they fed their children.

“The thing that would drive the ratings, all the drama around family and raising their kids, having to share all that was not acceptable to them,” says Jordan Berliant, one of their managers at the time.

“That’s the difference,” Isaac says when explaining why they’ve never been desperate for attention. “I don’t think we were ever trying to be famous. That wasn’t the goal. The goal was, ‘I want people to sing my songs.’ ”

That dynamic, of keeping things to themselves, extends to the relationship among the brothers. There’s nothing special about sibling strife in rock bands, from the Everlys to the Kinks, Oasis and the Black Crowes. Isaac is loath to discuss it, though, calling it “dirty laundry.” Zac is more open.

For Hanson, a low point came about four years ago, when the band embarked on what was meant to be a 20th-anniversary celebration. In 2013, after releasing their sixth studio album, “Anthem,” and touring, they were tired of the record/tour/record cycle — and of each other. What exactly happened is unclear.

But Hanson took most of 2014 off. Ultimately, they decided to regroup.

“I don’t know the Davies brothers,” says Zac. “I don’t know the Kings of Leon and how they hate or love or whatever. I have been training for this job my whole life. The idea of conflict resolution is not some new thing. It is simply what you have to do every day of your life. And so we just do it. When we yell at each other, we yell at each other until we are not yelling at each other. And when somebody says, ‘Maybe I’ll quit today,’ you say, ‘You are an idiot, and I’ll see you tomorrow.’ Because there is so much in it, so much you care about. The answer is not ‘I give up.’ It’s just not.”


From left, Issac, Zac and Taylor Hanson on Main Street in Tulsa. (Shane Bevel for The Washington Post)
Teen heroes to road warriors

Perhaps the most important misunderstanding — and biggest frustration for Hanson — is how their music has been viewed by the wider world. In Wiki-shorthand, they’re still the teeny-boppers who ushered in the boy-band era and, in the process, tortured most of adult America.

The comparisons to ’N Sync and the Backstreet Boys still bother them. Their music, after all, has always had more in common with Spoon and Squeeze than anything in Lou Pearlman’s stable. And Hanson’s latest song, “I Was Born,” released this summer, is as catchy as anything the band has done. NPR praised it as nothing short of “fantastic.”

They do know music, having made their most formative connection via a Time/Life anthology of 1958 hits purchased by their parents. When Walker and Diana Hanson took the family to South America for a year in 1989, the boys played that tape — stuffed with Chuck Berry, Little Richard and Eddie Cochran — over and over.

Isaac and Taylor also took piano lessons while abroad and started singing together, which continued when they got back to Tulsa. A family video, circa 1992, shows the boys — 11, 9 and 6 — singing Bobby Darin’s “Splish, Splash.” The Hanson Brothers, as they were called, made their first performance at an arts festival in Tulsa in 1992. By 1996, Hanson had released two self-produced albums and went to the South by Southwest festival in Austin to try to get attention. It didn’t work at first.

Play Video 1:56
Never-before-seen footage of young Hanson boys singing
Before their first-ever performance in 1992, Diana Hanson filmed her sons singing “Splish Splash.” At the time, Zac was 6, Taylor was 9 and Isaac was 11. (Courtesy of Hanson)

“There was no way I was going to sign them,” says Steve Greenberg, a Mercury talent scout. “We were just coming out of grunge, and everything was so dark and negative.”

But then Greenberg had an epiphany while in a supermarket checkout line.

“I pulled out one of those teen magazines and realized as I was looking through, there were no pictures of any musicians,” he says. “It was all pictures of Jonathan Taylor Thomas and actors. Of course, you can’t put Eddie Vedder in there. I just realized there was a huge hole here. I thought, ‘I wish there was somebody like that.’ ”

A Mercury colleague slipped Greenberg a tape, which included a rawer version of “MMMBop.” Greenberg signed Hanson and brought in the Dust Brothers, fresh off Beck’s “Odelay,” to give the song a little extra punch. With 1997’s “Middle of Nowhere,” Hanson became the rare teen band on the cover of Teen and topping the Village Voice’s Pazz and Jop critics poll.

Even then, the brothers weren’t afraid to choose their own path.

Greenberg recalls how hard he and Goldberg pushed Hanson to get back into the studio to capitalize on the success of “Middle of Nowhere.” Fame is fleeting, they argued. You have to take advantage of the moment. They refused, wanting instead to prove themselves on the road. Their follow-up, “This Time Around,” didn’t arrive until 2000. It barely cracked the Top 20.

“They never regained their teen audience,” says Greenberg. “What they got was the undying loyalty of the core of their original fans. They’re able to go out, able to tour, and they’re a really excellent band. Instead of looking out and seeing a room of 13-year-old girls, what you see is a room full of 33-year-old women.”


From left, Zac, Taylor and Issac Hanson film an interview with the crew from Signal Factory in the middle of Main Street during their Hop Jam beer and music festival in Tulsa in May. (Shane Bevel for The Washington Post)
Back to Tulsa

Taylor is still deadly handsome, a wearer of skinny jeans and leather boots. He’s not just the lead singer. He also sets the tone in interviews — warm, gracious but never confessional or uncontrolled. At one point, Goldberg expected him to break away from the band.

“There’s just no question that Taylor could have gone solo right away and tried to compete with Justin Timberlake for that slot in the culture,” he says. “It was just [not] going to happen.”

Taylor’s allegiance is on full display in “Strong Enough to Break,” a 2006 documentary, available on YouTube, that details the band’s struggles after “This Time Around.” By the time Hanson was working on their third album, Mercury had been consumed by Island Def Jam Recordings. Goldberg and Greenberg were gone. Instead, they had Jeff Fenster, an executive who rejected almost everything they presented.

Watching Hanson deal with Fenster is a lesson in self-control. Or self-abuse. At one point, during a phone call, the exec dismisses songs they’ve recorded with Greg Wells, who would go on to produce massive hits for Adele and Twenty One Pilots.

“We don’t have an album,” Fenster says.

You want Taylor to scream, smash the receiver and pull a Wilco, abandoning the major label hacks for an indie. Instead, he and Isaac weakly flip the bird to the phone and then he pleads for another chance.

“We so are trying to get where you’re coming from,” Taylor says. “So help us out here.”

Hanson finally split with Island Def Jam in 2003. Five years later, they moved their base of operations back to Tulsa and began releasing albums on their own and having children. (The brothers, all married, have 12 among them.) They also established what is effectively Hanson Inc.

The Hanson brothers brew, market and sell their own line of beers. (Shane Bevel for The Washington Post)

Fans raise their cellphones to take photos as Hanson takes the stage at Hop Jam. (Shane Bevel for The Washington Post)

They have offices in a downtown building stuffed with employees, a recording studio and everything from jewelry and T-shirts to the “Hansonopoly” board game. They launched a beer company, and in 2014 started Hop Jam, a craft beer and music festival in Tulsa.

Still, none of it is meant to replace the band’s central mission — music.

Backstage at this year’s Hop Jam, there are Hansons everywhere. Wives, in-laws, Walker and Diana. A baby with a pink ribbon in her hair. And then they’re on.

The set stretches from “MMMBop” to “I Was Born.” These days, Hanson doesn’t measure success in record sales. They look at their live show. Most of the tour dates are sold out, and at Hop Jam, the street is packed.

In the front row, a line of women, most between 25 and 35, bop to the beat of “Get the Girl Back” and shout as Taylor emerges from a riser in the center of the crowd to sing “Fired Up.”Zac hops out from behind his kit to perform one of his underappreciated gems, “Juliet.”

The next morning, at Tulsa International Airport, Jennifer Parks, 32, is still buzzing as she waits to board a flight back to Virginia. She’s with a friend she met at a Hanson show four years ago.

Hop Jam was Parks’s 60th Hanson gig since her first — Virginia Beach in 1998. What draws her is more than the music. The guys treat their fans with respect and love. They meet them before shows, pose for pictures, even allow fans to enter a contest to interview them. They’re more than a band, which is why she and her friends have never moved on.

“When we come here every year, it’s not just for Hanson,” she says. “It’s one big family.”

The H-Bomb Show Episode 23: Rhyme Syndicate

By | August 29, 2017

“Our summer series finale.

You sent in your favorite Hanson lines
I read through them for 20 minutes of time
The song selection is varied and vast
Some stories long, others just fast
From Been There Before to You Never Know
It’s episode 23 of The H-Bomb Show

Wow, that was awful.”

Tuesday Trivia

By | August 29, 2017

TuesdayTrivia

Copyright issues popped up when the now Whistle Pink Brewing company originally tried to license themselves as ‘Hanson Brothers’ but ran into trademark and copyright issues with ‘Hanson Brothers Beer’

What is Isaac’s favorite Australian animal?

Aos 33 anos, Yara realizou sonho de adolescência e conheceu os Hanson

By | August 28, 2017

Campo Grande News [Translated]

At age 33, Yara performed a teenage dream and met the Hanson

By the time the trio burst, she was only 13 years old, with no financial conditions to go to the show

Yara no show, segurando a plaquinha “20 anos depois”. (Foto: Acervo Pessoal)

When journalist Yara Dosso was 13, a worldwide phenomenon of pop music exploded, attracting a legion of fans around the planet, especially the girls. It was the trio of brothers and musicians Isaac, Taylor and Zac, who signed with the last name: Hanson. By the time they won the charts with the hit “MMMBop”, the boys were only 16, 14 and 11 years old. It was what most charmed Yara.

“Imagine a kid who played drums like that. They had incredible musicality,” he says. “I liked, first of all, the rhythm of the songs, and also of their history, of three brothers who learned to play with their father.”

Yara was the typical card fan. It had a huge collection of posters, magazines, and special articles. He recorded all the trio’s appearances on television on VHS and devoted himself, almost full-time, to the affection for the group. Love was great, but she had never been able to see them live.

“My parents were humble, I was a teenager, I had no money, they came to Brazil, but I did not go,” he says. In addition, his huge collection of Hanson articles ended up being lost along with the change of a friend. “I had taken my things to her house, she moved, we lost touch, I lost everything. I’m sad about it to this day.”

The 1997 photo, showing the journalist’s collection. (Photo: Acervo Pessoal)
The 1997 photo, showing the journalist’s collection. (Photo: Acervo Pessoal)
Many years have passed. From the past, there is only one photo from 1997 that shows Yara’s collection, lying on her bed and raised.

This year, Hanson announced a quick tour of Brazil, through Belo Horizonte, last Friday. Yara, who is now a married journalist, glimpsed the chance she never had. “I saw on a news portal that they were coming in. My husband said, ‘Let’s make this dream come true.’ He gives me the most support, we’re very close.”

Yara and Erlon chose to go to the Minas Gerais show because they have relatives in the region, an uncle and two nephews, who helped in the entire process of buying tickets and lodging. The show, packed with old hits and current songs, was tanned until the last minute by Campo-Grandense. “I almost went crazy, I went back to my 12 years of age, my heart beat hard,” he says. “The hour I saw them coming in, I could not believe that after 20 years I was there.” My eye filled with tears.

But, not to pay tribute to the family, Yara says she held on to the emotion. She was only crying the very next day, when she got an exclusive autograph from the boys.

That’s because Yara’s niece, Bruna, knew one of the security guards hired to protect the Hansons. It was the perfect opportunity. “I went to the hotel the next day to try to talk to them.I could not.I gave my 1997 photo to my niece’s known security.He managed to get the photo for them to autograph,” celebrates Yara .

When he saw the photo, there was another wave of emotion. “I’m crying horrors,” said the journalist, who this time could not hold back her tears. She may have lost all of her precious collection, but now she has a photo of her with an autograph unique to the idols.

Os ingressos e a foto da coleção de Yara, autografada pelos irmãos. (Foto: Acervo Pessoal)

Hanson comemora 25 anos de carreira com show animado em São Paulo

By | August 28, 2017

Correio Do Estado [Translated]

Hanson celebrates 25 years of career with live show in São Paulo

Pop phenomenon of the 1990s, the American trio Hanson performed on Saturday night (26), at Citibank Hall, in São Paulo.

Formed by brothers Isaac (guitar and vocals), Taylor (piano and voice) and Zachary (drums and vocals), the group drew attention at the time because it was formed by talented (and hairy) teenagers – they were, respectively, 16, 13 And 11 years when they blew up worldwide with “Mmmbop”.

The show is part of the commemorative tour of the band’s 25-year career, as well as marking the 20th anniversary of their first commercial album, “Middle of Nowhere” – that’s where “Mmmbop” is. Before, they performed in Rio de Janeiro and Belo Horizonte.

Despite never having achieved the spectacular success of the first hit, the trio remained active: it released five other albums, a brand of beers (called Mmmhops) and, in May of this year, the single “I Was Born.” With this, the faithful fan base has also remained active, which has aged with them and today is formed, mostly, by women in their 30s.

It was they who filled the space at Citibank Hall late Saturday with the same enthusiasm of adolescence – many wore t-shirts with phrases like “Taylor Hanson was my first love”, plus banners and Posters.

On stage, the group returns the affection of the audience. In an extensive, almost two-hour show, he toured every moment of his career with songs like “If Only,” “This Time Around,” “Save Me,” and “Thinking ’bout Somethin.” Performance has no signatures. They are, their instruments, two musicians of support, and only. There are no scenarios, projections or special lighting. But there is a lot of interaction with the public, thanks, mentions to other visits to Brazil and, in the end, a proposal: in case the audience promises to return to see them, they promise to return to the country.

The trio ends their Brazil tour with a show at the Fonte Nova Arena in Salvador, on Sunday (27). Tickets cost from R $ 90 (half-ticket) and can be purchased at www.bilheteriavirtual.com.br

Middle of Everywhere Tour – South America Stats

By | August 28, 2017

Hanson just completed the South American leg of the Middle of Everywhere tour which consisted of 6 tour shows and 2 Members Only Events for a total of 8 shows.  During these shows Hanson played 185 songs live, 48 of which were unique.  All of the setlists are in the database and we are only missing a ticket from the show in Belo Horizonte.  If you have a picture of the ticket you can share, please send it to blog@hansonstage.com so we can get it added to the website 🙂

Middle of Nowhere
Thinking of You – 0
MMMBop – 6
Weird – 6
Speechless – 0
Where’s The Love – 6
Yearbook – 0
Look At You – 6
Lucy – 1
I Will Come To You – 3
A Minute Without You – 6
Madeline – 5
With You In Your Dreams – 1
Man From Milwaukee – 2
Cried – 0

This Time Around
You Never Know – 0
If Only – 6
This Time Around – 7
Runaway Run – 3
Save Me – 4
Dying To Be Alive – 0
Can’t Stop – 0
Wish That I Was There – 0
Love Song – 0
Sure About It – 0
Hand in Hand – 1
In The City – 6
A Song To Sing – 0
Lonely Again – 0
I Don’t Know – 0
Smile – 0

Snowed In
Merry Christmas Baby – 0
What Christmas Means To Me – 0
Little Saint Nick – 0
At Christmas – 0
Christmas (Baby Please Come Home) – 0
Rockin Around The Christmas Tree – 0
Christmas Time – 0
Everybody Knows The Claus – 0
Run Rudolph Run – 0
Silent Night Medley – 0
White Christmas – 0

Three Car Garage
Day Has Come – 0
Two Tears – 0
River – 0
Surely As The Sun – 0
Soldier – 0
Stories – 0
Pictures – 0
Sometimes – 0

Live From Albertane
Gimme Some Lovin’ – 0
Shake a Tail Feather – 0
Where’s The Love – 6
River – 0
I Will Come To You – 3
Ever Lonely – 0
Speechless – 0
With You In Your Dreams – 1
A Minute Without You – 6
Money – 0
More Than Anything – 0
MMMBop – 6
Man From Milwaukee – 2

Underneath
Strong Enough To Break – 5
Dancing In The Wind – 0
Penny and Me – 6
Underneath – 0
Misery – 0
Lost Without Each Other – 4
When You’re Gone – 0
Broken Angel – 1
Deeper – 0
Get Up And Go – 0
Crazy Beautiful – 1
Hey – 3
Believe – 0
Lullabelle – 0

The Walk
Great Divide – 0
Been There Before – 2
Georgia – 0
Watch Over Me – 6
Running Man – 0
Go – 6
Fire On The Mountain – 0
One More – 0
Blue Sky – 0
Tearing It Down – 0
Something Going Round – 0
Your Illusion – 0
The Walk – 0
Got a Hold On Me – 0
I’ve Been Down – 0
In A Way – 0
I Am – 0

Take The Walk EP
Change In My Life – 0
Hope It Comes Soon – 0
Lay Me Down – 0
Follow Your Lead – 0
Where Did It Start – 0

Shout It Out
Waiting For This – 6
Thinking ‘Bout Somethin’ – 5
Kiss Me When You Come Home – 0
Carry You There – 0
Give a Little – 2
Make It Out Alive – 0
And I Waited – 4
Use Me Up – 0
These Walls – 0
Musical Ride – 0
Voice in the Chorus – 0
Me Myself and I – 0
World’s On Fire – 0
Make It Through The Day – 0

ANTHEM
Fired Up – 6
I’ve Got Soul – 0
You Can’t Stop Us – 0
Get The Girl Back – 5
Juliet – 6
Already Home – 5
For Your Love – 0
Lost Without You – 0
Cut Right Through Me – 0
Scream And Be Free – 0
Tragic Symphony – 5
Tonight – 0
Save Me From Myself – 0
Get So Low – 0
Pleasure With The Pain – 0
Nothing On Me – 0
All I Ever Needed – 0

Live and Electric
Optimistic – 0
Every Word I Say – 0
Where’s The Love – 6
Look At You – 6
Strong Enough To Break – 5
I Will Come To You – 3
Underneath – 0
Hand in Hand – 1
In A Little While – 0
Penny and Me – 6
MMMBop – 6
This Time Around – 7
Rock N Roll Razorblade – 0
If Only – 6
A Song To Sing – 0
Believe – 0
Hey – 3
In The City – 6
Deeper – 0

Underneath Acoustic
Strong Enough To Break – 5
Deeper – 0
When You’re Gone – 0
Misery – 0
Underneath – 0
Penny and Me – 6
Hey – 3
Love Somebody To Know – 0

Stand Up Stand Up
These Walls – 0
Carry You There – 0
Use Me Up – 0
Waiting For This – 6
World’s On Fire – 0

Digital Pants
Turning 21 – 0
Back in Japan – 0
When You Get Your Kit – 0
All This Love Crap – 0
I Want a Robot (Birthday 23) – 0
New Years Song 2009 (This Years Going My Way) – 0
Traci Brown – 0
An Evening At The Big Top – 0
Robot Alarm (Birthday 24) – 0
Refresh (Gospel) – 0
My Favorite Christmas Sweater – 0
Jet Lag – 0
Zombie – 0
Hear Those Jingle Bells – 0

Super Digital Pants
Digging to China – 0
Romance with a Robot – 0
My Mind Is Exploding – 0
Launch Time – 0
The Golden Rule – 0
Monster Jam – 0
Signs of Life – 0
More To Love – 0
Choo Choo Trains Of Thought – 0
Christmas Ball – 0

Roots and Rock N Roll EP
I Want To Take You Higher – 0
Hold On Im Coming – 0
Remember the Time – 0
I Believe In A Thing Called Love – 0
Thinking Out Loud – 0

Princess Diaries
Wake Up – 0

Jack Frost
Gimme Some Lovin’ – 0
Good Lovin’ – 0
Merry Christmas Baby – 0

Malcolm in the Middle
Smile – 0

Van Wilder
The Ugly Truth – 0

Strong Enough to Break
Dancing In The Wind – 0
Crazy Beautiful – 1
Underneath – 0
I Almost Care – 0
Wake Up – 0
Dream Girl – 0
Breaktown – 0
Someone – 0
Let You Go – 0
Hey – 3
My Own Sweet Time – 0
Out Of My Head – 0
Penny and Me – 6
Love Somebody To Know – 0
Teach Your Children – 0
Strong Enough To Break – 5

Boomerang
Boomerang – 0
Poison Ivy – 0
Lonely Boy – 0
Don’t Accuse – 0
Rain – 0
More Than Anything – 0
The Love You Save – 0
Back To The Island – 0

MMMBop
Day Has Come – 0
Thinking of You – 0
Two Tears – 0
Stories – 0
River – 0
Surely As The Sun – 0
Something New – 0
MMMBop – 6
Soldier – 0
Pictures – 0
Incredible – 0
With You In Your Dreams – 1
Sometimes – 0
Baby You’re So Fine – 0

2003 Kit
Down – 0
Rock N Roll Razorblade – 0
Next Train – 0
Beautiful Eyes – 0
End of the Line – 0

2004 Kit
Song For Natalie Portman – 0

2005 Kit
So Lovely – 0
Call Me – 0
Need You Now – 0
Never Let Go – 0

2006 Kit
Dancing In The Wind – 0
You Never Know – 0
Lost Without Each Other – 4

2007 Kit
In A Way – 0
I’ve Been Down – 0
Got a Hold On Me – 0
On The Rocks – 0
Take Our Chances – 0
Watershed – 0

2008 Kit
Letters in the Mailbox – 0
Leave the Light On – 0
Coming Back For More – 0
Yearbook – 0
Can’t Stop – 0

2009 Kit
I Can’t Wait – 0
Wait Here For You – 0
All I Have To Give – 0
Take My Time – 0
Devils Nachos – 0

2010 Kit
This Is The Jam – 0
Bad Solution – 0
Ordinary Words – 0
Too Young To Kill – 0
Live Forever – 0

Facing the Blank Page
Sonny Get Your Gun – 0
Sunny Day – 0
Bittersweet – 0
Time Baby Take It – 0
Get Out Of My Heart – 2

No Sleep for Banditos
Up All Night – 0
Be My Own – 0
No Sleep For Banditos – 1
Heartbreaker – 0
Chasing Down My Dreams – 0

Sound of Light
On and On – 6
Call Out My Name – 0
Roller Coaster Love – 2
Best of Times – 3
Sound of Light – 0

Music Made For Humans
On The Road – 0
Show Me The Way – 0
What’s Your Name – 0
Panic in the Streets – 0
White Collar Crime – 2

Inside the Box
Dance Like You Don’t Care – 1
Give Me Your Best Shot – 0
Grace Unknown – 0
Don’t Hide Your Tears – 0
What Are We Fighting For – 0

Other
In The Road – 0
Marshmallow Lover – 0
We’re Gonna Find Out – 0

Loud
Ooh La La La – 0
Stop Me In My Tracks – 0
No Rest For The Weary – 0
Something Loud – 0
Siren Call – 0

Play
Do You Believe In Love – 0
Freak Out – 0
Man On Top – 0
Joyful Noise – 0
Feeling Alive – 0

Finally Its Christmas
Wonderful Christmas Time – 0
Till New Years Day – 0
Someday At Christmas – 0
Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas – 0
All I Want For Christmas Is You – 0
O Little Town of Bethlehem – 0
Winter Wonderland – 0
Blue Christmas – 0
Dasher, Dancer, Prancer, Vixen, Comet, Cupid, Donner, Blitzen – 0
Come On It’s Christmas – 0
Please Come Home For Christmas – 0
Finally It’s Christmas – 0

Middle of Everywhere – The Greatest Hits
I Was Born – 6
MMMBop – 6
Where’s The Love – 6
I Will Come To You – 3
Weird – 6
A Minute Without You – 6
This Time Around – 7
If Only – 6
Save Me – 4
A Song To Sing – 0
Penny and Me – 6
Lost Without Each Other – 4
Underneath – 0
Strong Enough To Break – 5
Broken Angel – 1
Great Divide – 0
Been There Before – 2
Georgia – 0
Go – 6
Watch Over Me – 6
Thinking ‘Bout Somethin’ – 5
Give a Little – 2
Juliet – 6
Get The Girl Back – 5
Fired Up – 6
Already Home – 5

In Color
Somebody That Wants To Love You – 2
Ghostwriter – 1
Reach Out For My Hand – 0
I Don’t Want To Go Home – 3
I Lift You Up – 0

Unreleased
A Life Without You – 1
A Part Of Me – 0
All This Love Crap – 0
Anybody Out There – 0
Battle Cry – 0
Being Me – 0
Bridges Of Stone – 0
Bring Up The Sunshine – 0
Broke Down in the Basement – 0
Crime Of Passion – 0
Either Side – 0
Everyday – 0
Faded Heart – 0
Fate – 0
Fight Another Day – 0
Fly – 0
Glimmering Girl – 0
Goodbye George – 0
Goodnight Eyes – 0
Guns and Bacon – 0
Half As Bad As You – 0
It Just Ain’t Cool – 0
It’s Alright, It’s Ok – 0
It’s Magic – 0
Just a Word Away – 0
Leave It At That – 0
Live For Me – 0
Love – 0
Make Believe – 0
Make It All Right – 0
Modern Compromise – 0
My Favorite Shoes – 0
Never Love Again – 0
Now I See – 0
One More Day Without You – 0
One More Time – 0
One Way Ticket – 0
Out Of My Head – 0
Ready To Run – 0
Rosa – 0
Serious Woman – 0
Sexy Robot – 0
She’s Got Time – 0
Silent Ride – 0
Silver Lining – 0
Someone – 0
Song For Jim – 0
Story Of Your Life – 0
Sun and Sky – 0
Take It All Away – 0
The Hardest Thing – 0
The Space Between – 0
Time Will Tell – 0
Unknown Zac Song – 0
Voting Zac for President – 0
We All Know – 0
Wondering Why – 0
You Can Dream It – 0
You Don’t Know Me – 0
You Got What You Wanted – 0
You Said – 0
You’re Not The Only One – 0
You’ve Got To Love Somebody – 0
Youre Enough – 0

Cover
A Song For You – 0
Ain’t No Sunshine – 0
Aint Too Proud To Beg – 0
All Along The Watchtower – 0
Amazing Grace – 0
Arizona On The Run – 0
Back To The Island – 0
Black Eyed Dog – 0
Black Hearted Woman – 0
Can’t Always Get What You Want – 0
Cecelia – 0
Chain of Fools – 0
Crosstown Traffic – 0
Dancing In The Streets – 0
De Colores – 0
Delta Lady – 0
Desire – 0
Dirrty – 0
Don’t Let Me Down – 0
Don’t Stop Believing – 0
Everybody Needs Somebody To Love – 0
Everyday People – 0
Feelin Alright – 0
Free Fallin – 0
Furry Walls – 0
Ghostbusters – 0
Gloria – 0
God Bless America – 0
God Only Knows – 0
Going Down The Road Feeling Bad – 0
Gonna Make You Love Me – 0
Good Lovin’ – 0
Hallelujah – 0
Hang On Sloopy – 0
Happy Birthday – 0
Happy Together – 0
Hard To Handle – 0
Hard Travelin – 0
High Voltage – 0
Him Or Me – 0
Hold On Im Coming – 0
Hole In My Life – 0
Home Sweet Oklahoma – 0
Honey Bee – 0
How I Roll – 0
I Know You Rider – 0
I Want To Take You Higher – 0
I Want You Back – 0
I Want You To Want Me – 0
I’m A Man – 0
If I Were a Carpenter – 0
Instant Karma – 0
Isaac Quit The Band – 0
It’s a Long Way To The Top (If You Wanna Rock N Roll) – 0
Johnny B Goode – 4
Joy To The World – 0
Kate – 0
Let Love Rule – 0
Let’s Get It On – 0
Like A Rolling Stone – 0
Livin La Vida Loca – 0
Livin on a Prayer – 0
Livin on the Edge – 0
Livin on Tulsa Time – 0
Long Train Runnin – 0
Love Me – 0
Magic Carpet Ride – 0
Me And Julio Down By The Schoolyard – 0
Mixtape – 0
Movin Out – 0
My Girl – 0
National Anthem – 0
Never Been To Spain – 0
Not Fade Away – 0
Oh Darling – 0
Oh Holy Night – 0
Oklahoma Nights – 0
On The Road Again – 0
One More Saturday Night – 0
Out In The Woods – 0
Peace Train – 0
Piece of my Heart – 0
Revolution – 0
Rip It Up – 0
Rockin Robin – 4
Roll Away The Stone – 0
Roll With It – 0
Shake a Tail Feather – 0
Sign Of The Times – 0
Signed Sealed Delivered I’m Yours – 0
Soulshine – 0
Spanish Castle Magic – 0
Splish Splash – 0
Stand By Me – 0
Stranger in a Strange Land – 0
Stuck In The Middle With You – 0
Summertime Blues – 0
Sunshine Of Your Love – 0
Super Freak – 0
Sweet Home Alabama – 0
Sweet Home Chicago – 0
Teach Your Children – 0
The Highwayman – 0
The Joker / Bye Bye Bye – 0
The Mighty Quinn – 0
The Weight – 0
Think – 0
This Land Is Your Land – 0
Thriller – 0
Tightrope – 0
Tonights The First Night – 0
Too Much – 0
Too Much Heaven – 0
Top Of The World – 0
Troublemaker – 0
Trust Me – 0
Twist and Shout – 0
U Can’t Touch This – 0
Unbelievable – 0
Under the Sea – 0
Up Up And Away – 0
Use Me – 0
Wait and Bleed – 0
Waterfalls – 0
We Are Never Ever Getting Back Together – 0
Whatd I Say – 0
Whole Lotta Love – 0
You Make Me Feel Like A Natural Woman – 0
You May Be Right – 0

Hanson in Mexico & South America Videos

By | August 26, 2017

Hanson plays ‘MMMBop’ success at meeting with Fátima Bernardes – 08/24/2017

Taylor Hanson comments on Mari Palma shirt in his honor – Meeting with Fátima Bernardes

White Moon Rebellion Hanson Brothers Interview and asks Taylor Hanson at Wedding

Hanson exclusive interview in chile August 2017

Hanson I was born live vivo fox sports 2017

Hanson toca nova música “I Was Born” no Encontro com Fátima Bernardes

Taylor Hanson dismisses partnership with Anitta: “It’s just a rumor” | Brazil news

HANSON sus planes y que es lo que extrañaba mas de México Bla Bla Show

Hanson in Buenos Aires: Much more than Mmm Bop

By | August 26, 2017

No Son Horas 10 [Translated]

Year 1992. In the city of Tulsa, Oklahoma, three brothers form a musical group and begin to make small presentations in his native city. Without knowing it, they were brewing the germ of what would be a hit for the pop of that decade. “Middle of Nowhere”, their first album released with a label, hit the charts in 1997, and without imagining it, their first cut “Mmm Bop”, would launch them to an immediate success. Isaac, Taylor and Zac were at the top of the charts with only 16, 14 and 11 years.

Twenty-five years later, the band Hanson is embarked on “Middle Of Everywhere Tour”, a world tour whose purpose is to celebrate more than two decades of music. Last Tuesday, August 22, he had his stop in Buenos Aires, on the stage of the Opera Theater, in a concert where one could perceive a return to the past, with dyes of the present.

Isaac, Taylor, and Zac have already overcome the 30-year barrier, and musical maturation can be seen in the current sound of their songs, which never ceased to sound in the early 90’s and early 00’s: “Where’s the love”, “Penny & Me “,” If only “,” This time arround “and” Mmm bop “were the most celebrated themes. There was no lack of samples of his present, with the hand of “I born”, his new single and clear indication that there is future ahead for the band. Their fans also grew along with them, but there were no shortages, shouts, posters, lights, balloons and flags. The occasion was also ideal for them to live the show as if their adolescence remained intact.

For two hours, Hanson reviewed the highest points of his discography. The trio proves live to be much more than a catchy single, letting you perceive a sound strength gained on your journey. Even so, they keep the freshness of the beginnings: as if they kept their sibling games exchange instruments, maintain feedback with their followers, celebrate every moment of the show. A quarter of a century later, it can be seen that the three siblings enjoy being on stage, such as when they started, back in 1992, in the city of Tulsa, Oklahoma.

Lua Blanco meets the Hanson band and sings for their teenage idols

By | August 26, 2017

Gshow [Translated]

Fan of Hanson, White Moon interview the trio

Fan of Hanson, White Moon interview the trio

 

Do you know that teenage dream where you stand face to face with your favorite boyband ? And when is this done? For Lua Blanco , who plays Anita in A Força do Querer , met the band she has loved since she was 13, 14: the Hanson . And more: at the invitation of Gshow, the actress interviewed the trio of brothers who are touring Brazil.

This smile does not fool!  (Photo: Gabriel Nascimento / Gshow)

This smile does not fool! (Photo: Gabriel Nascimento / Gshow)

At the end of this lively chat with the American group, the blonde – who voiced 🎤 to Isaac , Taylor and Zac – made an unusual fan request. Want to find out which of the three was the moon crush ? Give play in the video above! ▶

That moment you've waited a lifetime!  Neither blinks to lose nothing, right, Moon?  (Photo: Anny Ribeiro / Gshow)That moment you've waited a lifetime!  Neither blinks to lose nothing, right, Moon?  (Photo: Anny Ribeiro / Gshow)

That moment you’ve waited a lifetime! Neither blinks to lose nothing, right, Moon? (Photo: Anny Ribeiro / Gshow)

Applied, Lua gave that study before the interview with Hanson (Photo: Anny Ribeiro / Gshow)Applied, Lua gave that study before the interview with Hanson (Photo: Anny Ribeiro / Gshow)

Applied, Lua gave that study before the interview with Hanson (Photo: Anny Ribeiro / Gshow)

Lua Blanco does a selfie with the Hanson (Photo: Gabriel Nascimento / Gshow)Lua Blanco does a selfie with the Hanson (Photo: Gabriel Nascimento / Gshow)

Lua Blanco does a selfie with the Hanson (Photo: Gabriel Nascimento / Gshow)

Now cute for posterity!  📸 (Photo: Gabriel Nascimento / Gshow)Now cute for posterity!  📸 (Photo: Gabriel Nascimento / Gshow)

Now cute for posterity! 📸 (Photo: Gabriel Nascimento / Gshow)

HANSON BEGINS BRAZILIAN TOUR ON THE RIVER WITH SHOW ROUND

By | August 26, 2017

Billboard Brazil [Translated]

American trio that was bursting in the 90’s is on commemorative tour of 25 years of road

Are you coming into pop rock dance, with influences of soul and rockabilly? So, and maybe that’s a bit shocking, Hanson’s show may be perfect for you. The blond boys (now men in their thirties, parents of children, full of children, etc.) who were successful worldwide in the 1990s with the hit “MMMBop” chewing gum, made this Thursday in Rio, the first of Four concerts in Brazil from the band’s 25-year memorial tour, “Middle of Everywhere.”

If this first presentation sets the tone for the others, it is safe to say that the show should appeal to card fans, to those who liked the group in the past, and who are curious about what the boys are doing. The show was thought to be a summary of Hanson’s career and the result is pleasant, very lively and very competent.

ISAAC HANSON: “LIFE PASSES VERY QUICK AND IN A ‘MMMBOP’ ALL IS FINISHED”

Punctually, the Americans took to the stage at the scheduled start of the show and, with two supporting musicians, started playing “Already Home” from the last album “Anthem”. They then amended the equally exciting “Waiting for This,” “Where’s the Love” (one of the best known of the trio) and “Look at You.”

Well rehearsed and full of breath, the band took the whole show in blocks of songs with few intervals, which the three members used to, with much sympathy, to speak the classic “obligados” in Portuguese and to contextualize the presence of some songs in the setlist, Case of the acoustic ballad “On and On”, part of an EP of the trio destined only members of the fanclub.

Within this quieter section, the fluffy “Penny & Me” and the emotional “Save Me”, which rocked the soap opera couple in the early 2000s, were played out of a 15-year-old wedding party and, of course, sung At the top of his lungs.

Photo: Disclosure

In the last third of the show, the animation returned with the new “I Was Born” and the old but incredibly known by the Brazilian public “A Minute Without You”, followed by the sung “Get the Girl Back” and “Give a Little” Which transformed part of the space into a dance floor. The maximum hit of the trio, “MMMBop,” and “If Only,” the song that released Hanson’s second album in 2000 and created an almost apotheotic mood in the house, were almost gone.

In the bis, a little more of the showcase of talents of the young men. Going back to the origins, when children began as a cover group to the capella of songs of the 50s and 60s, the three sang using only the microphone “Rockin ‘Robin” of Bobby Day, followed by “Johnny B Goode” and the author ” Lost Without Each Other “, composed in their own image of the genre that inspired them.

Hanson also passes through Belo Horizonte (August 25), São Paulo (26) and Salvador (27). Although a good part of the audience is composed of the faithful fans who have been with the band for more than 20 years, there is plenty of room for those who want to know the long career of the young.