Hanson: 25 Years of Music on Their Own Terms

By | October 11, 2017

BeatRoute

“I want to be proud of every moment and that sometimes means you take a path that leads away from pop culture,” Zac Hanson says.

VANCOUVER – In 1992, three golden-haired brothers took the stage at the Mayfest Arts Festival in Tulsa, Oklahoma. Each standing behind a microphone, Isaac, Taylor, and Zachary Hanson — 11, nine, and six years old, respectively — sang a cappella, harmonizing and snapping their fingers. A fuzzy videotape shows them wearing matching sunglasses, black jackets, and blue jeans, singing “Summertime Blues” and “Rockin’ Robin.”

Back then, they were known as the Hanson Brothers. Soon, they’d go simply by Hanson. They had already begun writing their own songs, mostly fifties-inspired — a musical era they were educated in from listening to a Time Life cassette with Chuck Berry and Little Richard on it over and over again. This, though, was their first gig. Before they learned how to play a handful of instruments other than piano. Before they released their first two independent albums, Boomerang and MMMBop. And before their third record and studio debut, Middle of Nowhere, would sell 10 million copies and “MMMBop” became an iconic hit.

When Hanson finished their set, a man approached the band and asked for their autograph. He thought they were amazing. “It was like a spark,” Zac, now 31, recalls, speaking over the telephone. “Wow, okay, somebody was listening. That was cool. Somebody wanted to remember that we performed. We should do it again — maybe that’ll happen again. That was the one moment I remember from the whirlwind of starting this journey that, at that point, was like, ‘Okay. This is what it means to get a reaction, for someone to feel connected.’”

It’s been 25 years since Mayfest. A lot has happened in that time. Hanson is celebrating with a greatest hits album, Middle of Everywhere, and a largely sold-out tour. Today, the band is in Atlanta, Georgia, where they’ll play the historic Buckhead Theatre. The anniversary felt important, Zac says, because it recognizes not only their success, but all the choices they made along the way to get there.

Hanson signed with Mercury Records, after busking at Austin’s South by Southwest festival landed them a manager. The Dust Brothers, who had just worked on Beck’s Odelay, were brought in to produce “MMMBop,” Middle of Nowhere’s first single. The song was released in April 1997 and quickly climbed to the top of the charts, where it stayed at number one for weeks around the world.

Suddenly, the boys covered magazines like Tiger Beat and Entertainment Weekly. Posters of them were plastered on bedroom walls. They performed the national anthem at the World Series. They were nominated for three Grammy Awards.

Despite urging from the label, Hanson didn’t churn out a follow-up album. They embarked on a tour through North America and Europe, and solidified their fanbase. This Time Around, their sophomore studio effort, came later, in 2000, just as Mercury was absorbed by Island/Def Jam — a corporate merger the band would suffer from. Hanson hit the road again, paying for it out of their own pockets after funding and promotion was cut.

There is a line in Hanson’s newest single, “I Was Born,” that goes: “There’s a road out in front of me, nobody can see, I’m paving it as I go.” “It does connect to something we believe about ourselves and about the world,” Zac says, of the verse. “That this idea of living your dream or living a dream or chasing something that is powerful and meaningful, it doesn’t mean that it’s going to be easy.”

For three years, after This Time Around, Isaac, Taylor, and Zac fought with Island/Def Jam to complete their next record. The band had written and demoed almost 100 songs. Fantastic songs, in their blend of pop, rock, and soul. Some they’d worked on with Carole King and Matthew Sweet. Executives rejected every one, arguing that they weren’t radio friendly. The frustrating struggle is chronicled in Strong Enough To Break, a 2005 documentary that highlights both the brothers’ commitment to artistic integrity and the superficial nature of the industry. In the end, Hanson walked away. They formed their own independent label, 3CG Records, under which they’ve released music ever since. Underneath was the first full length, the victory of that battle (although maintaining sanity might’ve been the real win). It entered at number one on Billboard’s Independent chart in 2004.

When Zac looks back on it, Hanson probably could have left Island/Def Jam earlier. But they are people who like to fix things. “I’m proud of that,” he states. “I like building bridges and mending fences. I think we need more of that in the world. That’s probably part of why I like to live in Oklahoma, you know, I like people who wanna be that way. But there are times when you need to see certain relationships — you have to move quicker to the conclusion.

Risk is not such a scary thing when you realize that the inaction is just as risky as the new endeavour. And I think that was our ultimate decision. We’re taking risks, we’re giving up our time and our relationship with our fans by waiting, by trying to fix things that wasn’t — both sides weren’t trying to fix it, it was just us. And so we had to kind of come to that realization.”

Hanson has never done anything for the sake of fame. That is not what they are about. They could have capitalized on commercial triumph, but they didn’t need to. They are not a corporate commodity. They are concerned with making music they believe in and connecting with people honestly.

“Ultimately, we feel really responsible for our own legacy, if we get to have one,” Zac continues. “And we want it to be something that — we don’t want to give up parts of it so that we can be more successful. I want to be proud of every moment and that sometimes means you take a path that leads away from pop culture or leads away from the known direction. ‘Why didn’t you work with this producer or why didn’t you have a sexy girl in your video or why didn’t you date this person?’ Or whatever it is, these known commodities. And we tend to go and want to build our own.”

Is it frustrating, then, to hear “Hanson is back” when they’ve always been here? Zac says not in the way one might think. “There’s no real storytelling when you say ‘Hanson is back’ because that’s not the story. It’s just — people just want a little piece. ‘I’ll just have one bite of pie,’ you know. There’s a bigger story. But I’m okay with that, because sometimes people need to play games to make themselves feel connected to what you’re doing. And we are back. It’s just we never really left.”

Integrity is a major part of who Hanson is. “I don’t think we know how to do it any other way,” Zac maintains. “When I say what I do to people, I don’t say I perform music, I say I make music. I make music. That means you make it. Every part of it. The lyrics, the melody, the way it’s performed, the chords, the arrangement that comes behind the song. And then, the act of performing it and going on stage is really being proud of what you do and wanting to share it. It’s like the reaction to the action of making something that you feel maybe people in the world need to hear.”

Live performance remains a fundamental element of the magic. Attend a concert or listen to Hanson acoustically to understand why. They are exceptional musicians — Zac on drums, Isaac on guitar, and Taylor on piano — and can switch between instruments effortlessly. Lead singer Taylor has an impossibly soulful voice, an ability to give goosebumps. Their harmonies perhaps pack the most impressive punch. Playing live keeps Hanson going, Zac says, particularly for how it allows them to go further as songwriters and relate intensely to the audience. “Without those kind of experiences, I think we easily could have stopped years ago, but every time you go on stage, you can’t help but remember why you’re there. All the crap you go through to get there doesn’t matter anymore.”

The relationship with fans is paramount: Hanson release an EP exclusively to their fan club every year and things like weekly newsletters, chances to interview them, and weekend-long celebrations with the band in Tulsa cultivate a community and share an enthusiasm for the music. They are just as invested in their fans as their fans are invested in them. “I think, for us, it’s about building deep connections,” Zac adds. “It’s about this idea that music has a power that transcends language and borders and we want to be the kind of people that are fuelling that, because that will last forever.”

And they are. Take The Walk, Hanson’s grassroots campaign to help fight poverty and HIV/AIDS in Africa, has funded medical missions and provided shoes to children in need. It’s something that will continually be a part of what they do, Zac stresses. It makes you re-think your priorities.

A few weeks ago, Zac and Taylor learned how to skydive. Before that, Zac completed a muddy obstacle race called Conquer the Gauntlet. In June, all three brothers leapt off the Auckland Sky Tower. The adventures are part of Hanson’s I Was Born Challenge, which the band launched with the single earlier this year. Both the song and challenge are about purpose: finding ways to face fears and be brave. Zac wanted to see where something like skydiving would take him. What could that inspire? What could that change about him? How could that make him stronger? “It’s okay to be afraid,” he says. “It’s okay for this to be hard. That’s not actually the bigger problem. The bigger problem is when you come back to this moment years from now, whether you regret your choices.”

Isaac, Taylor, and Zac have always been sensitive to the human condition. It’s a thread that has woven through their work since the beginning, from “MMMBop,” a song about life’s futility; to “Great Divide,” a rally for hope; to “A Song To Sing,” a call for the lost. Zac credits part of it to being people of faith — not a topic of their songs, but something that comes through their music and outlook on life. Mostly, it’s due to regarding music as medicine. “It’s a form of something that can heal people and I say it simply because I’ve experienced it, personally, from other people’s music,” Zac explains. “And it can get you through. I think what we would like part of our legacy to be [is] that the music that we make made people stronger or made people better. Helped people through it. Built stronger relationships. I’d like to think in every song there’s a little bit of timeless truth.”

Hanson is writing while on the road. But then, they’re constantly writing. A holiday album, Finally It’s Christmas, is on the way. A new record is to follow, after that. Right now though, they’re looking around — at each other and their fans — at what they’ve accomplished together so far. The music they have made, the connections they have fostered. At what can happen when one stands up for what they believe in and refuses to be compromised.

“I wanna be somebody that is trying to be the best at something,” Zac says. “Not for the sake of beating someone else, but for the sake of achieving something for myself.”

Hanson performs at the Vogue Theatre on October 18. 

 

Epcot’s Food and Wine Fest expands around the world

By | October 11, 2017

USA Today

If music be the food of love, Disney can cure that craving as well. The festival’s Eat to the Beat concert series, which is included with admission to the park, features artists such as Boyz II Men, Kenny G, and Hanson performing nightly in the American Gardens Theatre. After chowing down on Loaded Greek “Nachos,” the song “MMMBop” may take on a whole new meaning.

Christmas Album Preview 2017: Sia, Hanson, Lindsey Stirling and More

By | October 11, 2017

Billboard

Sure, it’s only October, but already a handful of artists are releasing holiday albums in anticipation of Christmas. From boy bands to pop stars, here are five albums to deck the halls with.

Hanson, Finally It’s Christmas

Twenty years since their debut Christmas album, Snowed In, the brothers swing back just in time for the holidays. “[Snowed In] has resonated with so many as a part of their family tradition for two decades,” says the trio in a joint statement. Finally It’s Christmas arrives Oct. 27 with four original songs.

Astrid Stawiarz/Getty Images
(L-R) Zac Hanson, Isaac Hanson and Taylor Hanson of the band Hanson visits the SiriusXM Studios on May 4, 2017 in New York City.

HNET Newsletter- Oct 5, 2017

By | October 9, 2017


WEEKLY PIC

This week we shared the latest installment of our “I Was Born Challenge” series where Taylor and Zac learned to skydive. This is a pic of Taylor and Zac during the epic day of learning to fly. Check out the vid on our YouTube page today!


MESSAGE FROM THE BAND

As we work our way across the continent with the Middle Of Everywhere Tour playing in New York, Toronto, Detroit and Chicago, the countdown to Finally It’s Christmas is underway.  October has just begun, but Christmas is already on the brain. It seems like everywhere we go fans are making plans to celebrate the change of season and join us for the upcoming Christmas concerts.  Even though our musical connection to the holiday season goes back more than twenty years, these Christmas shows will be a HANSON first.  We won’t start rehearsal ’til early November, but knowing we will be adding another member to the touring band is just exciting to think about.

The I Was Born Challenge continues and this time it was 11 years in the making.  You could call it a 14,000 ft trust fall, but it is usually referred to as Skydiving.  Taylor and Zac made their first jump, which was one part terrifying and one part life changing, but you need to watch the video to get the full story.

Isaac, Taylor and Zac


FINALLY IT’S CHRISTMAS ALBUM PRE-ORDERS

Hanson.net Exclusive Finally It’s Christmas Album Packages are now available to pre-order in the Hanson.net store!


RENEWAL REMINDER

Don’t forget to renew your Hanson.net membership for 2017.  You can find your current expiration date by going to your My Account page.

Hanson’s 25th Anniversary

By | October 6, 2017

ET Canada

Sibling trio Hanson are celebrating 25 years in the music business with a greatest hits album. The band is in Toronto, telling Cheryl Hickey how things have changed in the 20 years since they released their hit single “MMMBop”.

The top 20 songs that made your car playlist 20 years ago

By | October 6, 2017

Smooth

Wow, time flies when you have music like this

So, 20 years is a long time. When you think about how much has changed in the world over 20 years it’s crazy to think how we even lived in 1997.

No social media, no answering machines and no ways to stream songs. Such a simpler time.

Well, when it comes to music, we’ve come a long way.

A time when girl pop bands topped the music charts, and film clips were a staple every Saturday morning (I miss this the most), you probably taped these songs and played it on repeat while cruisin’ in your ’97 Corolla.

To celebrate carsales’ 20th birthday, we’re taking a trip down memory lane to remember the classics that made your car playlist 20 years ago:

5.    MMMBop, Hanson

The instant classic that no one knows the meaning of, MMMBop swept the charts globally, hitting #1 in 27 countries. The trio of brothers were nominated for two Grammy’s, making youngest brother Zac, 8, the youngest ever songwriter to be nominated.

Here’s proof that we’ve traveled in time: 9 reasons the ’90s are back

By | October 6, 2017

Detroit Free Press

HANSON

(Photo: TODD PLITT, AP)

Hanson — the musical brothers who brought us the the infectious “MMMBop” in 1997  — is back on tour.

Really.

And the (former) teen heart-throbs are  appearing tonight at St. Andrews Hall in Detroit.

But that’s not the only sign that we’ve somehow traveled back in time to the 1990s.

(See the rest at the source)

Hanson continues to make its musical mark 25 years later

By | October 6, 2017

Chicago Sun Times

Brothers Zac (from left), Taylor and Isaac Hanson of Hanson. | SUPPLIED PHOTO

Throughout their 25 years of making music together, the brotherly trio of Hanson – Isaac, Taylor and Zac – have toured the world many times over, winning over throngs of new fans with their catchy mix of R&B, pop, and rock.

Hanson – Middle of Everywhere 25th Anniversary Tour; Finally It’s Christmas Live
When: 6:30 pm October 7; December 1 and 3
Where: House of Blues 329 N Dearborn St.
Tickets: $44-50+. Sold Out
Info: houseofblues.com/chicago

Chicago is one place for which they’ve developed an especially deep reverence. Most years it’s almost like clockwork that the band routes its tours through the city. The brothers will perform two separate times this year at the House of Blues: Oct. 14 in celebration of their 25th anniversary and new collection “Middle of Everywhere ‑ The Greatest Hits,” and Dec. 1 and 3 to promote their first Christmas album in 20 years, “Finally It’s Christmas.”

“Chicago has been one of our favorite places to play for years,” says Taylor Hanson. “It’s one place we’ll consistently play two shows on tour. It’s not only that people will come out and see us but I think fans like to travel to that city. It’s a great city and I always enjoy coming back. Chicago can’t get rid of us.”

One of Taylor’s favorite Chicago memories is when the band played the House of Blues during a 2003 acoustic tour. He recalls “how the entire room was bouncing with fans” and what a “dynamic space it was.” For this tour, Taylor is most excited about seeing a multi-generational audience.

“With this tour, you see fans [that] have grown up with us and connected with along the way,” he says. “There are also fans that might be the children of the fans that got turned onto our music.”

Starting at ages 11, 9 and 6,  in 1992, the brothers set out to make music together and quickly hitting the jackpot with their chart-topping hit “MMMBop.” While some bands have crumbled to pressures and friction that comes with that kind of sudden success, Hanson has remained steadfast in its pursuit of making quality music.

“We haven’t avoided the pressures. We haven’t dodged challenges. We’ve just been stubborn about continuing to adjust and adapt and continue to do what we started doing, which is to focus on the music,” Taylor says. “We’re really focused on creating great music. That quality and that ability to make that connection with fans is really the thing that ties it all together.”

Taylor adds that it’s critical to take on risks and be confident in what you’re doing. Their ability to learn from their experiences and take on the challenges and hard decisions is a major reason they’ve lasted this long.

“We’re not trying to react to the next single or next trend,” says Taylor. “Our goal has been to make our future in a way that’s more long-term with what we are building. Having that focus has allowed us to weather the storm because we realize that our goal is not simply to popular in a moment but to create a connection to people and hopefully invest in them.”

Their new greatest hits collection is a testament to their staying power.

“One thing that’s really clear when you hear the record is there really is a continuity in our influences,” says Taylor. “You can hear our musical influences, whether you’re listen to our first record or our latest. … There’s a span of time and different life experiences, and peoples’ voices are higher many years ago when we were kids. But the common thread is these songs. You could put them right up next to each other and you still hear the foundation of this band.”

The collection also features new single “We Were Born,” which celebrates the idea that everyone has the potential to make their mark on the world. The song’s video features 11 of the trio’s 12 children, further embellishing the full-circle nature of the song for the band.

“To see our kids singing along, it’s a metaphor to our own life experiences,” says Taylor. “It’s like looking back at ourselves through them. We want people to be engaged by the message of the song and connect a little bit more with our story, which is: We chose to jump out there and go after our dream of making music when we were, in many cases, the ages of our kids.”

“There’s great possibilities when you’re crazy enough to go after what you imagine yourself doing, to go after the thing you feel you were born to do.”

Hanson at Saint Andrews, 5 Things To Know

By | October 6, 2017

The Oakland Press

Hanson performs Friday, Oct. 6, at Saint Andrews Hall in Detroit (Photo courtesy of 3CG Records)

Twenty-five years of Hanson? And 20 years of “MMMbop?” How crazy is that?

But it’s true. The three brothers from Oklahoma, who set the world on fire with their “Middle Of Nowhere” album’s sales of 10 million copies worldwide two decades ago, are now adults and fathers, and they’ve have survived and even creatively thrived as an independent act with their own label and their own vision, mixing music with philanthropic projects and even their own beer, Mmmhops.

The men don’t mind remembering their time as boys, however, and this year the group is celebrating its anniversaries on the Middle Of Everywhere World Tour, along with the release of a “Middle Of Everywhere — The Greatest Hits” album and, on Oct. 27, its second holiday album, “Finally It’s Christmas”…

• Isaac Hanson, the trio’s guitar-playing oldest brother, says that this year’s anniversaries have crept up on him and his siblings. “To some degree there’s a lot of it that just feels like yesterday,” Hanson, 36, says by phone. “But at the same time we were doing our first a capella gigs back in ‘92, and that does feel like a long time ago. There’s a lot of hours and a lot of years of work, but we’ve been very consistent about the way we do things since then. We have full-on trip-out moments where we’ll be talking about something, some performance we’ve done or something, and I’ll go, ‘Wait a second — that was 10 years ago!’ It all kind of blends after a point.”

• The Hanson of 2017, of course, is different than the group of 20 years ago. “For me, honestly, the biggest takeaway I have right now is it really feels like we’re throwing the gloves off,” Hanson explains. “Once you’ve been doing this for this long, it just really feels like there’s no reason to not just pursue every crazy idea. You’ve crossed a certain threshold where it’s like, ‘OK, I guess there are no rules anymore.’ It’s very freeing in that sense.”

• Hanson never repeated the massive success of “Middle Of Nowhere” or “MMMbop,” but that was never the key to building a career according to Isaac. “When we wrote ‘MMMbop’ we weren’t chasing a hit,” he explains. “We’re trying to just write songs we like and feel good about; If they happen to be hits and hit the world at the right time and right way and can transcend beyond just your immediate fan base, then that’s great. But the first thing you’ve got to do is do music you’re proud of and you care about. So you’ve got to start there. And then the next thing is you’ve got to care for the people who show up and support you and build a robust fan base. Those are the cores and that’s what we focus on.”

• The upcoming “Finally It’s Christmas” celebrates the 20th anniversary of Hanson’s first holiday album, “Snowed In” and answers fan requests for another seasonal record. “Ever since the very beginning of that ‘Snowed In’ record coming out, people are constantly going, ‘Are you guys ever gonna make another (holiday) record?’” Isaac says. “It was one of our favorite records we made, a really fun record to make, so we always felt like maybe one day we’ll make another one when it’s the right time. The 10th anniversary went by; That’s not it. The 15th went by; Definitely not the time. Then a couple years ago we started thinking, ‘Y’know, if we’re going to make a Christmas record again, the 20th anniversary seems about right.’ And it’s funny that back then we had younger brothers and sister who made random voiceover-type cameos at the very end of ‘Snowed In,’ and now we have kids who are about the same age. Things like that made us think this seemed about right.”

• Hanson has plans for 2018 and 2019 that Isaac says, “will remain a secret,” though he acknowledges that “there will definitely be new music in a variety of different forms.” As for the future beyond that, he says, “I still feel like the jury’s out for a lot of things with us. I do know who we are. I do know what we care about and I know we’ll be working our asses off for the next 25 years coming up because we care about it. But how the history books write it all out remains to be seen.”

If You Go:

• Hanson

• Friday, Oct. 6. Doors open at 7 p.m.

• Saint Andrews Hall, 431 E. Congress St., Detroit.

• Tickets are sold out.

• Call 313-961-8137 or visit saintandrewsdetroit.com.