9 Artists Who’ve Become Their Cities’ Unofficial Mayors

By | May 20, 2016

New York Mag

Wayne Coyne at Oklahoma City’s Flaming Lips Alley. Photo: Chris Landsberger/The Oklahoman/AP Photo

Twenty years ago, Oprah Winfrey asked Prince — who seemed as if he might have hailed from a different planet entirely — why, “of all places,” he chose to live in Minneapolis, where he was born. “I will always live in Minneapolis,” he said. “It’s so cold it keeps the bad people out.” He could have kept the whole world out if he wanted to, staying behind the gate at his suburban home base, Paisley Park; instead, Prince had a way of popping up around the city, at a record store or a jazz club. He was inclined to invite regular Minneapolitans to shows in his garage if they waited long enough outside the gate. His last party at Paisley Park (admission $10) was only five days before his death. In plenty of other places around the country, artists hold the keys to their cities, much like Prince did. They’re not just mingling with the hoi polloi at the local coffee shop; they’re actually civic boosters — whether it’s Hanson bringing in thousands of people with their fan weekend in Tulsa or George R.R. Martin helping a random group of guys in Santa Fe turn a bowling alley into an art space.


Oklahoma City
Everyone Here Has Had Their Photo Taken With Wayne Coyne

“It used to be that [the Flaming Lips’] Wayne Coyne would be walking around in his three-piece suits and his crazy hair, and most Oklahoma Citians might just think, Oh, isn’t that a colorful character? What changed — and I take some credit for this — is in about 2006, I was 26, and I had just become chief of staff to the mayor, and I thought, We gotta do something to embrace Wayne Coyne! He’s accomplished, and he lives in Oklahoma City! I am a Republican senator, but I am also an almost-millennial, and I have a high tolerance for all the things that make life interesting. So I found this alleyway in Bricktown, and I thought, Why don’t we name this Flaming Lips Alley? I thought people might think an alleyway — rather than a street — was cool. It was actually a complicated process — everyone in the government was like, ‘Who are the Flaming Lips?’ There were a lot of politics, but the mayor ended up saying yes. The Lips put on a grand show down there for the dedication. Wayne cursed. That changed everything for them locally. Soon afterward, they were part of an ad campaign for our gas-and-utility company. Everyone was posting Facebook pictures whenever they’d run into Wayne. It became a running gag: ‘You’re the last person in Oklahoma City not to have your picture taken with Wayne Coyne.’ ” —David Holt, state senator

Where to Find Wayne
The singer, who’s lived in OKC for 55 years, on his haunts.

Illustration: Jason Lee

1. Blue Note Lounge (2408 N. Robinson Ave.): “The first place that ever allowed the Flaming Lips to play. I think we’re gonna do a 60-years-in-the-same-place anniversary show there.”

2. Saints Pub (1715 NW 16th St.): “A bar we can walk to from my house, get fairly fucked up, and then walk back.”

3. Womb Gallery (25 NW 9th St.): “It was a dilapidated car dealership that someone turned into a gallery, and we got the idea it could be partially a gallery and partially a Flaming Lips warehouse, which it now is.”

4. Bad Granny’s Bazaar (1759 NW 16th St.): “This thrift store has been in this little corner of the Plaza District a long time. Even just four, five years ago, you could literally buy crack in that area; it was devastated.”

5. Lowe’s (3801 N. May Ave.): “I go to Lowe’s a lot! Recently I’ve been there five times a day to get ready for the tornadoes.”

6. Tana Thai (10700 N. May Ave.): “We have the best fuckin’ Thai restaurants in the world here.”

7. Chesapeake Energy Arena (100 W. Reno Ave.): “I just saw Bruce Springsteen; we got to talk with Bruce afterward. That’s one of the great perks of being here — there’s no one else he’d know! Robert Plant came, it was the same way.”


Minneapolis
“I Showed Up One Night at Prince’s House and He Let Me In”

Prince.

“When I was in high school, there was this urban legend that if you hung out outside Paisley Park after Prince had done a show in town, when he got back he’d open the doors and let kids in to just hang out and maybe watch him play. The older kids would tell the younger kids; it was Minnesota lore. My friends and I were bored one night and we were like, Let’s just try that. We knew he’d played a show in town that night, so we chilled and waited, and finally this caravan of cars comes up, goes through the gate. They saw us and just kind of disappeared. Then some bodyguard dude comes out and is like, ‘Y’all been waiting a while? Come right in.’ It must have been ten of us. It’s this weird-looking compound, like some ’60s Soviet-bloc factory, so we went in and they brought us into this huge garage — it felt airplane-hangar-sized, and we just sat there and waited. No one was drinking or partying, just a bunch of people hanging, couches everywhere. After about 30 minutes Prince just came out and played. He was clearly just messing around. It wasn’t a performance, it was like he was just practicing. We were these giggly teenagers in the corner. He didn’t really acknowledge us, but the urban legend definitely proved true.” —Caitlin McNally, journalist


Red Hook
“I See Dustin Yellin Everywhere”
An anonymous Red Hook resident on the artist behind the creative space Pioneer Works.

Photo: Murphy Lippincott

“What Dustin’s done with Pioneer Works is obviously neighborhood-changing. Basically, his door is always open — it’s not like a regular PS1 thing with snooty curators, it’s a complete open-door policy, dogs and kids running around outside. I think because he’s been like that, he’s definitely been embraced by the neighborhood. And even when they have their big benefit, he could just lock the door, but he doesn’t. He loves to be in the mix and around people in that very Warholian ‘This is my Factory’ kind of way. Five days out of the week I see him, for sure. Sometimes it’s at the coffee shop, sometimes it’s at a lunch place. I’ve seen him in Fort Defiance in the mornings. He’s very unassuming; he looks like any other 40-year-old hipster in jeans with a pretty girlfriend.”


Tulsa
Last Year, Hanson Brought 30,000 Fans to the City

Photo: Murphy Lippincott

“Everyone here knows who Hanson is. Their studio is smack-dab in the middle of downtown, so you can always see them around there. Isaac will get coffee at Joebot’s. I saw Zac and his wife walking down the street the other day. I run into their dad at the diner all the time. They have this fan weekend every year, Hanson Day, that brings a ton of people here. The town is on fire. Everyone that owns a business, they plan months in advance for it. The restaurants are packed, the hotels are booked, and for a small business it has a huge impact. Once, at a random concert here, I was able to go backstage, and I found myself sitting across from Isaac Hanson and listening to him talk about getting restless-leg syndrome while on an airplane. I had to pinch myself!” —Mary Beth Babcock, owner of Dwelling Spaces boutique


Santa Fe
“I Bought a Bowling Alley With George R.R. Martin

Photo: Murphy Lippincott

“George just lives here like any other Santa Fean. He’s out and about; he’ll be at the movie theater he owns, the Jean Cocteau, or at Dragonstone Studios, the artists’ studios he bought. My business partner Vince had worked with George at Jean Cocteau, and when we found this bowling alley and wanted to turn it into a space for our art collective, we were like, ‘Oh, let’s see if George wants to buy it with us.’ So we emailed him, and George was like, ‘Yeah, that sounds cool.’ Our space, which we opened in March, is called Meow Wolf, and we make these kind of sci-fi novels you can walk inside of, and George was psyched about that. ” —Sean Di Ianni, chief operating officer, Meow Wolf

“And I’m in a Sci-Fi Writers’ Group With George R.R. Martin”

“I was at a science-fiction convention in 2001 and ended up at a table with George. I told him I lived in Santa Fe, and he said, ‘So, you could join our writers’ group if you want.’ It happens at different people’s houses. For a while, George and I were carpool-mates. For the first month, George just said, ‘Well, I’ll drive you.’ Then his car was in the shop, so I drove him for several months. There was a time when he’d come to us with part of his novels, and we’d have things to say about the plot structure, but once he’s really into it, he needs to live his way through to the end of the story, and we’ll just annoy him. I’ll see him at his theater, the Jean Cocteau. It’s quite typical to just see him pop in, and his car is pretty recognizable: It’s a bright-purple Tesla, a custom paint job. He has a GRRM vanity plate.” —E. M. Tippetts, author


Austin
Here, Richard Linklater Is Just Another Zhlub-Around-Town
Despite the fact that he’s one of the city’s most important cultural figures.

Richard Linklater, Rolling Stone, October 1, 2014

Richard Linklater. Photo: LeAnn Mueller/This content is subject to copyright.

“Rick’s usually wearing a Criterion Collection T-shirt and shorts. Many a time, I’ve seen our interns at the Austin Film Society get into a conversation with him about film, and it’s an epic experience for them, but it’s really just typical Rick.” —Rebecca Campbell, executive director of the Austin Film Society

Eeven at film premieres, he usually looks like he just got out of bed. The specter of Rick looms large over the arts community here. He’s just around and he’s accessible — he has this longtime assistant, Kirsten, and if you go through her, he will always call.” —Evan Smith, CEO of the Texas Tribune

“He lives a few blocks from us in Hyde Park, in a modest house. Every Halloween he co-hosts a yard party. He’ll bring out his pet pig. I think of him as Rick, this guy in the neighborhood, but then I’ll see him on TV and it’s like, ‘Oh, it’s Richard Linklater!’ ” —Rodney Gibbs, digital strategist


Dallas
Where Erykah Badu Might Show Up to Your Birthday Party

Photo: Murphy Lippincott

“It’s cool because Erykah really reps Dallas — a lot of people have left, but she’s stayed and is always going to gigs, art shows, things like that. It was my homie Picnic’s birthday, and we did a little party on a Thursday at Beauty Bar. It wasn’t even ten yet, and Erykah just popped in. It was one of those moments where you just do a double take. Some random weirdos were just talking to her, this older crowd who were having a drink at the bar. I think she had a flower in her hair; she might have put it in this dude’s hair next to her.” —Will Rhoten, a.k.a. DJ Sober


And in the very small town of St. Johnsbury, Vermont
Neko Case Is My Landlord”

Photo: Murphy Lippincott

“Dylan’s, the café I own, used to be down the street from here, and this redhead started coming in every day. One time she said, ‘Hey, you wanna buy non-GMO tomatoes?’ And I did. I just thought she played guitars in cafés and was a farmer growing tomatoes. Then one day my daughter comes up with her iPhone and shows me a picture of Neko and says, ‘It’s about time I told you, Mom.’ Five years back, she bought this old Art Deco–y post office because she heard it was being turned into a parking lot. She brought me up there and said, ‘Wouldn’t it be cool to turn part of this into a restaurant?’ We’ve been here five years now. Behind one wall in this building, there’s an old movie theater that Neko’s turned into a rehearsal space. One time her band was practicing in the studio, and we were serving lunch, and she kept coming out: ‘Am I bothering people?’ We were like, ‘That song sounds good!’ She comes in with her dogs. Liza passed away a few months ago, everyone knew Liza, and now she has another rescue, Joanie. She sits down, and Joanie has some turkey, and Neko has a sandwich.” —Erin Papin, owner of Dylan’s Café


New Orleans
Where to Find Kermit Ruffins Any Day of the Week

Photo: Murphy Lippincott

The trumpeter and singer appeared as himself on HBO’s Treme, but he’s been a beloved local character for far longer: He grew up in the Ninth Ward, had a speakeasy in Tremé until recently, and still lives there, on top of his new club, Kermit’s Tremé Mother-in-Law Lounge — where he barbecues almost every day.

Monday
“Almost every Monday, I wake up and cook six pounds of ribs, which we serve in the yard of my bar. I also love to cook turtle in a nice red gravy. The other day I cooked raccoon with lots of sweet potatoes. Every day we give out free lunch and cold beer.”

Tuesday
“At around eight, I head to the Prime Example, a mom-and-pop spot with some of the best jazz in the city, where my uncle Percy Williams, who taught me to play trumpet, plays with Irma Thomas.”

Wednesday
“Every Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, and Saturday night I’ll go see Jeremy Davenport at the Ritz-Carlton.”

Thursday
“At six, I’m playing at Bullet’s. Then I’ll go to the Prime Example or to see Nayo Jones at the Carousel Bar at the Hotel Monteleone — the crowd there on Saturdays is mostly tourists; on Thursdays it’s locals.”

Friday
“We have free crawfish every Friday at my bar, and then at seven, I’m playing at the Blue Nile.”

Saturday
“I have pop-up concerts almost every Saturday at the bar, and then I play at the Little Gem Saloon at seven.”

Sunday
“We always have a big show at my bar on Sundays with DJ Sugar Ray.”

 

 

News 9’s Lacey Swope Meets Childhood Idols, Hanson – 20 Years Later

By | May 20, 2016

News on 6

 
NewsOn6.com – Tulsa, OK – News, Weather, Video and Sports – KOTV.com |

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TULSA – It’s been 20 years since the hit single MMMBop was released by Oklahoma’s own Hanson brothers. They are still making music, now creating craft beer, and are busy planning their 3rd annual festival called Hop Jam. News 9’s Lacey Swope sat down with Isaac, Taylor and Zac Hanson to find out where they are now.

Lacey Swope: “I’m sure you remember me. This is from the Mabee Center. 1998. I was 11. I was in section 6. Each one of you throughout the concert made eye contact with me so we’ve basically been best friends ever since.”

Zac Hanson: “Sometimes friendships. You just don’t see each other for a while.”

Taylor Hanson: “It’s the long distance thing.”

Isaac Hanson: “I’m glad you reminded me of this because that’s who you are.’

The heartthrob’s posters filled her walls, and their faces were on her pillows, they’re records were her anthems. For Lacey and millions of others the 90’s were all about Hanson!

“When we first started out we were the chipmunks and the voices were up there,” say Taylor. “What we heard in our heads was the rock and roll stuff. We just sounded like a chipmunk.”

Their sound is a little different now.

“While the music has changed a lot over the 20 years, to me the core essence of who we are as a band and what it is that we were trying to get at from he get go is definitely, definitely the same,” said Isacc.

Their voices have changed, their hair is different, and now they’re dads.

“We all have kids,” said Zac. “Tay’s got five kids. Isaacs got three kids. I’ve got three kids. What people see you doing is making music but what you spend your time doing is raising your kids.”

After the past two decades and several trips around the world, there is only one place they come back to: Oklahoma.

“We went to New York for a while,” said Taylor. “We’ve lived in California. It’s one thing to live in those places. It’s another thing to call them home.”

“It’s place with great roots,” Zac added. “Musically we feel like that is important to find our roots, to be a band from somewhere.”

Investing in their home state and watching it thrive is now a big focus.

“There are a lot of people with good morel centers I guess you could say,” said Isaac. “People that believe in hard work, that some level of trust in their fellow man. That is shall we say a heartland kind of thing.”

They do focus on up and coming musicians.

“By being from here, we’re making cool events happen. Supporting other local artists and telling that story,” added Taylor.

Tickets are on sale now for their 3rd annual music festival called Hop Jam in Tulsa on May 22. It will feature live music and over 60 different breweries. They are also raffling off a custom guitar. Proceeds will go to the Regional Food Bank.

 

Hanson Brothers Want Hop Jam To Continue Growth

By | May 20, 2016

News on 6


NewsOn6.com – Tulsa, OK – News, Weather, Video and Sports – KOTV.com |

TULSA, Oklahoma – The Hanson brother’s Hop Jam Beer and Music Festival is this Sunday.

In three years’ time, the festival has more than doubled, and the brothers said they hope the event continues to shine a positive light on Tulsa.

The trio has kept busy over the years – belting out tunes and crafting their own beer. It’s their love of music, a fine brew and hometown fun that sparked their desire to organize Hop Jam three years ago.

“From the very first year we set out to do something that was not just cool for Oklahoma but was unique for the whole region,” Taylor Hanson said.

The festival is all day Sunday in the Brady Arts District; more than 60 brewers representing over 20 states and 10 countries will be there.

5/19/2016 Related Story: News 9’s Lacey Swope Meets Childhood Idols, Hanson – 20 Years Later

“It’s a great time,” Zac Hanson said. “Who doesn’t want to listen to great music and drink a beer and hang out with your friends?”

On top of that, is a longer list of bands – this year, instead of one stage, there will be two.

The brothers said the goal is to provide a platform for new brew and music to thrive.

“What we saw was this growing community of craft breweries in Oklahoma and something we wanted to be a part of; and the music scene we travel around to do as our career and go, we want to bring these together because they make great combinations,” Zac Hanson said.

The festival is also a fundraiser. Each year a specially designed ‘Hop Guitar’ is auctioned off. The money from the raffle ticket sales helps the Community Food Bank of Eastern Oklahoma.

“We look forward to the ability to say that an event of this size, of this scale and quality is here, and it’s something everybody can take credit for and feel a part of,” Taylor Hanson said.

Packed weekend of downtown Tulsa festivals becoming yearly tradition attracting crowds of people

By | May 19, 2016

Kjrh

 

TULSA – On Wednesday afternoon, Heather Pingry walked through downtown as artists set up their booths for Tulsa’s International Mayfest.

“Starts down here on the corner at 3rd and Main,” Pingry said as she walked down Main. “They will be set up on both sides of the street here.”

As the executive director of Mayfest,  Pingry said the festival has grown over the years. She is also excited by how much downtown Tulsa has grown with the Blue Dome Arts Festival and Hop Jam being held on the same weekend.

“This is what we have been waiting for, for a long time,” Pingry said. “To have all of these events going on and have so many people down here is incredible.”

Starting Thursday and running through the weekend, Mayfest will feature artists of all kinds selling their work, as well as food vendors and several stages for live music.

Photographer David Bolin traveled from Colorado this week to sell his work at his fourth Mayfest.

“This is a grizzly I photographed in Denali National park,” he said while hanging one of his photos at his booth for the festival.

With a gallery called Hanging Valley Photography in Colorado, Bolin said he keeps coming to Mayfest because of its national reputation.

“It is just a show that the whole city gets involved with it,” Bolin said. “Everybody knows about it and you see some really good art.”

Glass artist Steve Brewster brings his work from Moon Bay Art Glass Studio to Mayfest for similar reasons. He thinks it is also why crowds come to all of the festivals in downtown Tulsa this weekend.

“Cause there is a lot going on in Tulsa,” Brewster said. “It is a great town, and you know the proximity. People can come downtown and go to several things instead of just going to one event.”

New to Mayfest this year will be an art competition called Inspired, similar to cooking competition reality shows.

“An art competition, one hour long,” Pingry said. “They will have a basket of surprise ingredients. All of those ingredients will serve as inspiration for their piece.”

Several blocks away the Blue Dome Arts Festival’s mural is ready near 2nd and Elgin in downtown.

“This one right down here is mine. I did this one right here in orange,” the Blue Dome Art Festival’s executive director Jo Armstrong said as she found her handprint on the mural.

On Friday and Saturday, Armstrong said around 244 booths will fill the Blue Dome District’s streets, with all sorts of artwork on display and for sale. ”

“We still actually have a waiting list of people we weren’t able to fit into the festival this year,” Armstrong said. “We have quite a few. That is just how much it has grown. When people understand we have this much talent here, I think that is cool.”

Armstrong said new to the Blue Dome Arts Festival this year are a full family zone and make and take crafts, a collaborative art piece and the chance to add your hand print to the festival’s mural.

For the third year in a row, Hop Jam a beer and music festival hosted by the Hanson brothers will finish off the packed weekend. It is a weekend special to the Tulsa band.

“Our band started 24 years ago at Mayfest, we played our first show at Mayfest,” Taylor Hanson said. “So we love being a part of that heritage. I think a lot of young people are staking their claim in re-framing what downtown life is like.”

Hanson said this year’s festival will feature more music than the festivals first two years. Edward Sharpe and the Magnetic Zeros, Albert Hammond Jr., and X Ambassadors will headline the music in the Brady District. A second stage will also be set-up at Guthrie Green.

The number of craft breweries has also doubled this year from around 30 to 60, showcasing beer from 20 states and 10 countries.

“This is a weekend that kind of kicks of the summer,” Hanson said. “Everybody says hey, ‘I want to be taking in what downtown has to offer. I think Hop Jam is helping to highlight this incredible craft beer movement.”

Details on road closures and event times for all the festivals can be found on KJRH.com here:

 

Tulsa World Editorial: Mayfest kicks off weekend of music, art and food

By | May 19, 2016

Tulsa World

Tulsa International Mayfest kicks off Thursday.

Hooray!

The festival, which runs through Sunday, has been bringing big crowds downtown for more than 30 years.

As it has been for several years, Mayfest is also the centerpiece of a series of celebrations in and around the central business district this weekend.

The Blue Dome Arts festival, just down the street from Mayfest, runs Friday through Sunday. It emphasizes local artists, live music and food trucks and more.

For details, go to: bluedomearts.org.

Sunday afternoon is the time for The Hop Jam, the annual craft beer and music celebration in the Brady Arts Districts offered by Hanson. This year’s festival features Edward Sharpe and the Magnetic Zeros, Albert Hammond Jr., X Ambassadors and locals John Moreland and Chase Kerby + the Villains.

For more information, go to thehopjam.com.

But the big draw is Mayfest, which will feature its usual array of fun and art, including entertainment on three stages, blocks of art vendors from near and far, and lots of food.

We’re especially fond of the invitational gallery in the Williams Towers Lobby, Third and Main streets; the youth art gallery in the Tulsa PAC’s LaFortune Studio, 101 E. Third St.; and the KidZone in the H.A. Chapman Centennial Green, Sixth and Main streets.

For more details, got to tulsamayfest.org.

Let’s give a proper shout-out to MidFirst Bank, Mayfest’s presenting sponsor this year.

Come downtown this weekend, spend a little money, have a lot of fun. You won’t regret it.

 

Map, schedule: Hanson Bros. Hop Jam festival in Brady Arts District on May 22

By | May 19, 2016

KJRH

TULSA – Do you like tasting craft beer? Do you enjoy listening to music in downtown Tulsa? If you answered “yes” to both of these questions, then Hop Jam 2016 is the event for you this weekend.

The concert and beer tasting event will be held Sunday May 22 starting at noon in the Brady Arts District. Below is a map of the designated area for the event.

Music ranges from local artists such as John Moreland to nationally known headliner Edward Sharpe and the Magnetic Zeros. The tickets for the music aspect of the event are free. 

Before the music will be the beer. Several breweries from around the nation will have samples of their brew to try beforehand. Tickets to taste vary in cost depending on how exclusive you wish to be.

CLICK HERE FOR TICKET PRICING INFO 

 

Would you still recognize today the Hanson brothers?

By | May 18, 2016

Het Nieuwsblad

(Translated using Google Translate)

Zou jij de broertjes Hanson vandaag nog herkennen?
Foto: YouTube

Seventeen years ago, they conquered the world with their biggest hit ‘Mmmbop’ can today Isaac (35), Taylor (33) and Zac Hanson (30) still. A movie in which the three adult brothers bring a singing tribute to their favorite baseball team, is viewed pressure through social media.

The summer of 1997, the three long-haired poprockertjes Hanson with their first single ‘MMMBop’ tackle a world and also did many teen hearts beating faster. Today, the brothers are occasionally active in the music industry, and they do not sing next. They demonstrated last Friday at the Tulsa Drillers baseball stadium, where they the team from their hometown, singing a strike heartened. They spent a flawless version of the American national anthem with hand on chest. A movie of the ‘reunion’ has now been viewed nearly half a million times.

And for the rest? The guys have their hair clipped and focus primarily on their own beer company with a brand name as a nod to their past in showbiz: Mmmhops.

The three are now married and were repeatedly dad. Taylor married in 2002 with Natalie Anne Bryant. The couple has five children. Isaac in 2006 married Nicole Dufresne, a girl he met three years earlier at one of his performances Hanson. Together they have two sons and a daughter. The youngest Zac met his future Kate Tucker in 2000, quite by accident on the same night as his brother Taylor. He married two years ago with her. They have three children together.

 

What the Ale: Tulsa Craft Beer Week events continue this week

By | May 18, 2016

Tulsa World

Tulsa Craft Beer Week continues through Sunday, and I hope you are ready to taste some beer.

The week culminates with The Hop Jam Beer and Music Festival on May 22 at the Brady Arts District. But if you can’t make that huge event, there are a lot of smaller events.

Be sure to make reservations for some of these events; they sell out quickly.

Gentleman’s Lunch featuring Marshall Brewing: 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. May 18 at James E. McNellie’s Public House, 409 E. First St. Marshall and McNellie’s team up for a gentleman’s lunch. A special menu item created by McNellie’s will be paired with a special cask of Rosemary Pale Ale from Marshall.

Dead Armadillo and COOP Ale Works Tasting: 5-6:30 p.m. May 18 at Ranch Acres Wine & Spirits, 3324 E. 31st St. Also find a local food truck. Contact Ranch Acres for reservations.

Patio Party with Marshall Brewing: 5-10 p.m. May 19 at McNellie’s South City, 7031 S. Zurich Ave. Marshall’s Arrowhead Pale Ale will be on draft, along with a firkin of Arrowhead on peaches with glassware. facebook.com/events/704354386371107/

COOP Pint Night: 6-8:30 p.m. May 19 at The Pint on Cherry Street, 1325 E. 15th St.

Avery Beer Dinner: 7-9:30 p.m. May 19 at James E. McNellie’s Public House, 409 E. First St. Food from McNellie’s culinary staff and beer from Avery. For reservatons,janna@mcnellies.com. facebook.com/events/1030447393698396/

Founders Beer Dinner: 7-9:30 p.m. May 19 at BurnCo BBQ, 1738 S. Boston Ave.facebook.com/Burncobbq

Growler Fills & Pints: 12-7 p.m. May 20 at Marshall Brewing Co., 618 S. Wheeling Ave. Find $4 pints of Marshall’s Session Series beers, as well as local food trucks.

Destihl Beer Dinner: 7-9 p.m. May 18, Fassler Hall, 304 S. Elgin Ave.facebook.com/fasslerhall

Locals Day Tap Takeover: 5-10 p.m. May 19, R Bar & Grill, 3421 S. Peoria Ave. Find 20 taps of local beer, including many one-offs made just for this event.

COOP Peach Berliner Weiss Release: 6-8:30 p.m. May 20 at Fassler Hall, 304 S. Elgin Ave. COOP Ale Works will soon ship to North Texas and DFW markets. The new “Trail to Texas” beer is a Peach Berliner Weiss. Commemorative glassware will be available while supplies last.

Founders Nitro Pale Ale Night: 5-9 p.m. May 20, R Bar & Grill, 3421 S. Peoria Ave.

Sierra Blanca Alien Amber Pint Night: 7-8 p.m. May 20, George’s Pub, 108 N. First St., Jenks

Brunch with Anthem Brewing: 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. May 21 at McNellie’s South City, 7031 S. Zurich Ave. Find Anthem’s Arjuna Wit on Blueberries and pair it with a special breakfast sandwich. facebook.com/events/261046907573829/

Fassler Hall and Marshall Brewing Beer Brunch: Noon May 21. Each dish will be paired with a Marshall beer, including the Klaus Hefeweizen. Seating is limited. $50 per person including beer. Reservations accepted: 918-576-7898

Hop Jam Official Meet & Greet: Noon to 5 p.m. May 21 at James E. McNellie’s Public House, 409 E. First St. facebook.com/thehop.jam

The Hop Jam Beer & Music Festival: May 22 in the Brady Arts District.facebook.com/thehop.jam

Hanson welcomes fans from around the world to Tulsa

By | May 18, 2016

Tulsa World

Hanson

Isaac (left), Taylor and Zac Hanson prepare for Hanson Day and The Hop Jam this weekend. TOM GILBERT/Tulsa World

Hanson fans have for years made the pilgrimage to the hometown of their musical heroes.

“We heard, oh we’re getting together on May 6 — which was the release day for (Hanson’s breakthrough album) ‘Middle of Nowhere’ — and we’re going to get together to have a Hanson party of sorts,” Isaac Hanson said in a recent interview. “It was these fan festivals all around the world.”

So Hanson tried to make the most of it, making an event for those fans to be a part of. Ten years ago, the band hosted one of its first real Hanson Day events with an acoustic performance of “Middle of Nowhere.”

The event has since expanded to multiple days and events with thousands of fans from around the globe spending a weekend in Tulsa for the chance to spend some time with their favorite band and with one another.

Hanson Day events, which are open to anyone who is a member of the Hanson fan club, now include special recordings, unique performances, lectures and Q-and-A sessions, a dance party DJed by Taylor Hanson and Hanson karaoke.

“That continues to evolve, but some of these core components now, we have a sense of the framework,” Taylor Hanson said.

“That’s cool because it’s taking shape. You have to listen and watch what’s already in the soil. Cultivate what’s there, and what’s there is that strong community and experience.”

And three years ago, that Hanson fan day made its biggest expansion yet, incorporating the Hanson brothers’ new beer and music festival, The Hop Jam. The third year is the festival’s biggest, set for Sunday in the Brady Arts District.

While Hanson is stepping back from a headlining role into a host role this year, Hanson fans will still have plenty of opportunities to again connect with one another and the band. And like years before, Hanson hopes to give fans a good experience in their hometown.

“Because our relationship with the fan base is unique in its own way and maintaining Tulsa as home, it kind of had a different emphasis over time,” Isaac Hanson said. “It’s: Come to our hometown where we grew up.”

For fans who already live in their hometown and the area, Hanson wants them to know this is open to them, too. All that’s needed is membership to the fan club for access to the experience.

Of course, The Hop Jam is open to everyone and has become one of Tulsa’s biggest music parties. But there is a lot more to the weekend for Hanson fans.

“As Hop Jam has become more of a deal, we think there’s more of an opportunity to make Tulsans aware that this is happening,” Taylor Hanson said. “From the Hanson Day point of view, all the events are accessible because you’re a fan club member. That barrier of entry is not super high.”

A Hanson fan club membership is $40, available at hanson.net/store.

“So I think as these years go on, figuring out how to make it something that is seen as something that’s happening in Tulsa where Tulsa fans can get involved as well, it’ll be fun to see what we can do with it,” Taylor Hanson added.

Hanson

Isaac, Taylor and Zac Hanson prepare for Hanson days and Hop Jam, which happen this weekend. TOM GILBERT/Tulsa World