The non-singles Hanson consider singles are Minute Without You and Been There Before.
How many years was I Was Born written before they actually released it?
The non-singles Hanson consider singles are Minute Without You and Been There Before.
How many years was I Was Born written before they actually released it?
Hanson is bringing the holiday cheer once again.
Twenty years after their debut Christmas album hit shelves – and ‘MMMBop’ skyrocketed to the top of the charts – Isaac, 37, Taylor, 34, and Zac Hanson, 32, are back with a second holiday record: Finally It’s Christmas.
“It’s this time of year that anyone with any heart, all the non-Grinches, looks forward to,” Zac says of the brothers’ love of the season. “It’s an excuse to treat yourself well and take care of other people in a way that we maybe sometimes don’t allow ourselves to think about. You become a better version of yourself.”
Now a married father-of-four, Zac talked to TheFIX about all things Christmas, avoiding the pitfalls of child fame, and if a Hanson reality TV show could actually be in the works.
From left: Zac, Taylor, and Isaac Hanson in 2017; Image: Supplied
Snowed In is arguably one of the greatest Christmas albums of all time. What made you want to do a follow-up now?
When we first decided to do Snowed In 20 years ago, it was a little bit outside our comfort zone. A lot of people celebrate Christmas, but a lot of people struggle to find themselves in these traditional songs. Even in the pop songs, it just seems like the artist gets lost a lot.
For years, fans had asked us to do another Christmas album, and we wanted to do it but it was just about finding that right mix of songs.
We didn’t want to just do a song because it was a classic Christmas song. It was about waiting long enough to be able to do something like ‘A Wonderful Christmas Time’ by Paul McCartney, where it really is a classic now. Twenty years ago, it wasn’t. It was a more modern song. And Mariah Carey‘s ‘All I Want For Christmas Is You’ – we felt like we could do a great version of that song that added something to it. Hers is great, but it’s very pop and very slick. It seemed like one that was worth reinventing on Finally It’s Christmas.
You, Taylor, and Isaac have 12 kids between you – and they sing on ‘Happy Christmas’! Were they itching to get involved with the record?
No, no, I wouldn’t say that. [laughs] We had a few little moments on the first Christmas album, especially right at the end – our youngest brother at the time was 4 and he did a few little speaking parts. And I now have a sonwho was roughly 4 when we were making this album.
Immediately, it was like, wouldn’t it be cool to find a way to connect to our own nostalgia? At this point in the band, 25 years of making music, 20 years since that album, we have our own little memories, our own little stories within our culture as a band. And that was a way to connect to that.
What’s Christmas like in the Hanson family?
There’s always a big Hanson celebration – lots of food, movies, bringing whatever toys and games you got for Christmas over. There have been many sessions of late-night Cards Against Humanity among the adults.
So, who gets the most into the festivities?
I love the gifts the most. I’m a big kid. I still love to play video games. There’s part of me that still loves the idea of what a great toy is from a Nerf gun to a GI Joe to a Barbie doll and Calico Critters to the latest, greatest Hot Wheels set. I love the artistry of it. I love playing.
Isaac is probably the one who gets the most into the traditions: writing the Santa Claus letters – don’t tell the kids – and putting out the cookies and reading The Night Before Christmas on Christmas Eve. He’s probably the biggest Bing Crosby of the band.
Finally It’s Christmas album art; Image: Supplied
As a band, you seem to have continuously been able to do what you love without getting caught up in the Hollywood madness.
The balance we’ve always strived for as a band was based on the art. Not to be elitist as an artist, but simply, if I told you my job title it would be ‘to make music’. That’s what I want to be known for: the crafting, the building. So when you go out into the world and the Hollywood spotlight or the stardom – that’s simply a reflection of what you make. The goal is not to be famous, the goal is to make things that last.
That’s how you see our whole life: We have our own record label because we want to be able to put out music when we want it, how we want it. And we’ve built our own team of people who care about how those songs and stories are shared with the world.
Being based in Oklahoma for us is more a reflection of technology and the time we live in. I’m talking to you, and you’re in Australia. It doesn’t matter that much that there’s a time difference or where I am because music is so digital and so immediate. It’s in the device in your hand. It’s not so much in a place anymore.
You were just 11 when ‘MMMBop’ was released, and yet you seem to have been able to avoid the pitfalls of child fame. What’s the secret?
It’s probably some version of the ‘why’. When you get in a situation where you’re working to become successful, I think you make a lot of choices that are easy to regret. You’re doing it to be successful. My answer to the ‘why’ is I want to be proud of the things I make, and I want to work as hard as I have to work to be successful at things I’m proud of.
People offer us reality TV shows all the time. They’re like, ‘Oh we want to watch you guys. It seems like it would be a good show.’ And we always turn them down because nobody ever wants to make a show about what we do. They want to make a show about who we are.
From left: Isaac, Taylor, and Zac Hanson on The Tonight Show with Jay Leno in 1997; Image: Getty
So, no chance of a Hanson reality show anytime soon?
I love new challenges. That’s my favourite thing in life. Whether it’s a new instrument or a new art form. So, I think someday a reality show could be a great show that connects with who we are, but you won’t get a Hanson show that’s just like, ‘Here they are!” That’s not a show that has longevity or that connects with who we are or our greater culture as a band.
Hanson toured in Australia this year. Any chance you’ll be back soon?
We’re making big plans for next year. I think we’ll be back either 2018, 2019. It’s a beautiful country. There’s a rascal-y spirit that’s similar to the best things about the American spirit. We’re always trying to figure out, How do we go back? How do we make this work?
We’ve been received so well in Australia, and the fans in Australia have been so loyal. Sometimes you can have an almost magical, spiritual experience on stage, and we’ve had so many of those moments while touring in Australia. There’s this this aura and energy that the audiences have. It just makes you want to do it again.
Finally It’s Christmas is available now.
ABC will be broadcasting two Disney Parks holiday specials this year.
The first will air on November 30.
Entitled “The Wonderful World Of Disney: Magical Holiday Celebration,” the special features performances by Fifth Harmony, Hanson, Ciara, In Real Life, Darius Rucker and more.
Julianne Hough and Nick Lachey appear as hosts.
The broadcast is set for 9PM ET on November 30, but ABC has already provided a first look at the performances (which were taped at the Disney theme parks in recent weeks).
Those photos follow:
Elvis, Sia, 98 Degrees… favorites new and old have holiday albums out this year. Take a look at six albums to play and play again this festive season.
Hanson – “Finally It’s Christmas”
More 1990s nostalgia comes in the form of this LP from trio Hanson, featuring four original songs and eight classics. The brothers are following up previous holiday album “Snowed In”, this time lending their sound to tracks recorded by Elvis, Stevie Wonder and more.
Read more: http://entertainment.inquirer.net/250236/holiday-albums-2017-elvis-cheap-trick-hanson#ixzz4yq2G0Sgt
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Hanson has released their latest holiday album, Finally It’s Christmas, just in time for the holidays! Off the Christmas is LP is their single “Finally It’s Christmas” which Hanson has just dropped a festive new lyric video for.
Brothers Zac, Taylor, and Isaac Hanson formed a band and signed a record contract in their teenage years achieving fame from their hit single “MMMBop” released in 1997 earning three Grammy Nominations. The efforts of “MMMBop” debuted at number 13 on the U.S. charts upon its release earning the album multi-platinum sales and positive reviews. Hanson sold over 16 million records worldwide with 8 top 40 albums in addition to 6 top 40 singles in the US, and 8 top 40 singles in the UK. Currently, the band now records under its own independent record label, 3CG Records.
Under their own record label 3CG, Hanson shifted away from the teen pop scene into indie pop releasing the album Underneath which entered Billboard Independent Chart at number one furthermore allowing them to tour in 25 cities and 13 countries in over four weeks. Success followed Hanson as they toured and released multiple albums such as Shout It Out that debuted at 30 on the Billboard 200.
For more about Hanson, visit:
https://twitter.com/hansonmusic
Taylor compared the setlists on the Middle of Everywhere tour to that of a ballet.
According to Hanson, what songs are well known by the fanbase and while weren’t actually singles, are staples in setlists?
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PHOTO COURTESY OF HANSON
We have a big family, so Christmas is hectic. Isaac has three kids and Zac has four. I have six brothers and sisters. I haven’t counted how many people are in our family in a while, but it’s huge.
We’ve had Christmases where one of the brothers has gone to see his in-laws and, when you lose one brother and a group of cousins, it definitely changes the environment. “This seems quiet,” we’ll say. We’re not used to that.
For the past few years, we’ve stopped having every person give gifts to every single person. It gets out of control. You’d need a truck. We do a gift exchange and, ultimately, it’s mostly about being together, lots of food and lots of Christmas classics.
As I get older, with five kids of my own (my oldest is 14), it’s definitely different from when I was the only band member with kids. That’s definitely less complex because you could have them roll with you, put them on your back and get on the next plane. But it really just gets more fun to have these different personalities.
There’s definitely a noticeable change when you have three kids because then you’re dealing with a group. Two individuals might have two different personalities or be two different ages. But once you have a third child, there’s a sense that there’s a group and the dynamics change, depending on who is interested in something at the moment. Different alliances form, depending on the situation. It’s absolutely different when you have three.
I think what’s really cool about bigger families is that everybody develops this innate ability to figure out how to compromise, work with others and realize that the entire world doesn’t revolve around you. It also encourages you to be an individual because you can clearly see your differences from a brother or sister. I see that with my kids: They’re very different, but I see that they love and respect one another.
Beyond that, what I think really happens is that you have a sense that you’re part of a crew when you’re in a big family. You’re already included in a group. I see that with my five-year-old, who is the fifth child. You can see it in her sense of confidence: She is so comfortable being in situations because she sees a lot of love and feels safe. She kind of looks around at the world and feels optimistic. In so many situations, she has somebody beside her that she trusts. It gives you the sense that you have an identity that’s connected to something bigger.
Hanson’s new Christmas album, Finally It’s Christmas, is out now. They play back-to-back dates in Toronto on their Finally It’s Christmas tour on November 24 and 25.
Voice in the Chorus is the Hanson song about all the fans who stuck it out dealing with fair weather fans.
Taylor compared the setlists and tour to what other form of performance?