Dana and her friends before their first concert in 1998!
Count Tutu chosen winner of The Hop Jam opening band contest
The people have spoken: The Tulsa band Count Tutu will be the opening band at The Hop Jam craft beer and music festival, scheduled May 21 in the Brady Arts District.
Count Tutu was voted as the winner of the Awesome Music Opening Band Contest (co-presented by the Tulsa World, the Woody Guthrie Center and OKPOP) and will christen a fourth-year festival that will be headlined by Hanson.
Contest runners-up will play on the Park Stage. Runners-up include Sam Westhoff, The Lonelys, Jesse Joice and The Young Vines.
On a Count Tutu Facebook page, this description was offered about the band: “Big, loud, funky, opinionated. If you like dancing, costumes, blasting horn solos, and compassionate propaganda, you’ll like our 11-piece family.”
The band roster on the Facebook page includes Nathan Wright, guitar/vocals; Mike Cameron, bari/alto sax; Branjae Jackson, vocals; Dave Johnson, trumpet; Jared Cathey, tenor sax; Zac Lee, trombone; Greg Fallis, trombone; Jordan Hehl, bass; Kristin Ruyle, percussion; Nicholas Foster, percussion; and Michael Bremo, drums.
Twelve finalists were selected before the opening band contest was opened to voting. Oklahoma artists had until April 17 to register for the contest by posting video of a live performance. The Hop Jam Team was charged with the responsibility of choosing the finalists.
RVRB won the opening band contest in 2016. All About a Bubble won the contest in 2015.
The 2017 festival will include more than 200 craft beers and all-ages free concerts on two stages. Joining Main Stage headliner Hanson and opening act Count Tutu will be Mayer Hawthorne, Kongos, Castro and Oklahoma natives John Fullbright and Johnny Polygon.
Ticket and event information is available at thehopjam.com.
What the Ale: Hanson Brothers Beer and the Community Food Bank of Eastern Oklahoma team up for beer dinner
Tuesday Trivia
The song that has lyrics that are supposed to be a conversation is “You’ve Gotta Love Somebody”
What did Isaac say about Ed Sheeran’s chords and melodies?
The H-Bomb Show Bomb Shelter: The Hanson Day Contingency Plan
Booked a flight to Hanson Day but then saw half the festivities are sold out? This show may help you pass the time in Tulsa.
Journalism I & II classes experience live taping of GMA
On Friday, May 5, Becton’s own Cat’s Eye View team took a trip to Good Morning America Studios in Times Square to be a part of the live studio audience. The trip was chaperoned by English teachers Mrs. De Santis and Mrs. Scalera.
Good Morning America is a morning news television show that airs on ABC from 7:00 a.m. to 9:00 a.m., Monday through Friday. GMA features daily news segments, weather broadcasts, interviews, and several other segments such as “Pop News”. The program is primarily hosted by Robin Roberts, Lara Spencer, George Stephanopoulos, Michael Strahan, and meteorologist Ginger Zee.
Friday’s show had “Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2” actor Michael Rooker as its guest star to promote the movie’s debut that same day. In celebration of the movie’s release, studio audience members each went home with a Groot action figure and comic book for Free Comic Book Day, which takes place on May 6 each year.
Pop-rock band Hanson also performed, with the group singing their 1997 hit “MMMBop” for the band’s 25th anniversary, as well as a brand-new song titled “I Was Born”.
In celebration of Cinco de Mayo, GMA also featured a segment that displayed different guacamole recipes and tips for cooking with avocados from chef Pati Jinich. The segment was sponsored by Avocados From Mexico.
The show also presented its segment “Deals and Steals on Wheels” from Dallas, Texas with Tory Johnson in honor of Small Business Week. The studio audience was then treated to homemade cinnabons courtesy of RoRo’s Baking Company, a small business out of Dallas.
During commercial breaks, hosts Robin Roberts and Michael Strahan posed for pictures and selfies with members of the studio audience, including Cat’s Eye View members. “I felt starstruck!” Senior Simran Kaur exclaimed. “It was overall an amazing experience, and it was a lot of fun to actually be on television.”
At the end of the show, the class was treated to a tour of the studio guided by former Becton student, Philip McCrickard. Upon graduating Becton in 2007 and attending Montclair State University for broadcasting and television production, Phil eventually got a job at GMA where he holds a very important role as a script coordinator.
Watch: Hanson releases lyric video for inspirational new song ‘I Was Born’
NewsOK
Tulsa pop-rock trio Hanson has released the inspirational lyric video for its anthemic new song “I Was Born.”
As previously reported, the band of brothers – Isaac, Taylor and Zac Hanson – will release Sept. 8 “Middle Of Everywhere – The Greatest Hits,” a comprehensive collection which includes hit singles “Mmmbop,” “Where’s The Love,” “Weird,” “This Time Around,” “If Only,” “Penny And Me,” “Thinking ‘Bout Somethin’,” “Get The Girl Back,” plus “I Was Born.”
The brothers celebrated their 25th anniversary making music with a performance of their breakout hit “MMMBop” Friday on “Good Morning America.”
Founded in 1992, the trio began performing classic rock ‘n roll and soul music, and writing original material, crafting a distinctive blend of harmonies and organic soulful pop-rock. Besides Hanson’s 25th anniversary, 2017 also marks the 20th anniversary of the band’s debut release “Middle Of Nowhere,” led by the iconic single “MMMBop,” which introduced the group to the world.
As previously reported, Hanson announced earlier this year its extensive “Middle Of Everywhere 25th Anniversary World Tour.” The trio will kick off the tour in their hometown of Tulsa with The Hop Jam 2017. Billed as Oklahoma’s largest craft beer and music festival, the fourth annual Hop Jam will take place May 21 in the heart of downtown Tulsa’s historic Brady Arts District. The 2017 Hop Jam festivities will include more than 200 craft beers and music headlined by Hanson, the festival’s co-founders.
The tour will feature performances of the group’s most widely known material alongside fan favorites encompassing their extensive catalog. In select markets, Taylor Hanson will DJ the “Dance Like You Don’t Care” after-party, which will feature an eclectic mix of modern and 90’s favorites, according to a news release.
As previously reported, the band also showed off its brotherly harmonies last week at a star-studded Carnegie Hall concert honoring fellow Oklahoman Jimmy Webb. Surprisingly, Hanson performed the legendary songwriter’s “Highwayman,” known as the inspiration for the name of the country supergroup featuring Kris Kristofferson, Waylon Jennings, Willie Nelson and Johnny Cash.
“I Was Born” will be available from all digital music outlets on May 26.
-BAM
Hanson on BMMS 5-8-17
This morning Hanson was on The Big Mad Morning Show to discuss Hop Jam.
Check out the interview here: http://kmod.iheart.com/media/play/27761667/?timeCodeStart-6921
(The Hanson/HopJam portion of the show begins around 1:55:30)
Jimmy Webb Carnegie Hall Tribute: ‘A Celebration’
When you think of “MacArthur Park,” your mind probably settles first on Richard Harris’ dramatic pop rendering, a #2 hit in 1968, or Donna Summer’s disco-ization, which went to #1 in 1978. But did you know that Waylon Jennings, the late country music superstar, cut a version in 1969, which he took to #23 on the Billboard country chart?
The song has also been covered by everyone from superstar vocalist Tony Bennett to Motown’s Four Tops, from jazz guitarist Larry Carlton to British blues great Long John Baldry. At the May 3 Carnegie Hall concert called “A Celebration of the Music of Jimmy Webb: The Cake and the Rain,” it was another country star, Toby Keith, who took on the classic tune, and the fact that his version had more of the exaggerated theatricality of Harris’ than with Jennings’ relatively subdued approach, but echoed neither too closely, says plenty about the adaptability of Webb’s music.
Drawing upon the bravado Webb deliberately and unapologetically wrote into it, Keith, in short, nailed it, with Webb himself providing the moving mid-song piano solo. Declaring, as he took center stage, that this performance was about to be “the most challenging of my career,” Keith—without ever losing his Oklahoma twang—alternately soothed and belted the hell out of the tricky tune, built upon changes in tempo and temperament, wowing the New York audience.
Keith’s turn at the mic came toward the end of the 90-minute program. By then we’d already heard Webb’s songs—both the mega-popular ones and some less known—interpreted by a parade of stars and up-and-comers. The three brothers who call themselves Hanson—like both Webb and Keith, fellow Oklahomans—had come out first. Isaac, Taylor and Zac Hanson had ranged in age from 11 to 16 when they had a #1 teen-pop hit in 1997 with “MMMBop.” Now here they were, all grown up and singing a cappella on Webb’s “Oklahoma Nights,” which Webb recorded with Vince Gill in 2010. They were followed swiftly by actor Michael Douglas, who attempted to sum up Webb’s gift in way too short a time slot, making the point that Webb “works with an inner collaborator,” before making way for Judy Collins.

Judy Collins at the Carnegie Hall Jimmy Webb tribute concert (Photo by Al Pereira, used with permission)
At 78, Collins’ voice remains pure and unsullied. She sat at the piano and sang “The Moon Is a Harsh Mistress,” sans other accompaniment. She’d recorded it on herJudith album back in 1975, after both Joe Cocker and Glen Campbell had given it a whirl. Here she emphasized the poetics of Webb’s words—“The moon’s a harsh mistress, the sky is made of stone/The moon’s a harsh mistress, she’s hard to call your own”—and set up a contrast that would be explored by the next set of performers.
Marilyn McCoo and Billy Davis Jr. were among the first to establish the name of Jimmy Webb as a formidable craftsman. As the lead vocalists of the 5th Dimension, they cut his “Up—Up and Away” in 1967 and, almost exactly 50 years ago, watched it fly into the top 10. Compared to a song like “The Moon Is a Harsh Mistress,” the sunshiney, multiple-Grammy-winning 5th Dimension hit could nearly be seen as whimsical, and at Carnegie, their voices still soaring, McCoo and Davis, backed by the house band, recreated it flawlessly.
Related: Part 1 of BCB’s interview with Jimmy Webb
Throughout the evening, reminders of Webb’s diversity as a composer were affirmed. More than anything though, what came across was that Jimmy Webb has always written first and foremost for singers capable of conveying depth and emotion. Davis lingered onstage as his partner exited and informed the audience that it was his group that had first recorded Webb’s “Worst That Could Happen” in 1968. Released on their album The Magic Garden that year—an album consisting almost exclusively of Webb compositions—it went nowhere. Then, the song found its way and the Brooklyn Bridge, a singing group led by Johnny Maestro, who’d sung lead with the Crests, of “16 Candles” fame, in the ’50s. Maestro and his new group got hold of “Worst That Could Happen” and took it to #3 but here, it was up to Davis to return the song to its original glory—like Collins, he’s 78 and hasn’t lost a thing.
Watch Marilyn McCoo and Billy Davis sing “Up–Up and Away” at the Celebration of Jimmy Webb
B.J. Thomas was next. Another Oklahoman, he’s best known for “Hooked On a Feeling,” but at Carnegie he chose “Do What You Gotta Do,” a song recorded in the past by Johnny Rivers, Nina Simone and others. Thomas’ reading was country-flavored, with a touch of soul, and if not one of the evening’s highlights it still provided another way of looking at a Webb tune. Liz Callaway, a singer/actress who is usually heard on Broadway or singing songs for animated films, took on “Still Within the Sound of My Voice,” one of several highlighted tunes closely associated with Glen Campbell.
She was followed by the returning Hanson, applying their impeccable three-part harmony to “Highwayman.” This one has its own notable timeline—recorded first by Webb himself, then Campbell (on his 1979 album Highwayman) and then, six years later, picked up by Johnny Cash, Waylon Jennings, Kris Kristofferson and Willie Nelson, who cut it for their country supergroup project, also calledHighwayman. They liked it so much they adapted the title as the name of their on-and-off group, giving Webb’s song a higher profile than it might otherwise have had.
A young neo-soul singer, Sheléa, who recently toured with Stevie Wonder, began “Shattered,” previously sung by Art Garfunkel on Webb’s own Still Within the Sound of My Voice album, on piano, then moved to the front of the stage to knock it home. After Sheléa, it was time for the heavy names. First was Johnny Rivers, who often called upon Webb’s material during his heyday. Here he was assigned “By the Time I Get to Phoenix,” which he recorded on his 1966 Changes album. Rivers didn’t have the hit with it—Campbell, of course did, the following year—but at Carnegie Hall, Rivers, self-accompanied on acoustic guitar, injected it with all of the sense of loss and loneliness of the more familiar Campbell version.
Watch Johnny Rivers perform “By the Time I Get to Phoenix” at the Carnegie Hall concert
Perhaps Jimmy Webb could have waited till the end of the show to make his grand entrance but he arrived mid-show instead. He described “Galveston,” yet another associated with Campbell, as “the reason I’m sitting up here tonight” and then offered his own take on it. Although he has released numerous albums of his own, Webb has never been known as a singer. But he sure knows how to deliver a Jimmy Webb song convincingly and here he dedicated one of his biggest, “Galveston,” to our men and women in uniform “who made the ultimate sacrifice,” as well as his own father, making one wonder via his strong delivery if perhaps he could have had more success as a performer if he’d chosen that route rather than concentrating primarily on songwriting.
Graham Nash turned out to be the only real disappointment of the show. He sang just great, but was under-utilized, offering only harmonies to Webb’s own version of “If These Walls Could Talk.” Why not let Nash sing a song too? He’s Graham Nash and he’s at your show! Nonetheless, that was it for Nash but the momentum didn’t flag at all. Art Garfunkel took the microphone for “As I Know,” his signature celestial tone admittedly not what it was 50 years ago but still quite touching.
Watch Art Garfunkel sing “All You Know” at the show
Dwight Yoakam, the first cowboy hat-wearer of the night (he preceded cowboy hat-wearer number two, Keith), was next, bringing some serious country grit to the stage. Following “By the Time I Get to Phoenix” and “Galveston,” he explained, Campbell needed “another city song” so Webb wrote “Wichita Lineman” for him. In receipt of a rough sketch of the song, Campbell finished it himself and, needless to say, turned it into a country and pop smash. Yoakam stuck largely to the original arrangement here, albeit stripping the song of some of the sweetness of the Campbell studio recording.
Related: Part 2 of BCB’s interview with Webb
Michael Douglas came back to the stage to elaborate on the Webb-Campbell partnership, his spiel serving as an intro to Ashley Campbell, the youngest daughter of Glen (who was unable to attend due to his worsening Alzheimer’s). Ashley, bearing a banjo, possesses a strong set of pipes, which she applied to “You Might As Well Smile,” which Glen recorded on his 1974 album Reunion—The Songs of Jimmy Webb.
Hollywood giant Catherine Zeta-Jones, who is also Douglas’ wife, proved a formidable vocalist with her “Didn’t We,” which she introduced as a song that “puts the spotlight on Jimmy the poet.” An unannounced special guest, pop vocalist Michael Feinstein, was dazzling, his rich baritone in exquisite form on “Only One Life,” from his own Webb tribute album, dating from 2003. Keith’s “MacArthur Park” followed and then, to wrap things up, the appropriate “Adios,” featuring Webb, on piano, taking the first two verses and then singer Amy Grant taking it from there.
That song was recorded by Linda Ronstadt on her 1989 Cry Like a Rainstorm, Howl Like the Windalbum, and also serves as the title track for Glen Campbell’s final studio release, due out in June. Ronstadt, who has Parkinson’s disease, also received a shout-out from Webb from the stage. He did not mention it, but the concert was a benefit the Alzheimer’s Association and the I’ll Be Me Foundation, in Campbell’s honor. He also didn’t mention that he has a brand new memoir, The Cake and the Rain, published on April 18. The focus stayed clearly on the songs this evening, a true celebration of one of the most accomplished and consistently satisfying creators of music for these past five decades.
Watch Jimmy Webb perform his own “Galveston” at the concert
Hanson Release New Music ‘I Was Born’ LISTEN
Hanson have new music ahead of their Australian tour in June. ‘I Was Born’ marks 25 years of Hanson.
“Making music together for 25 years is a milestone that we had to acknowledge and what better way to do it than an anniversary tour,” said keyboardist Taylor Hanson.
Isaac Hanson added, “This year is not only about the two decades of music, it’s about celebrating the incredible community of fans who have been with us, singing along year after year”.
‘I Was Born’ is the first taste of the next yet-to-be-named Hanson album due later in 2017.
Hanson had their first hit ‘MMMBop’ 20 years ago in 1997. The song earned the brothers two Grammy nominations and a number one hit in Australia, the USA and UK.
HANSON | MIDDLE OF EVERYWHERE 2017 TOUR DATES
PERTH: Thursday 15th June – Metro City
ADELAIDE: Friday 16th June – Thebarton Theatre
MELBOURNE – SOLD OUT : Sunday 18th June – Forum Theatre
MELBOURNE – SOLD OUT: Monday 19th June – Forum Theatre
SYDNEY – SOLD OUT : Wednesday 21st June – Enmore Theatre
SYDNEY: NEW SHOW: Thursday 22nd June – Enmore Theatre
GOLD COAST: Saturday 24th June – The Star (Jupiters until March 30)
BRISBANE – SOLD OUT: Sunday 25th June – The Tivoli