Article: Hanson Walks for Poverty

By | November 15, 2009

Bandtastic Reviews

Meagan Clements | Senior Staff Writer

…For three-brother band Hanson, raising awareness starts with taking action

Heralded as “the finest straight-up rock band in America by New York’s Village Voice, the three-brother band Hanson fought poverty and AIDS in Africa through their Use Your Sole tour sponsored by TOMS shoes.

Encouraging students to join in the cause, the band hosted one-mile barefoot walks at college campuses across the U.S. For each individual who walked, $1 was donated to help those in need.

“These walks are not just about us walking to fight poverty and AIDS in Africa; they are about us taking an opportunity to serve others,” guitarist Isaac Hanson said. “This is a service walk, a walk that says, ‘we are here not purely to act, but [we are here] in solidarity with those who are struggling.'”

Senior psychology major April Novall supports the band’s efforts to give back to nations in need.

“To know that they are contributing to save children [in poverty] around the world makes you feel as if you are a part of something bigger,” Novall said.

Isaac says the solution to any problem is in the action.

“It is our opportunity to act that is the most crucial,” Isaac said. [Action] makes a difference in everything.”

Isaac feels there is danger in looking only to the past and the future rather than living in the present.

“Ultimately, we’re waiting for something that we’re not willing to make happen ourselves,” Isaac said.

Isaac added that the walks are about more than raising funds.

[It’s] more about putting the action first and putting the responsibility not purely on a fund raising event, but on an action event,” Isaac said. “It’s more about engaging one another in the process of acting, not in the process of raising funds.”

Fan Holly Snider who has supported the band since 1997 feels walking barefoot is a simple reminder of the necessities often taken for granted.

“I can put my shoes back on any time I choose,” Snider said. “There are so many people who don’t have that option.”

Pianist Taylor Hanson agreed.

“Where things really make a difference is [when] you put yourself with those who are struggling, with those who are in need and get over yourself,” Taylor said. “So much of the reason why people are afraid to do things is [because] they are deeply afraid of what it means to put themselves against someone who is truly in need.”

Taylor noted that effort plays a vital role in making progress possible.

“People get caught up in the optimism of wanting to see things succeed really quickly,” Taylor said. “It takes effort to do the things that make progress possible.”

Isaac feels raising awareness is sometimes easier than taking action.

“You’d be amazed how many people are excited and willing to talk about what it is that we’re doing when we take a barefoot walk, but you’d be amazed at how scared people are when we say, ‘let’s do this barefoot,'” Isaac said.

Although the band has devoted much of their efforts to fighting issues in Africa, Isaac feels something as simple as a smile, a touch or a kind word has an equally likely chance of making a powerful impact on someone’s life.

“Hopefully our actions will be that smile, that hand up and that opportunity to possibly affect others,” Isaac said.

Drummer Zac Hanson says giving unities people of all ages and is not dependent on success of failure.

“You don’t have to succeed before you begin to give back or do things you’re passionate about that will leave the impact and the legacy you want for your life,” Zac said. “[Giving] is something that we can do as a part of the way we live and not as a byproduct of our success or failure in the commercial world.”

Longtime fan Kira Cox, describes the barefoot walks as an eye-opening experience.

“I have a feeling of peace and unity when I am taking these walks, I feel what it is like to have sore and freezing feet like children who don’t have shoes and I feel gratitude for the things I have that I tend to take for granted,” Cox said.

Using music as an avenue for expression, the band plans to release their fifth studio album this spring.

“Music is a powerful tool to engage people even if it’s just in subtle ways where you’re encouraging people to see themselves as having value,” Taylor said. “People that are confident in their own skin are going to be much more willing to get out there and do something.”

Senior music major Joel Simpson feels music is about more than a hit singe.

“You can’t touch the world just by writing songs that sell,” Simpson said. “Bands are starting to realize that what they say matters to people [regardless] of what the economy is like.”

Simpson commended Hanson for using their gift of music to give back to the world.

“Music touches everyone’s emotions and bands like Hanson have the power,” Simpson said. “It’s a blessing and about time bands stop being selfish and change the world. It’s a fresh feeling.”

To find out how you can get involved, visit: http://www.takethewalk.net.

Meagan Clements is the senior staff writer and music journalist for The Clause, weekly paper Azusa Pacific University.

Setlist: Anaheim, CA 11-11-09

By | November 12, 2009

1. Where’s the Love
2. Great Divide
3. Get Up and Go
4. Minute Without You
5. Running Man
6. Been There Before
7. World’s on Fire

8. Carry You There
9. Strong Enough to Break
10. Use Me Up – Zac solo
11. These Walls – Start acoustic then back into electric

12. Dream Girl
13. This Time Around
14. Crazy Beautiful
15. Penny and Me
16. If Only
17. Twist and Shout
18. Lost Without Each Other
19. MMMBop
20. Something Going Round

21. Waiting for This

Setlilst: Tuscon, AZ 11-10-09

By | November 12, 2009

1. Where’s The Love
2. Great Divide
3. Thinking of You
4. Get Up and Go
5. Running Man
6. Been There Before
7. World’s On Fire

8. Madeline
9. Carry You There
10. Strong Enough To Break
11. Hand In Hand – Ike solo

12. This Time Around
13. Waiting For This
14. Crazy Beautiful – band intro
15. A Minute Without You
16. Twist and Shout
17. Lost Without Each Other
18. Mmmbop
19. Something Going Round

20. If Only

Setlist: San Diego 1-8-09

By | November 9, 2009

1. Where’s the Love
2. Great Divide
3. Thinking Of you
4. Get Up And Go
5. Running Man
6. Been There Before
7. Worlds On Fire

8. Carry You There
9. Strong Enough To Break
10. I Will Come To You
11. Deeper (Isaac solo)

12. Madeline / Hold On Im Coming
13. Waiting for This
14. Minute Without You
15. Twist and Shout
16. Lost Without Each Other
17. MMMBop
18. Something Going Round

19. Don’t Stop Believing

Setlist: Los Angeles 11-7-09

By | November 8, 2009

1. Where’s The Love
2. Great Divide
3. Get Up and Go
4. Hey
5. You Never Know
6. Been There Before
7. This Time Around
8. World’s On Fire

9. Carry You There
10. Penny and Me
11. A Song To Sing
12. Use Me up- Zac Solo
13. Never Been To Spain
14. Waiting For This- (Back to electric.)
15. Crazy Beautiful
16.Minute W/O You
17. Twist and Shout
18. Lost W/O Each Other
19.MMMBop
20. Something Going Around

21. If Only
22. Gimme Some Lovin

Article: Hanson fans clamor for more as trio heads to mouse house

By | November 8, 2009

OC Register

In the spring of 1997, as a high school senior eagerly awaiting graduation, I was unfortunately without a car. My friend Rick drove a used Chevy Blazer (and therefore me) and owned one CD: the single version of Hanson’s “MMMBop,” which he played continuously.

Rick had purchased the disc after hearing the song on the radio, but once it became a No. 1 smash in almost a dozen countries — and the moppety mugs of Isaac, Taylor and Zac were plastered all over TV — Rick “lost” the CD, eventually claiming he’d never even owned it.

This backlash was all too common in the late ’90s and early ’00s, and while it may never be cool to listen to Hanson (or at least cop to listening to Hanson), the three-piece from Tulsa never really went away — the band of brothers is currently putting the finishing touches on its as-yet-unnamed eighth LP (due in 2010) and touring the U.S. behind a mostly-acoustic EP titled Stand Up, Stand Up.

On Saturday, the group’s Use Your Sole Tour bopped into L.A. Live’s jam-packed Club Nokia (it stops Wednesday at House of Blues Anaheim), and while Rick was noticeably absent, the adoring legion of Hansonites were out in force to support the band that most of them never stopped supporting.

It was eerily reminiscent of a Phish or Grateful Dead concert, as the (heavily female) fans near me rattled off recent set lists, discussed best-ever versions of songs and recited how many shows they’d seen on this particular tour. One thirtysomething woman claimed the Club Nokia show was her 200th Hanson show.

I’ll let that one sink in: 200th Hanson show.

During the two-hour headlining slot, the trio catered to this tirelessly loyal army of fans with continuous interaction, playful (if not contrived) stage banter, stripped-down acoustic numbers and even a few covers voted into the set by fans.

Opening with “Where’s the Love” and closing with a cover of the Spencer Davis Group’s “Gimme Some Lovin’” (featuring not only the three stellar opening acts — Hellogoodbye, Steel Train and Sherwood — but also members of Rooney and, if you can believe it, “Weird Al” Yankovic), Hanson played a set of 20 or so songs that showcased the band’s catchy, hook-laden, gospel-tinged pop. And the audience knew ever single word.

Here’s the deal: if you’d never listened to Hanson, only knew “MMMBop” from the radio, and someone told you that an unnamed up-and-coming blue-eyed soul trio was playing Club Nokia, you’d be hard-pressed to tell its songs apart from anything John Mayer has released to mainstream radio in the past five years. Even the teenybop tunes have been updated and given more powerful punch.

The songs are solid — upbeat, piano-based pop/rock songs, louder than you’d expect, with electric guitars and synthesized horn lines — even if after two hours the formula gets repetitive, while numbers like “You Never Know” and “Crazy Beautiful” would have benefited greatly from an in-the-flesh three-piece horn section. (That would definitely up the Hanson Authenticity Ante.)

At least from a rabid-fan perspective (and I’m solely judging by the amount of screaming and applause around me), the night’s highlight came when the band trotted out a series of new songs. After beginning electric with the U2-sounding “World’s on Fire” and continuing acoustic with “Carry You There” (both from the new EP), the band left the stage except for drummer Zac, who positioned himself at brother Taylor’s white upright piano for “Use Me Up,” a supplicating plea that wouldn’t sound out of place on, dare I say it, one of the half-dozen albums the “retired” Ryan Adams is undoubtedly preparing for 2010.

Heartfelt and tender without sounding wimpy or trite, “Use Me Up” should not only enter Hanson’s regular rotation, but stand at its forefront as a shining example of a light-years-away move from the sugarcoated teen shtick the band popularized in the late ’90s.

And speaking of “MMMBop” … yeah, they played it, after Hellogoodbye playfully teased the intro during its set. Isaac didn’t seem tired of picking out the intro, Zac wasn’t put off by the 4/4 drumbeat and Taylor sang it as if he had rarely performed that one song that made Hanson overnight celebrities 13 years ago.

It reminded me of an interview in the ’80s, when Jimmy Buffett was asked if he ever got tired of playing “Margaritaville.” Without skipping a beat, he responded (and I’m paraphrasing) that his most popular song had been paying the bills for years — how could he ever stop playing it?

“MMMBop” helped Hanson sell over 10 million copies of its major-label debut, Middle of Nowhere — and it’s been paying the bills for years, during which time the brothers could easily have slipped into one-hit-wonder obscurity. They haven’t, however, which is not only a testament to their incredibly dedicated fan base but also their desire to be taken seriously by the music mainstream.

Love ‘em or loathe ‘em, Hanson ain’t going nowhere. And now that my friend Rick has an 11-year-old daughter, maybe he should dig up that “MMMBop” single — a new generation of Hanson fans might just be waiting in the wings.

(Hanson plays tonight at House of Blues San Diego, $32.50-$47.50, and Wednesday at House of Blues Anaheim, $30. Photos by Bryan Johnson.)

What’s happening in LA

By | November 6, 2009

Layolan

Hanson and Hellogoodbye

Club Nokia

800 W Olympia Blvd.

Los Angeles, CA

Saturday, Nov. 7, 6:30 p.m.

$24 online, $30 day of show

Hanson, of 1990s boy band fame, and synthpop group Hellogoodbye team up for what they’ve called the “Use Your Sole Tour.” The Hanson brothers have come a long way from their 1997 hit “MMMBop,” and will be playing music from several of their seven studio albums. Hellogoodbye is gearing up for a new album, and on Saturday, concert-goers may get a listen of their new song “When We First Met.” Steel Train and Sherwood are also scheduled to perform at the event.

Setlist: San Francisco 11-5-09

By | November 6, 2009

01. Wheres the Love
02 .Great Divide
03. Get Up And Go
04. Hey
05. You Never Know
06. Been There Before
07. This Time Around
08. World’s On Fire

09. Carry You There
10. Penny and Me
11. I Will Come To You
12. Use Me Up (Zac solo)
13. Love Me (Taylor Solo)

14. Crazy Beautiful
15. Waiting For This
16. Minute Without You
17. Twist and Shout
18. Lost Without Each Other
19. MMMBop
20. Something Going Round

21. Don’t Stop Believing