From baby-faced teens to rugged hunks! Isaac, Taylor and Zac Tulsa from pop-band Hanson look VERY different 20 years after releasing their number one hit MMMBop

By | June 21, 2017

The Daily Mail

By Monique Friedlander For Daily Mail Australia
21:23 EDT 20 Jun 2017, updated 05:06 EDT 21 Jun 2017

It has been 20 years since cult 90s band Hanson shot to fame with their hit single MMMBop.

And Isaac, Taylor and Zac Tulsa looked worlds away from their former teen heartthrobs selves during their appearance on Australian breakfast TV show Sunrise this Wednesday.

The trio, who are now all in their early thirties, no longer sport the long blonde locks for which they became known two decades ago.
Now 31, Zac now sports a chiselled jawline and a much darker hair colour.

He is also the only member of Hanson to have retained his long hairstyle over the years.

The talented musician is the fourth youngest Grammy winner of all time and is skilled in the drums, guitar, percussion, vocals and piano.

He and his wife Kate Tucker share four children.

Zac’s older brother Taylor, 34, has also changed dramatically over the years.
Gone is his luscious blond mane and rosy-cheeked complexion, with the talented musician now sporting a short wavy hair-style and a shadow of stubble.

Taylor sings lead and back-up vocals as well as playing keyboard, guitar and drums.

Despite his celebrity status, Taylor has made to live his life outside of the spotlight in recent years.
Speaking to Vice, the handsome musician claimed that the reason he isn’t pictured in the tabloids is because of his laid-back lifestyle.

‘[My brothers and I] are little bit more casual, a little bit more private,’ he explained.

‘We really enjoy having a good time, but we are the guys at the bar watching the basketball game kind of people, versus feeling the need to make a**es of ourselves in public too much,’ he added.
Taylor and his wife Natalie Bryant are parents to five children.

Meanwhile, eldest Hanson band-member Isaac is 36-years-old and a father to three children with wife Nicole Dufresne.

Isaac has lobbed off his iconic long ponytail and these days sports a head of short, ash-blond hair.

His face-shape appears to be less pointed than it was in his youth, perhaps thanks to the placement of his goatee and squared hair-line.

This year, Hanson are planning their musical comeback with the release of their new single I Was Born.

Tuesday Trivia

By | June 20, 2017

TuesdayTrivia

The Taylor quote is “My bass player can only play 4 bars at a time”

Which song from the Making of Play streams is now in the Hanson vault?

Embrace your inner fangirl: Hanson bring the Middle of Nowhere back to Australia

By | June 20, 2017

the Guardian

Stephanie Van Schilt
Monday 19 June 2017 15.00 EDT

On stage at the sold-out Forum, Hanson frontman, middle-sibling and all-round-dreamweaver Taylor tells his audience that the trio’s new song, I Was Born, is about getting to the core of what you’ve always really wanted in life.

“That crazy idea about who you wanted to be, before you had that job you have — before all the shit you have to deal with,” he says.

For me, and for many like me in the 1990s, I knew exactly who I wanted to be: Mrs Jordan Taylor Hanson. To paraphrase Oscar Wilde: we were all in our teenage bedrooms, but some of us were looking up at stars.

The walls and ceiling of my suburban room were plastered with Hanson, pages torn from Smash Hits, Dolly, TV Hits and some specifically imported special issues from the States and Japan. I had lifesize posters bought with hard-earned pocket money from What’s New – and not just one CD single, but every CD single, of every song, multiple times over (they had different remixes and bonus tracks, and I was a completist).

The Middle of Everywhere tour marks a special anniversary for the brothers and their no-longer-tween fans. Heading from Europe to Australia and then around the world, they are celebrating the 25th anniversary of the band’s formation, and the two decades that have passed since the release of Middle of Nowhere, the record that put them at the centre of the 90s pop music map.

Some will be surprised to hear that Hanson have been consistently releasing studio albums every few years since 1997. They’ve been back to Australia for smaller shows a few times, but this is the big nostalgia tour, reaching for a market that hasn’t been tapped for about 20 years. And with sold-out shows in Melbourne, Sydney and Brisbane, it’s working.

In the 90s, Hanson were especially huge in Australia. Their catchy nonsense ditty MMMBop spent nine weeks at No 1 on the ARIA charts, and made Hanson a household name for anyone with adolescent daughters. They were imprinted on hearts, minds and bedroom walls across the globe, as Middle of Nowhere sold 10 million copies worldwide.

And on Sunday night, those once-adolescent daughters – now 30-somethings like me, many watching through their mobile phones – are out in full force.

The Forum is electric and raucous, fuelled with unbridled joy and shameless nostalgia. It’s bright orange logos and sunshine, a place where we plant a seed, plant a flower, plant ten thousand roses while relishing the unchallenging themes of love and loss, happiness and sadness, and, well, whatever MMMBop is.

“We’ve got a lot of history with this great town,” Taylor says, flirting with the audience. Isaac brings up the “little in-store performance” way back in 97 that saw 20,000 young girls (and their poor parents) head to Southland shopping centre in Melbourne to watch a free Hanson show. Twenty years ago I had lined up for that show from 4am; this time, I drove myself to the concert, was able to refrain from hysterical sobbing, and didn’t need to race back to record their performance on Hey Hey It’s Saturday when I got home.

The songs from Middle of Nowhere — Weird, Where’s The Love?, Madeline and MMMBop — are greeted, of course, by the loudest singing and screams, but other favourites like Penny & Me also stand the test of time. Their newer stuff is just as poppy and optimistic, and apart from minor technical difficulties with pitch in the second half – and a strange moment when Isaac realises he has jumped his script cue, and stops talking to the crowd mid-sentence – it’s an excellent show.

Hanson, undeniably talented musicians, switch between instruments; Taylor still bends his knees while singing and belting the keys, the way you remember; and their collective acapella cover of Rockin’ Robin – a callback to their origin story – remains a testament to their vocal skills. Beyond that though, the band revel in the pure pop ability held by all good contemporary chart toppers, from Swift (the only other Taylor that matters) to One Direction: they can make you – the fan – feel like you’re the most important person in the world.

When I wallpapered my room with the the sweet, sweet faces of Taylor, Zac and Isaac, it wasn’t about mere decoration, but dedication; it was the visual projection of my deep, undivided (and arguably unrivalled) love of the band. The only thing I regret more than growing a plaited rats tail to emulate Taylor’s is letting that love die. For many, it’s continued – shout out to those who have been part of Hanson.net for all these years – but most of us, those less resilient, have taught ourselves to push this love aside and take up more “credible” (aka androcentric) cultural pursuits.

If the attack at Ariana Grande’s show in Manchester taught us anything, it was that pop music is an empowering force, and the community of fans that revel in it – mostly teen and pre-teen girls – are powerful enough to be seen as a threat to patriarchal dominance, and to religious extremists. That’s exactly why they need to be celebrated.

I embraced my inner fangirl on Sunday, and danced to songs I haven’t listened to for years. Reviewing a band that has held your heart before you’d even held anyone’s hand is an impossibly biased task. But for the polite crowd, the feel in the room, the smile on my face and Hanson’s overall performance, I’m giving the Middle of Nowhere tour four stars — one for each of Zac Hanson’s children.

Yep, he has four kids. See, now you feel old too.

• Hanson play Sydney on 21 and 22 June, Gold Coast on 24 June, Brisbane on 25 June, and Auckland on 27 June, before touring South America and the US

Hanson brothers slam Justin Bieber: ‘Chlamydia of the ear’

By | June 19, 2017

news.com.au

Andrew Bucklow news.com.au

HANSON has slammed Justin Bieber, comparing both the pop star and his music to a sexually transmitted disease.

Isaac, Taylor and Zac Hanson took the music world by storm 20 years ago when their song MMMBop went to number one in 27 different countries.

But in an interview with Hit107 FM in Adelaide, they made it quite clear they’re not fans of current chart-topping artist, Bieber, who has three out of the top five singles on the ARIA charts.

The brothers, who are now in their 30s, took part in a game called Whose Song is it Anyway? with breakfast radio hosts Amos Gill, Cat Lynch and Angus O’Loughlin.

“Here’s the deal with this game,” one of the brothers said, “we’re gonna lose”.

Isaac, Taylor and Zachary Hanson back in their glory days.
Isaac, Taylor and Zachary Hanson back in their glory days.Source:News Corp Australia
Admitting they don’t listen to much “modern” music, it wasn’t surprising that none of the Hanson members knew the title or artist of the biggest song in the country right now, Despacito.

When the breakfast hosts told them it was by Luis Fonsi, Daddy Yankee and Justin Bieber, the Hanson members couldn’t hide their disdain.

“Can I just say I’m glad I didn’t know what that was,” one of the brothers said.

“I prefer not to get any venereal diseases so whenever Justin Bieber gets near me or near my ears … it’s just ear infections, they’re terrible.”

Hanson, who seemed amused throughout the interview by the fact most Koala’s have chlamydia, then compared Bieber to one of the furry creatures.

“It’s like hanging out with a koala,” one of them said, “Chlamydia of the ear, it sucks”.

Hanson is currently touring Australia and will be performing at the Enmore Theatre in Sydney on June 21, The Star on the Gold Coast on June 24 and The Tivoli in Brisbane on June 25.

Oh, and for the record, they lost the game of Whose Song is it Anyway?

Review: Adelaide basks in nineties nostalgia with US pop band Hanson playing The Barton Theatre, 20 years on from their hit album Middle of Nowhere

By | June 18, 2017

Adelaide Now

Meagan Dillon, The Advertiser

June 17, 2017 9:05am

WELL, they managed to do it.

I woke up the morning after the Hanson gig in Adelaide with the song MMMBop in my head.

And it has been hard to get it out — it’s just so damn catchy.

Growing up in the 90s, the Hanson brothers — Isaac, Taylor and Zac — were on high rotation in my household.

I will not admit to having the band’s poster on my wall.

But I will admit that their 1997 album Middle of Nowhere was one of the first I ever bought. And by bought, I mean my parents got it for me — I was nine.

Hanson hit Thebarton Theatre on Friday night on a tour that is celebrating the 20th anniversary of that seminal album.

It took the brothers five years to land on the mainstream radar with their breakthrough hit MMMBop.

But when it broke, they became the biggest boy band in the world, generating decibel-busting teen hysteria.

Two decades on, nothing much has changed.
Thebby Theatre was filled with screaming hardcore Hanson fans in their band tees, singing along to every word, of every song as loudly as they could.

Then there were the Hanson fans like me — who just appreciated the trip down memory lane.

These boys from Tulsa, Oklahoma, definitely know how to put on a fun show and even invited the audience back to their hometown for a reunion.

Songs from the Middle of Nowhere album featured heavily during the two-hour set, including Madeline and MMMBop.

They also belted out an awesome rendition of Gimme Some Lovin’ from the 1998 Jack Frost soundtrack.

To finish up, Hanson covered one of the most iconic Australian rock songs ever — AC/DC’s It’s A Long Way To The Top.

Ambitious, yes. But they managed to pull it off.

Hanson were supported by Australian singer-songwriter Jason Singh — the former frontman of Taxiride — and their tour will hit Melbourne, Sydney, the Gold Coast, Brisbane and Auckland, in New Zealand, over the coming weeks

HNET Newsletter- June 16, 2017

By | June 16, 2017


WEEKLY PIC

Zac on stage in Adelaide during the MOE world tour.


MESSAGE FROM THE BAND

We are three days into the Australian leg of the Middle Of Everywhere world tour, not yet over our jet lag, but having a great time in spite of it. We played last night in Perth to an amazing crowd and will be taking the stage for our second show in Aus in just a few hours.  It is so striking to travel the world through Europe to Australia, summer to winter, culture to culture, but still music bringing everyone together. We had a warm welcome when we arrived at the Adelaide airport this morning. It left us all excited for tonight’s show and the prospect of seeing many more Aussie fans. We are continually blown away by the support and dedication we see from so many people all over. That support has made all these years of making music possible.

Isaac, Taylor and Zac


HANSON TOMS SHOES OUT OF THE VAULT

Look what we found in the HANSON Vault! Just in time to celebrate the 10th anniversary of Take The Walk – only available until August 31st 2017 or until sold out! Limited sizes available so get yours today!

MIDDLE OF EVERYWHERE TOUR – NEW DATE

In celebration of the band’s 25th Anniversary, multi-Grammy nominated pop-rock trio HANSON have launched a comprehensive tour taking them around the world, with concerts quickly selling out in Europe, North America and Australia. Following overwhelming response to last week’s on-sale of the upcoming Latin American leg of the tour, the band is adding an additional concert in Monterrey, Mexico to the tour. The additional concert in Monterrey set for August 13th at Rio 70 will go on sale to the public on Fri 16th June, following special fan club pre-sales this week.

“The Middle Of Everywhere Tour has already been a great success since our kick off last week in Europe and the great response to the Latin American onsale. We’re excited that the new show in Monterrey will bring the tour to even more fans as a part of this year’s anniversary celebration”, said keyboardist and singer Taylor Hanson.

In 2013, the group diversified its brand with the founding of their Hanson Brothers Beer Company, and in 2014 added The Hop Jam Beer and Music Festival based in their hometown of Tulsa, OK, which brings together artists and brewers from all over the world, culminating in one of the country’s leading Craft Beer and Music Festivals with 40,000 in attendance, occurring this year on May 21st in Tulsa. The Middle Of Everywhere Tour showcases more than two decades of music in a celebratory world tour, alongside new music that will be followed by a further release in 2018.

To find out more information on HANSON’s tour and music release go to www.hanson.net.
For further information on The Hop Jam Festival, go to www.TheHopJam.com.
For more information on Hanson Brothers Beer, go to www.hansonbrothersbeer.com.

Latin America Dates:
Sun 13 Aug 17 Monterrey MEXICO Rio 70
Tue 15 Aug 17 Guadalajara MEXICO C3 Stage
Wed 16 Aug 17 Mexico City MEXICO Plaza Condesa
Fri 18 Aug 17 Lima PERU Barranco Arena
Sat 19 Aug 17 Santiago CHILE Club Subterraneo
Tues 22 Aug 17 Buenos Aires ARGENTINA Opera Allianz
Thu 24 Aug 17 Rio de Janeiro BRAZIL Km de Vantagem Hall Rio
Fri 25 Aug 17 Belo Horizonte BRAZIL Km de Vantagem Hall Belo
Sat 26 Aug 17 Sao Paulo BRAZIL Citibank Hall

Full Tour Schedule:

Thu 1 Jun 17 Cologne GERMANY Gloria
Fri 2 Jun 17 Amsterdam NETHERLANDS Paradiso SOLD OUT
Sat 3 Jun 17 Hamburg GERMANY Mojo
Mon 5 Jun 17 Paris FRANCE La Cigale
Tue 6 Jun 17 Zurich SWITZERLAND Komplex
Wed 7 Jun 17 Milan ITALY Fabrique
Fri 9 Jun 17 Antwerp BELGIUM Trix SOLD OUT
Sat 10 Jun 17 London ENGLAND O2 Shepherd’s Bush Empire
SOLD OUT
Sun 11 Jun 17 London ENGLAND O2 Shepherd’s Bush Empire
Thu 15 Jun 17 Perth AUSTRALIA Metro City
Fri 16 Jun 17 Adelaide AUSTRALIA Thebarton Theatre
Sun 18 Jun 17 Melbourne AUSTRALIA Forum SOLD OUT
Sun 19 Jun 17 Melbourne AUSTRALIA Forum SOLD OUT
Wed 21 Jun 17 Sydney AUSTRALIA Enmore SOLD OUT
Wed 22 Jun 17 Sydney AUSTRALIA Enmore
Sat 24 Jun 17 Gold Coast AUSTRALIA Star Casino
Sun 25 Jun 17 Brisbane AUSTRALIA Tivoli SOLD OUT
Tue 27 Jun 17 Auckland NEW ZEALAND Town Hall
Tue 12 Sep 17 Dallas TX House Of Blues SOLD OUT
Wed 13 Sep 17 Austin TX Emos East
Fri 15 Sep 17 New Orleans LA Joy Theater
Sat 16 Sep 17 Nashville TN Wildhorse Saloon SOLD OUT
Sun 17 Sep 17 Birmingham AL Iron City SOLD OUT
Tue 19 Sep 17 St Petersburg FL Jannus Live
Wed 20 Sep 17 Atlanta GA Buckhead Theatre SOLD OUT
Fri 22 Sep 17 Raleigh NC The Ritz SOLD OUT
Sat 23 Sep 17 Norfolk VA Norva
Sun 24 Sep 17 Silver Spring MD The Fillmore SOLD OUT
Tue 26 Sep 17 Cleveland OH House Of Blues SOLD OUT
Wed 27 Sep 17 Pittsburgh PA Carnegie Music Hall of Homestead
SOLD OUT
Thu 28 Sep 17 Philadelphia PA The Fillmore SOLD OUT
Sat 30 Sep 17 New York NY Playstation Theatre SOLD OUT
Sun 1 Oct 17 Boston MA House Of Blues SOLD OUT
Tue 3 Oct 17 Montreal QC CANADA Corona
Wed 4 Oct 17 Toronto ON CANADA Danforth Music Hall SOLD OUT
Fri 6 Oct 17 Detroit MI St Andrews SOLD OUT
Sat 7 Oct 17 Chicago IL House Of Blues SOLD OUT
Sun 8 Oct 17 Grand Rapids MI 20 Monroe Live SOLD OUT
Tue 10 Oct 17 Minneapolis MN First Avenue SOLD OUT
Wed 11 Oct 17 St Louis MO The Pageant SOLD OUT
Thu 12 Oct 17 Lawrence KS Granada Theater SOLD OUT
Sat 14 Oct 17 Denver CO Summit Music Hall SOLD OUT
Sun 15 Oct 17 Salt Lake City UT Depot
Tue 17 Oct 17 Seattle WA The Neptune SOLD OUT
Wed 18 Oct 17 Vancouver BC Vogue Theatre
Thu 19 Oct 17 Portland OR Aladdin Theater SOLD OUT
Sat 21 Oct 17 Anaheim CA House Of Blues SOLD OUT
Sun 22 Oct 17 Los Angeles CA The Mayan SOLD OUT
Tue 24 Oct 17 San Diego CA House Of Blues
Wed 25 Oct 17 Las Vegas NV House Of Blues
Fri 27 Oct 17 Houston TX House Of Blues

 


RENEWAL REMINDER

It’s 2017! We wanted to remind you to renew your Hanson.net membership for 2017.  You can find your current expiration date by going to your My Account page.

Hanson’s Dark Secret About MMMBop

By | June 14, 2017

Mix94.5

Something you just might not know…

Hanson's Dark Secret About MMMBop

Well, Subiaco was the destination for a whole bunch of fan-girling this morning when three of Tulsa’s faves entered the building… ladies and gentlemen, Hanson.

It was a great chat with Isaac, Taylor and Zac, who revealed something you may not have actually known about their massive smash hit MMMbop.

MMMBop’s Dark Secret
The one thing you probably didn’t know about Hanson’s smash hit.

We just had to ask them some questions from the fans as well.

Fan Questions For Hanson
That’s right… your questions to Isaac, Taylor and Zac.

The chat, in full, was fantastic and well worth the price of admission.

Hanson… In Full
Our chat in full with Isaac, Taylor and Zac.

Hanson have a new song out, I Was Born, and it’s fantastic.

They’re here for a big Aussie tour and we’re super happy they dropped in for a chat. You’re welcome back any time, boys!

Did Hanson Give Us A New Pride Song? Hear And See ‘I Was Born’

By | June 14, 2017

Instinct

MMMBop was how long ago?  The earworm of a song was released 20 years ago but the band Hanson has been around officially for 25 years.

As part of their 25th Anniversary, HANSON created the “I Was Born” video to commemorate 25 years of living out their dreams. The cast features 11 of the band’s 12 children.

It’s a song we wanted to share with you here on Instinct. Could this even be a new Pride song? Have a listen and a look and you decide.

No, it’s no Gaga’s ‘Born This Way,’ but does it have to be?  A song doesn’t need to be in your face about sexuality or mention non-binary, non-heterogeneitous activities to be a song we can embrace as a pride anthem or even a life anthem.

My first watch and listen through, I was finding myself feeling happy and glad they made a great song like this. Then, when whomever was editing this decided to thrown in a prism, I was like OOOOHHHH!!!  Yes, I saw something shiny and went all gay and even more happy.

No, this is most likely not an attempt to say, hey Gaga, here’s our version, or if some or all of our 11 or 12 children are part of the LGBT community, we’ll be okay with it.

But how do the Hansons stand in regard to the LGBT community? Back in 2007, Zac Hanson answered these questions from the Advocate:

Queer director Gus Van Sant shot the video for 1998’s “Weird”, a song you guys co-penned with gay songwriter-producer Desmond Child.

We chose to work with Gus because he’s an incredibly talented director. I don’t know if many people know this about Gus, but he’s also an incredibly talented musician. He played a Woody Guthrie song with us once. I have this record [Gus] did called 18 Songs About Golf.

You guys come from a religious background. Did Gus and Desmond influence your personal views toward gays and sexuality?

My feeling toward gays is always just… everybody chooses. People’s sexuality and how they live their lives-they have to decide, and it’s not for me to tell them or not to. I don’t walk to the marching orders or anything like that.

The song “Yearbook” is about someone upset over missing a guy named Johnny. Was this meant to be ambiguous? And more important, is Johnny hot?

Probably. Otherwise there wouldn’t be so much controversy over where he is. I love that song because there are so many takes on what that would be. Maybe it’s a gay song.

The band is the subject of a lot of online fan fiction, most of which imagines all or one of you, especially Taylor, as gay.

That’s one end of the spectrum, and the other end is people sending you death threats. I would go with fan fiction any day. And Taylor has that thing about him-and hopefully, he’ll forgive me for saying this in an interview-he’s just a good-looking pretty boy.

They seem pretty okay with us and we’re pretty okay with them, too, and their new song.

Awwww fuck it.  Here’s the song that made them famous.

 

 

MMMBop inspired ‘SNL’ skit

By | June 14, 2017

MPRNews

HansonZac Hanson, Taylor Hanson and Isaac Hanson of Hanson attend the iHeartRadio Music Festival at the MGM Grand Garden Arena on Sept. 21, 2013, in Las Vegas. David Becker | Getty Images for Clear Channel 2013