VIDEO: Watch Hanson Taste & Review Their Mmmhops Beer

By | May 20, 2014

People

Hanson Mmmmhops Beer Taste Test
FRANCES JANISCH; KEN ARCARA/SIPA

The Hanson brothers are many things: musicians, fathers, philanthropists … and beer sommeliers?

Well, they try their best.

Just in time for the upcoming American Craft Beer Week, Taylor, Isaac and Zac Hanson — who launched a pale ale called Mmmhops last year — celebrated the beer’s nationwide release with a special tasting exclusively for PEOPLE.

As Taylor explains the beer’s brief history, Zac quickly interjects, “We should drink some!”

Ignoring his brother, Taylor pours some ale into a glass and asks Isaac, “What comes to mind when you taste this, besides magic and unicorns?”

“Mmm, hops,” jokes Isaac who, judging by the generous “taste” he took, clearly enjoys the brew. After Taylor presses him to describe the beer, Isaac calls it, “a very malty pale ale. It’s got a nice, lively nose to it.”

“This is a very good introductory pale ale for those that are not familiar with craft beer,” he continues.

But the brothers’ serious tasting discussion only lasts so long.

“As a musician, what kind of notes does this beer have?” asks Zac.

Deadpans Taylor: “Mostly C-minor.”

Watch the brothers pour one on here — and when they host the Hop Jam beer and music festival in their native Tulsa, Oklahoma on May 18th, featuring their own beer and music, plus other local breweries and bands.

Bands and brews strike a chord with thousands at Tulsa’s first ever Hop Jam Beer & Music Festival

By | May 20, 2014

KJRH

TULSA – TULSA – Beer drinkers and music lovers came by the thousands to downtown Tulsa this weekend for the first ever Hop Jam Beer and Music Festival.

Hanson, the well-known band of brothers, helped organize the event to appeal to more than just fans of their music.

The brothers not only headlined a free concert for the public, but they also let people sample beer made by 15 different craft brewers from across Oklahoma. The brews on tap Sunday included the trio’s own brand.

“Our flagship beer is called Mmmhopps inspired by our first kind of debut song, and it’s a pale ale,” said Taylor Hanson.

“This is a beer that you drink, and then you go I didn’t even know beer tasted this good,” he said, “and then you realize there’s so much other beer.”

The Mmmhops beer has proven as big of a hit as the song that inspired the name. Taylor Hanson says it just won a gold medal at the World Beer Championship, and fans have given it their stamp of approval, too.

“We love Hanson,” said longtime fan Brittany Stout. “We love their beer, and it’s exciting to come to Tulsa to celebrate that.”

The Hanson brothers hope to have an encore next year and make the festival a national event highlighting craft beer as well as different music. Taylor says the two have more in common than one would think.

“Craft beer really goes back to people making things and making them in a community,” Taylor said, “and musicians are the same way.”

The brothers can at least count on their loyal fans to support the event again next year.

“They go above and beyond what they really have to do for us because there’s an equal love,” said Alycia Folkerts, who got her first Hanson cassette tape in 1997. “We give them love, and they give it back.”

“We’ll probably be coming every time until they decide they’re done,” said longtime Hanson fan Nicole Sell.

Organizers say they may have to make some changes for the Hop Jam festival next year since most of the craft brewers ran out of beer about two hours after the gates opened Sunday.

Tulsa’s Hanson Brothers Debut First Homebrew At Hop Jam

By | May 20, 2014

News on 6

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

 

 

TULSA, Oklahoma –

The first Hop Jam beer and music festival is the brain child of Tulsa natives and musicians – the Hanson brothers.

They just released their first beer, and had to ask when they’d consider opening a craft brewhouse right here in their hometown.

“As we say… beer plus music equals awesome,” Zac Hanson said.

A love for craft beer and good music inspired the Hanson brothers to host Hop Jam.

Hundreds packed the Brady Arts District on Sunday, drinking local beers, taking in local music and raising money for local charities.

“We see it as celebrating entrepreneurship, celebrating craft and people that are dedicated to their community,” Taylor Hanson said.

Isaac, Taylor and Zac Hanson say they’re big fans of Tulsa brewers.

“If you walk down this street, we can tell you the names of every brewer and owner of the breweries,” Taylor said.

The brothers just released their first homebrew – Mmmhops – named after a combination of their famously 1997 catchy song – Mmmbop – and “hops,” which are an essential ingredient to beer making.

“We have a passion for our beer, Mmmhops, and our future more beers that we plan to release,” Zac Hanson said.

Their pale ale just won gold at the World Beer Championships.

Taylor says beer and music go hand in hand.

“Musicians start in garages and so do homebrewers,” he said.

But it’s not all about singing and drinking.

Zac and Taylor say they want their hometown to be one of the cities people look to for a good time.

“The music business isn’t in Tulsa, but we’ve never really cared about that,” Zac Hanson said. “We felt like we want to see something grow. We want to see Tulsa grow.”

As for when they’ll open their own craft brewhouse…

“Well, we’d like to see Oklahoma come around to the 21st Century on laws in a very healthy, productive way,” Taylor said. “We would like to be able to invite people to our craft brewhouse, and that can be possible if we start to see stuff happen on the legislative level.”

No brewery anytime soon, but you can now buy their beer in stores.

The brothers said they hope Hop Jam becomes an annual, national festival.

Butch Walker plus Robert Randolph and the Family Band played to outdoor crowds earlier in the day, and the Tulsa brothers headlined the bill.

Hanson hosts inaugural Hop Jam in Brady District

By | May 20, 2014

Fox23

TULSA, Okla. – Hundreds of thousands of people packed downtown Tulsa this weekend for Mayfest and the Blue Dome Art Festival, but it was Hanson’s Hop Jam that wrapped up the weekend.

People streamed into the Hop Jam Beer and Music Festival all day Sunday. FOX23 spoke with the Hanson brothers before their performance about why the festival is so important to them.

“Music and beer are a great combination,” Zach Hanson said.

Local breweries and bands were all featured in Hanson’s hometown festival.

“Let’s host a great party where we can come together as a community and have Tulsa and Oklahoma support that community,” Hanson said.

There were food trucks, music and a total of 14 Oklahoma breweries.

“I love the scene. It’s pretty awesome and busy today,” Mel Howell said. 

With so much happening downtown this weekend, Tulsans told FOX23 that Hop Jam was the perfect way to cap it off.

“Just enjoying some good downtown Tulsa fun,” Chrissy Lombard said.

Hanson said they hope the festival will shine light on Tulsa.

“We want to see Tulsa grow. We have barely scratched the surface of what Tulsans can do to celebrate the community and to be a destination,” Hanson said.

The brothers hope to make the festival an annual event.

Hanson Brothers Host The Hop Jam in Downtown Tulsa

By | May 20, 2014

KTUL

Tulsans can attend The Hop Jam for free today in downtown Tulsa, a music and beer festival hosted by the Hanson brothers.

The pop-rock trio from Tulsa, Hanson, made famous by “MmmBop” in the 1990s, debuted their craft beer Mmmhops Pale Ale in 2013 and the festival will bring together local brewers and musicians.

14 Oklahoma breweries will be featured at the festival and several bands, including a performance from Hanson.

“Through The Hop Jam, our hope is that we can help support the craft beer community and foster a one of a kind music event, while also creating an anchor for the city’s downtown renewal”, said Taylor Hanson.

The event will be held in the Brady Arts District in downtown Tulsa. Doors open at 3 p.m. and the festivities will run until 10 p.m.

More information can be found at www.thehopjam.com.

 

REVIEW: Hanson at the Hop Jam

By | May 20, 2014

Tulsa World


Hanson’s first song at their first beer and music festival Sunday was more of a command to the thousands of fans packed into the Brady Arts District.

“Let’s get fired up!”

The band was already there. They performed with unmatched energy Sunday at The Hop Jam, the Hanson brothers’ beer and music festival.

Isaac, Taylor and Zac, the Tulsa natives and brothers who make up the band, started their career 22 years ago just a few blocks from where their stage was set Sunday. In that time, the brothers have had several careers, from the early days to breakout success with “MMMBop” to their own record label and millions of albums sold.

Sunday was all about the beer and the music, and Hanson made sure the music ended the festival on a high note. It was already great musically from opening acts Capitol Cars, Taddy Porter, Butch Walker and Robert Randolph & the Family Band.

For the band’s first public show in Tulsa in three years, Hanson did not disappoint.

Hanson played with an incredible amount of energy Sunday, with strong voices and band work. It’s pure rock pop, but the Hanson brothers add so much more with their own talent.

Most notable is the amount of soul with which the band performs, thanks to Taylor Hanson’s voice and piano. Isaac Hanson brings a strong rock voice and guitar work, which was featured heavily Sunday. Zac Hanson on the drums is forceful but creative and energetic.

It makes for a great band and great sound, each a little different, thanks to the different styles and voices they bring.

What sets their music apart is their harmony, musically and just personally. Singing together, the band is pitch perfect and effortless. They surely get a boost too from being brothers playing for 22 years. It helps them make a fantastic connection.

That variety is also evident just in the range of music they played. They have 22 years of music to pull from, and the set list spanned their career. “Fired Up” and “I’ve Got Soul,” come from the band’s latest album, “Anthem.” Following that was “Where’s the Love,” off their breakout album, “Middle of Nowhere.”

Hardcore Hanson fans had a lot to appreciate, too. The band pulled out several of those deep tracks.

There were lots of hardcore Hanson fans in the crowd, too. Hop Jam was the cap of the band’s annual members-only fan appreciation weekend.

With all that going on, and with the beer portion of the festival bringing thousands to the district all day, there was a lot to be excited about. During their performance, it showed.

“We didn’t say how happy we are to be on stage tonight,” Taylor Hanson said, after saying how thrilled the group was to share the stage with the bands that played before.

“It’s a lot.”

As they took the stage, Taylor Hanson welcomed the crowd to the first Hop Jam festival, which he said was the first of many. Though they have said they may not play next year, if it’s anything like this year, Tulsa has something to look forward to for years to come.

REVIEW: Capitol Cars

By | May 20, 2014

Tulsa World

If the members of Capitol Cars were nervous, you couldn’t really tell.

It was by far the biggest stage yet for Capitol Cars, which won the opening band contest to play at The Hop Jam on Sunday. The group only formed in January after playing separately and in other bands for years.

Kicking off the festival Sunday, they played a soulful indie-rock style and they played it loud and very well.

The group impressively mixed several styles and genres, making the indie rock more dynamic. It was all impressive, even if you didn’t know the band was so young.

Frontman Grant Wiscaver had a distinct voice with a great range and control. It was especially on display for “Downtown,” one of the all-original set they played for about 30 minutes to open the show. In each song, Wiscaver sounded like his voice was made for the sound the band made.

Aaron Watson was impressive on guitar, playing nearly effortless solos with a soaring and powerful sound. The blues and soul influence was evident in drummer Jordan Phillips’ work. Bassist Nick Vinyard, the elder of the band at 23, was a good backbone for the band and its sound.

It had a sound reminiscent of Kings of Leon, especially with Wiscaver’s voice.

The band played for just about 25 minutes, the shortest set of the evening. I wanted to hear more, but from the reaction of the crowd and the band’s performance, they should be around for a while.

The Tulsa World with Hanson hosted the opening band contest, with nearly 100 videos loaded into the contest. Hanson picked the top five, who were then voted on by fans.

The contest was close throughout, with Capitol Cars winning by just more than 30 votes.

They won the opening spot in the contest and a download of their music will be available on bottles of the Hanson Brothers Beer Company Mmmhops Pale Ale, now available across the country.

The Hop Jam: See photos, updates and more from the inaugural festival

By | May 20, 2014

Tulsa World

The Hop Jam is underway, with thousands of folks from around the world streaming into the Brady Arts District.

Music is set to start momentarily, but the beer portion of the festival has been going for a while.

We’ll post more updates online here, so be sure to check it out. Also check out the photo gallery, with more photos added through the night.

Follow all of our folks on Twitter for even more updates: @TWScene,@TulsaWorldPhoto and music writer @jerrywofford

Here’s our review of the winner of the opening band contest: Capitol Cars.

Creativity, variety drive Hanson after 22 years

By | May 20, 2014

Tulsa World

From their beer to their music festival to the notes in their songs, Hanson has a simple focus.

“We made most of our decisions based on how well will we sleep after we make these decisions,” Taylor Hanson said from the band’s downtown Tulsa studio. “I think this is true with some of our greatest idols. They say, ‘look, this is who I am and I’m going to have to create, I’m going to have to make music. So, at some point, that’s got to come first.”

More than 22 years after Isaac, Taylor and Zac Hanson’s first performance at Mayfest, they have seen the world, played “MMMBop” more times than they can fathom, built an enormous and fervent fanbase and weathered tension between record labels and themselves. The creativity of the Tulsa-native brothers, so many years after they started their career as pre-teens, shows no signs of slowing.

Sunday’s Hop Jam beer and music festival hopes to showcase that. It’s another way to help build a community.

“You’re growing this orb of stuff you’re proud of that just grows and grows,” Taylor Hanson said. “Then, every once in a while, you hope something really leaps out.”

Hopefully, the inaugural beer and music festival Hop Jam will be one of those things that leaps out, they said.

Finding their fit

That Mayfest in 1992 was the first step down their long and winding path. Wearing sunglasses and greaser jackets, the three boys, with Isaac at age 11, Taylor at 9 and Zac at 7, had a harmony and rhythm impressive to many at the time.

And from most directions, they saw green lights.

“We were never told we couldn’t do what we’re doing,” Taylor Hanson said. “We were raised in this very, ‘If you work hard enough you can probably do that.’”

They recorded a couple of albums locally, including one with the song that would be their breakout hit. Eventually, they settled into their own roles and instruments, further honing their own sound as teenagers. But their age threw many off.

“I feel like, in some level, in our biggest moments of success we were always the underdog,” Isaac Hanson said. “As you’re the young kids, you’re definitely not like the core demo for being able to play the festivals.”

“No one really knew what to do with us,” Taylor Hanson added.

In 1997, though, things took off quickly.

The album “Middle of Nowhere” was released on May 6, 1997. It included the song “MMMBop,” an earworm that dominated the radio and cassette players of teens across the world.

More than 4 million copies of “Middle of Nowhere” have been sold in the United States with approximately 10 million worldwide. All while they were teens themselves.

However, they didn’t necessarily see what they were doing as something unique.

“We just followed people we thought of in the history of music, they were how old?” Taylor Hanson said. “But we just thought this was the next step.”

Most adult musicians would feel pressure from such an album. Hanson was no different.

The pressure they felt came from outside forces, but Hanson knew they needed to keep their creativity in their own hands.

“We need to not lose control of it,” Taylor Hanson said. “I think that was our biggest fear was that something from the outside, a label or whatever, was going to take away our ability to steer what we were doing.”

By the time their second major-label album, “This Time Around,” was released, some of those fears had begun to materialize.

The new 3 Car Garage

The album they wanted to release next was met with resistance from their record label at the time, Island Def Jam.

Around 2000, the struggle became more contentious. The music industry was changing and they were stuck in the middle.

They had a new album ready to send out the door, but there was pushback. Something had to change for the band to keep going.

That was a turning point, something that could benefit from what they fall back on: the brothers’ creativity.

“The conflicts you come across really just harden that side of who you are,” Zac Hanson said. “Because here I am in another difficult situation and this is what I keep coming back to.”

This time in the band’s career was filmed and made into the documentary “Strong Enough to Break,” which follows the band through the roughly three-year period before venturing out on their own.

“It feels more relevant now because it feels like a flashback,” Taylor Hanson said. “And you hear us talking about where we think the music business is going to go and what we have to do, and then you could make a list now of 10, 20 known bands that have gone through that exact same thing. Just caught in a quagmire of big labels and all.”

The brothers formed their own record label, “3 Car Garage,” in 2003. This marked a shift from band to entrepreneurs. They would have creative control over nearly every aspect of their work, but it greatly increased how much work they had to do on their own to move and promote their work.

That model, of taking charge of your own work and really owning its dissemination and connecting with fans, seemed crazy at the time. But it worked well for Hanson and has been effective for other start-up labels from bands.

“What’s cool about it is that it is genuinely true that our model, some version of it, has become the second standard for the industry,” Taylor Hanson said. “Not necessarily because of us. But, if you look at the way the music industry has grown, it’s just this whole idea of know your fans, have control over your identity and build.”

Through that time, hardcore Hanson fans didn’t waver. But it was a long time without new material, so they had to find a creative way to pull them back in and start reaching out to more.

In their own hands

Hanson had an album of material ready to go when they started their label. It was just a matter of creating buzz and bringing fans in to hear it.

They embarked on the Underneath Acoustic tour, playing small rooms and selling an acoustic version of the album only at the shows.

Fans came out in droves, Taylor Hanson said.

When the album, “Underneath,” did go on sale wide in 2004, it debuted at No. 1 on the Billboard independent chart and at 25 on the Billboard 200 with the lead single, “Penny and Me,” reaching No. 2 on the Hot 100 singles chart.

Had the band found another label to release the album instead of charging out on their own, it could have gone differently.

“We never really felt like there was any other way to do it than to be very involved in everything,” Zac Hanson said. “If you don’t know that industry, you start learning it because it’s something you care about. People are going to judge you based on these first impressions and we want to be a part of crafting those first impressions.”

That galvanized the brothers, who continued to tour and record, releasing “The Walk” and “Shout it Out” in 2007 and 2010. They were able to keep control close and do creative things with their music and with their tours.

But it was lots of work and it took its toll. When it came time to head to the studio for their next album, which would be “Anthem,” their ambition may have temporarily got the better of them.

“‘Anthem’ was the record that almost didn’t get made for a completely different reason than ‘Underneath,’” Isaac Hanson said. “We legitimately walked into ‘Anthem’ head-on, not paying enough attention to internal band tension.”

Can’t stop us

Taylor Hanson remembers sitting in their studio in the Brady District at their organ, trying to work through a song, but the band’s frustration was keeping the work tamped down.

After the first recording for the record was done, Isaac said they realized it was time for a break.

“It hit the fan right at the end of that song and everybody kind of went, ‘we’re not ready to make this record,’” Isaac Hanson said. “We put a lot of internal pressures on ourselves to make this record and it was not good. In other circumstances we might have been able to get that done. But (not) in that particular moment, in that particular year, with all the stuff that had gone on up until that point.”

But like brothers, and a band of brothers at that, they worked through the tension and frustration and let their “Anthem” out. Released last June, “Anthem” brings a high-energy, guitar-soaked album meant to pump up, to serve as an anthem for anyone.

“It was an album that really taught us a lot,” Taylor Hanson said. “You can’t underestimate what your headspace is before you go into that intensive passionate opinion-full project. It was almost like the subject of the record was countering the frustration.

“We turned that into a positive. It was, ‘you can’t stop us now.’”


Participating breweries

Prairie Artisan Ales

Brewmaster: Chase Healey

Location: 1803 S. 49th West Ave.

More info: Prairie is recognizable by its artistic labels created by Chase Healey’s brother, Colin Healey. Chase plans to at least bring Bierica, a sour ale aged on raspberry, and Prairie JFJO, a farmhouse IPA, to the event. But you never know. They could always add more closer to Hop Jam.

Signature beer: Prairie Bomb!

COOP Ale Works

Location: 4745 Council Heights Road, Oklahoma City

Brewmaster: Blake Jarolim

More info: COOP Ale Works has grown to be a powerhouse in the Oklahoma brewing world, with a new 15,000-square-foot brewery with 30 barrels churning out several styles, including the F5 IPA, which has been popular in the state for years. The brewery recently celebrated its fifth anniversary.

Signature beer: F5 IPA

Battered Boar Brewing Co.

Brewmaster: Mike Sandefur

Location: 14801 Metro Plaza Blvd., Edmond

More info: Some popular flavors include Company Man Pale Ale, Coconut Cream Stout and Blue Face Scotch Ale

Signature beer: Briar Patch Amber

Marshall Brewing Co.

Location: 618 S. Wheeling Ave.

Brewmaster: Eric Marshall

Signature beer: Atlas IPA

Choc Beer

Location: Krebs

Brewmaster: Michael Lalli

More info: Choc is the old beer on the block. Choc got its start in the community of Krebs near McAlester, deeply rooted in its Italian heritage with a storied past. Choc was decades ahead of the craft beer boom. The brewery now has a wide range of beer.

Signature beer: Oklahoma Pale Ale

Roughtail Brewing Co.

Brewmaster: Tony Tielli

Location: 1279 N. Air Depot Blvd., Oklahoma City

More info: Roughtail just released its first anniversary beer called 1st Anniversary, a hoppy double IPA. The brewery plans to bring Red Republic, 12th Round, Roughtail IPA and Polar Night Stout.

Signature beer: Roughtail IPA

Willows Family Ales

Brewmaster: Heath Glover

Location: Tulsa, brewing out of Prairie Artisan Ales

More info: Glover plans to have his first beer, Family Ale, ready this week, just in time to unveil it at The Hop Jam. Family Ale is an American sour ale, which is a type of beer that he would like to make popular in Oklahoma.

Signature beer: Family Ale

Mustang Brewing Co.

Location: Oklahoma City

Brewmaster: Gary Shellman

More info: Mustang Brewing Co. grew out of a homebrew operation with its first pint poured at McNellie’s in Oklahoma City in 2009. Brewer Ethan Buckman said they plan to bring several experimental beers, which is a great way for the brewery to see what works and what doesn’t. Sunday will cap a busy weekend for Mustang, with the grand reopening of its brewery Friday and the Oklahoma City beer festival Saturday.

Signature beer: Washita Wheat

Anthem Brewing Co.

Location: Oklahoma City

Brewmaster: Matt Anthony

More info: Started with a home brew kit by Matt Anthony, Anthem now has its own 15,000-square-foot brewing space in Oklahoma City. It’s focused on a Belgian-style of brewing, using open-top fermenters.

Signature beer: Golden One

Dead Armadillo Brewing

Location: Tulsa

Brewmasters: Mason Beecroft and Tony Peck

More info: Dead Armadillo co-founder Mason Beecroft said they will be pouring their Amber Ale, Black Hop, Dead Ball Hooligan and the Nine Band IPA brewed especially for festivals. Beecroft also has exciting news — Dead Armadillo will have an even bigger presence in Tulsa.

“We have a building now, so hopefully we’ll have our production up and running in Tulsa pretty soon,” Beecroft said. They hope to have a brewery at Third Street and Peoria Avenue in the next six months. They have been renting space at Roughtail Brewing in Oklahoma City.

Signature beer: Amber Ale

Black Mesa Brewing

Brewmaster: Chris Sanders

Location: Oklahoma City

More info: Black Mesa Brewing Co. claimed a gold medal in Denver at the World Beer Cup last month. Black Mesa’s Endless Skyway Bitter took home the top prize among 57 entries in the competition’s Extra Special Bitter category.

Signature beer: Black Mesa Blonde


Hop Jam 2014

Who: Hanson, Robert Randolph & The Family Band, Butch Walker and a local band, Capitol Cars, chosen by voters.

When: Sunday, May 18. Event opens at 3 p.m., music begins at 5 p.m.

Where: Revolving around North Main and Brady streets with entrances at Boulder Avenue and Brady Street and Brady Street near Boston Avenue. The stage will be at Archer and Main streets. The beer festival will be in an area at Main Street between Brady and Cameron streets and will be open to those 21 and older.

Info: Free to attend music area. Admission to beer area is $10, which includes several samples. More samples can be purchased.

Donations of nonperishable food items will be accepted at the front gate to benefit the Community Food Bank of Eastern Oklahoma. Raffle tickets will also be sold for the chance to win a hop-shaped guitar made specifically for the Hop Jam.