Dina and Sid are joined by 3x Grammy nominated trio, Hanson, to discuss the 30th anniversary of the band as well as their new album, ‘RED GREEN BLUE’.
NONE DARE CALL IT COINCIDENCE
File it under life coming full circle: the inking of Steve Greenberg-managed AJR to Mercury comes 25 years to the week after another three-brother act, Hanson, reached #1 on the original Mercury label with the pop juggernaut “Mmmbop.” The A&R head who signed Hanson and executive-produced their smash? The aforementioned Greenberg.
When 2047 rolls around, will Steve land a third three-brother band on the planet Mercury? And will the atmosphere there make it possible to let the dogs out? Stay tuned.
REVIEW: Hanson breaks apart, comes together on ‘Red Green Blue’
To celebrate its third decade as a band, pop-rock trio Hanson flipped the script entirely for its eight album. Red Green Blue is a cohesive release made up of three separate creative endeavors.
Each band member (and Hanson brother) took the reins to write and produce his own collection of songs; Taylor’s Red, Isaac’s Green and Zac’s Blue. The album comes two years after the group opened up the vault for a Perennial collection. The unique new format combines the members’ individual voices but still feels like a collective band effort. It’s actually quite an impressive feat just what a career the band that first broke on the scene with “mmmBop” has carved for itself 30 years later.
There’s even variety within each “sub-album,” each spanning five or so tracks. Not one of the brothers sticks to any certain style or genre. Instead, all three opt for a blend that represents his creative touch. Taylor Hanson’s Red (not to be confused with that other Taylor’s Red) tends to lean more toward a rootsy Americana and country lane.
“Child At Heart” opens things up with subdued classic rock heavy on harmony. “Rambling Heart” and “Truth” lean heavier into a focused acoustic singer-songwriter vibe. The Tom Petty connection may not be entirely unfounded, as Hanson is collaborating with Jim Scott, who worked with both Petty and the Red Hot Chili Peppers. David Garza co-produced the album, who’s also helmed albums by Fiona Apple and Sharon Van Etten.
“We Belong Together” builds from an energetic acoustic stomper and grows into a soaring singalong that feels uplifting and anthemic. “Semi Hollow” wraps things up on a bluesy high note that fuses more of a Paul-Simon-meets-Grateful-Dead attitude.
For Isaac Hanson’s Green, the overall mood doesn’t change dramatically, but there’s more of an intimate and vintage sound. The Green tracks are more vocal-forward, letting the band’s harmonies carry the way over the instrumentation. “Greener Pastures” is a slick mid-tempo bop with plenty of green wordplay and some smooth bluesy guitar playing.
Acoustic ballads “Write You a Song” and “No Matter The Reason” slow things down but also focus in on the singing. “The Gift of Tears” strips things back even more for a Springsteen-esque ballad with a reverb-laden acoustic guitar and lightly fuzzy electric guitar strumming, sans percussion. The section comes to a close on a rousing note with “Cold As Ice,” a funky and percussive jam with an infusion of soul. The track is a fun romp and one of the high points of the record, bringing back the Paul Simon energy while adding a little bit of Stevie Wonder for good measure.
Zac Hanson’s Blue has a more contemporary sound, taking the same Americana backbone and mixing in pop, rock and alt-country. “Bad” is a slick toe-tapper that mixes some light keys to the organic sound.
The emphasis on the band’s signature harmonies is still very present. Acoustic ballads “World Goes Round” and “Wake Up” are slower but don’t sound as roots as the previous sections. The songs are intricate and well-crafted, showcasing the earnest songwriting. The fist-pumping “Don’t Let Me Down” is probably the most rock track on the entire album, and for good reason: It features Shinedown guitarist Zach Myers.
Blue concludes on soft and airy ballad “Where I Belong,” a piano-driven track that offers some of the most throwback sound on the record. Red Green Blue is experimental and fun for a band that’s been getting it done for a number of years. It showcases the band members’ individualities but feels like a singular work regardless of who’s at the helm.
Why Hanson Decided To Go Solo For ‘Red Green Blue’ — And How They Found Togetherness Because Of It
The Hanson brothers — Taylor, Isaac and Zac — give GRAMMY.com an inside look at the challenging, but rewarding process behind their new album, ‘RED GREEN BLUE.’
After 30 years as a band, Hanson created an album in a way they’ve never done before: going solo.
The sibling trio’s latest release, RED GREEN BLUE, is an amalgamation of a 5-song mini album created by each individual brother: RED for Taylor, GREEN for Isaac and BLUE for Zac. Each brother wrote and produced their third of the album entirely on their own (with the help of GRAMMY Award-winning producers Jim Scott and David Garza), which was new territory for the familial group. But that doesn’t mean it’s any less Hanson — in fact, it may be their most Hanson record to date.
“You really hear the creative voice of each guy in a different way,” Taylor suggests during a recent Zoom interview with his brothers. “Fans that have followed us for years have understood this idea of, ‘that’s sort of an Isaac song’ or ‘that’s sort of a Taylor song, or Zac [song]’ — or at least that’s subliminally been in the sound of our work. It’s us working together in a different capacity.”
RED GREEN BLUE provides Hanson fans a chance to get lost in the uniqueness of each brother’s voice and musical talent — after all, they each sing, songwrite, and play instruments. But their unmistakable bond and chemistry is as vibrant as ever thanks to their signature harmonies, which appear in varied ways across every track.
GRAMMY.com spoke to the Hanson brothers about taking this new creative direction, their continued growth as artists, and the importance of creating connections with fans for 30 years and counting.
The album combines three separate solo projects into one album. What led you to that decision? Why did it make sense to combine them into one album?
Zac: You’re trying to deepen the connection you have with people, go deeper down the rabbit hole of why we do what we do, how we do what we do — what it is that makes Hanson an entity, and why we’ve been together for 30 years. A little bit of deconstruction, taking the parts and seeing them as individuals, seemed like a cool and interesting — and also challenging — way to tell our story as a band at this sort of critical moment in our history.
We produce almost all of our music, just the three of us. That’s a very full room full of ideas and lots of opinions. In a normal environment, it’s hard to get a fourth or a fifth person and their ideas into the music. It provided the opportunity to have Jim Scott, who’s a great producer/engineer, and a good friend, David Garza, who’s also a great artist and producer, to play a more full role..
Taylor: We’ve always really been passionate about writing songs as much as performing. On this record, you hear the creative voice of each guy in a different way. There’s not many bands that have every member contribute creatively as singers, players and writers.
Fans that have followed us for years have understood this idea of, “that’s sort of an Isaac song” or “that’s sort of a Taylor song, or Zac [song]” — or at least that’s subliminally been in the sound of our work. It’s a project that highlights those things differently.
In the end, it’s still presented as Hanson because it is Hanson. It’s us playing on each other’s work. It’s us working together in a different capacity. Finding a way to balance the differences, while also putting them on a platform of what we’ve made together, was a unique challenge. I think we found a balance on how to do it.
The new album is called RED GREEN BLUE. What is the significance of those colors?
Isaac: It goes back, frankly, as long as I can remember, to our childhood in some way or another, because as we were growing up, my childhood favorite color was green, Taylor’s was red, and Zac’s was blue. And that was the kind of thing that we would use those colors to differentiate things like, “Oh, that’s my stuff.” It goes back that far in our personal history.
It’s also indicative of certain parts of our personalities. I think it’s a kind of an appropriate metaphor for who we are. Taylor’s a very kind of driven, a very passionate kind of guy, you see that in red. I am a little bit [of an] organic-leaning guy. And Zac is an adventurer — he sees the blue sky kind of possibilities. We joked around with calling it… What was it? Red Blood?
Taylor: Red Blood was where I was going to go.
Isaac: Yeah, Red Blood. And then Greener Pastures and Blue Yonder. We thought about different names, but in the end RED GREEN BLUE gave the message of [being] together and also the difference of separate voices at the same time.
This isn’t the first time the band’s released music in an untraditional way. For the band’s last album, Against the World, you released a single at a time throughout the year. What do you like about shaking things up like that?
Taylor: It just challenges us. The best thing about this project, for me, was getting to collaborate with other people we respect. Jim Scott — who’s just a real legend and a gentleman — Jim has produced, engineered or mixed many of our favorite records from Tom Petty to [Red Hot] Chili Peppers, and many more in between.
And David Garza, he’s been a longtime friend and somebody we admire greatly as a musician. The silver lining of the whole project was their contribution and being able to share a project. We’ve known both of them in different capacities for years, and never actually created something from the very beginning until the end. Both of those gifted people are a part of the Hanson story and can sort of share in whatever we get to do from here.
Zac: I think the way you release an album can have a big effect on the way people hear that music. And we recognize that. In this case, releasing a three-part album — three individual solo projects released together — that’s a story. But to tell that story, it seemed best to release one single from each first, so that people are already on that journey. They’re already in a head space that’s helping them hear it as true to what it was created to be.
It’s a huge benefit to have an opportunity to put the spotlight on more songs. Also, at this point in our career, there’s more songs than we will ever play in one concert. There’s more than we’ll ever play in a week of concerts! In that environment, every song matters more.
The band strives to create story-driven songs that challenge the listener to grow. You’re also looking to give fans new reasons to listen. Why are those important goals?
Isaac: Sometimes you’re concerned, “Oh, will the audience evolve with me?” And you feel like you have to give the audience what you think they need.
Taylor: That pathway happens to a lot of artists, because frankly, they get tired. They’re like, “Hey, I’m never going to play these songs. Let’s play the songs people want.” But half of what you do as an artist is for yourself — for your own creative fire, and that sense of excitement and energy.
We’ve always felt like the fans respond to what they see in you. They respond to the earnestness and to the story. We had a great producer we worked with on our fourth record, Danny Kortchmar, who is a legend as a guitar player and a producer. One of the things he said was that part of the job of an artist is to keep your antenna up — communicate through songs what a lot of people are feeling, but may not have an outlet for.
One theme of our whole career — and it comes from who we are as a unit and how we’ve all grown up — is there is an aspirational quality.t Trying to find a silver lining, trying to be optimistic through challenges — not to ignore the challenges, but to look for answers and look for solutions. All that stuff comes together and that paints a picture for themes. You hear in the music we make.
Isaac: You can hear those themes as early as in songs like “MMMBop,” you can hear them in “Where’s The Love” and “This Time Around” and “Save Me.” As well as a song like “Child at Heart,” for example, which is talking about not losing the innocence — if you keep a little bit of that child in you alive, you’ve always got hope for tomorrow. And hope is really, really important.
As a core principle, you tend to write your ethos into your music. And what you hear in our music over and over again is that desire to overcome the temporary hardship, that desire to overcome the place you’re in and look over the horizon. In a way, I think we give therapy to ourselves by writing these songs. People need to be able to hear that message.
“Write You A Song” is about realizing what’s really important in one’s life. That theme feels pretty relevant these last few years. What inspired that song?
Isaac: We’re all feeling a lot of stress from the isolation and the uncertainty that COVID injected into all of our lives. It probably, in some way, brought about the Red Green Blue record, because we also realized that by spending more time than we normally would on our own, we all recognized the value of looking at the world in my own voice.
A few days before “Write You A Song” was written, my daughter said to me — in a very emotional way — “Daddy, I don’t have a song. You’ve never written me a song. Why don’t I have a song?” And I tried to assure her, “Well, there’s this song and there’s that song.” And she looked at me and she said, “No, daddy, those are not my songs.”
It was a good challenge. A few days later, a friend of ours was coming through town, and we ended up writing that song. What’s cool about it for me is I will never forget the significance of writing the song. In a way, it’s like every single time you’re living out the story of the song itself. And that’s a really special, unique thing.
I hope when people listen to it, it inspires them to dive deep into their relationships, and to make memories that will last a lifetime. It’s important to hold on to the people around you love and care about, and to capture them in your heart and in your head, so that you’ll never be lonely — as the song says.
What was the biggest surprise making the album?
Isaac: It was as hard, if not harder, than I thought it would be, in certain ways. You’re used to being able to lean on each other — “Zac will have some cool, clever lyric to throw in there.” or, “I can’t wait to hear that drumbeat” — and maybe that will drive the inspiration of the song.
We didn’t really have those things in the same way. I said, “This is a songwriter exercise for me. It’s a deep dive into my heart and head because I’m not going to play a guitar riff and have Zac just jamming it out.”
Zac: I was very pleasantly surprised with how well the songs seemed to work together despite how separately the songs were made and recorded. I didn’t know what songs you guys were choosing and you didn’t know what songs I was choosing. Though it is not one contiguous thought, it does have a certain arc to it. And it does have a certain kinship to the messages and the lyrics and the way they talk about the world.
I think though it’s a very different Hanson record, in the end — even though it’s three solo projects — it fits into one Hanson story.
In your 30 years as a band, you’ve had a very tight-knit connection with fans. What does it mean to have that kind of connection?
Isaac: The best thing about playing shows night after night for an audience that has been with you that long is, strangely enough, it feels very fresh. It feels very honest and real. And I think this tour will probably feel even more that way, because when you’re singing old songs and new songs right next to each other, they’re kind of like the RED GREEN BLUE album — they feel very connected in all the right ways. I want people to hear these songs and find who they are, and then chase the best version of that for the rest of their lives every day.
Zac: When you start a band — in our case, at least — your goal is not to become famous or to have people adore you. You are hoping to have an impact on people — and the kind of longevity to where a grandma can listen with her granddaughter.
When you are able to look at fans and know that people have been sharing experiences with you for decades, It means that you did it. It means that you were able to touch people in a personal way. You don’t know them personally, but you’ve impacted them in a way that has caused them to continue to enjoy those stories year after year — and now multiple decades later.
It’s a deep combination of gratifying and rejuvenating. It makes you want to do it again. It makes you feel that the efforts, all those little challenges and big struggles along the way, were worthy of that effort.
Taylor: I feel just a great amount of gratitude, because we understand what it is to be a fan and to love something. Music hits people, and it does become personal. To be able to be on the side not of the creator that has been able to connect with others and become a part of their lives, it’s a real honor.
It just blows my mind that we’ve gotten to be one of the artists that have continued to do that sort of past our expiration date. The community side is something we’ve seen a huge amount in our time as a band, and we’ve tried to embrace that. The music community is as important as just what you’re making — connecting people to each other.
Hanson on GMA
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Setlist: May 13, 2022 Cain’s Ballroom Tulsa, OK Storytellers
HANSON: Live Streaming Every Day!
WEEKLY PIC
HANSON DAY 2022 is fully underway in Tulsa and we are SO happy to have so many of you here to celebrate in person again for the first time since 2019! Here’s a collection of images from 2019’s festival gatherings. Can’t wait to share the epic events of 2022.
Hanson want to have a ‘deeper connection’ as the band reaches 25 years
Hanson want to have a ‘deeper connection’ as the band reaches 25 years.
The pop band – which is made up of brothers Isaac, Taylor and Zac Hanson – shot to fame as kids with their debut single ‘MMMBop’ back in 1997 and now drummer Zac has explained that he had a “mental shift” as the group approached the milestone anniversary.
He said: “When we hit the 25th anniversary of the band, to me there was a mental shift that said, ‘It’s not really just about making music anymore’. So, I just started thinking about records more like, ‘What kind of stories are we telling? How are we deepening the connection and the understanding of the band? [Being in the band is] a beautiful compromise, because what we are together makes us better for the most part].”
Meanwhile, guitarist Isaac – who is now married to Nicole Dufresne and has Clarke, 15, James, 14, and Nina, eight – explained that it is “trippy” to think his eldest son is now around the same age he was when they were penning their smash hit single and debut album but claimed that he has had a “wild experience” with fame.
Speaking to Retro Pop Magazine, he said: I “was basically the age my eldest son is now, making ‘Middle of Nowhere’ – and that is trippy. He’s starting to get it, which is really funny. Especially in the last couple of years, he’s been like, ‘Dad, um, what the heck?’ It connects with him in a visceral way, because he saw a picture of me that was taken at the MTV Europe Music Awards, where I was standing with Steven Tyler and Jon Bon Jovi. He kind of flipped out, like ‘Dad, I love Bon Jovi and I love Aerosmith! What is going on?’ I was like, ‘I’ve lived a lot of life, man!’ It’s been a wild experience and it’s been a great experience!”
Hanson is back with a new album, 25 years after MMMBop
Pop-rock trio Hanson – yes, of MMMBop fame – are out with a new album celebrating their 30th anniversary as a band. Global News Weekend’s Mike Arsenault spoke to Taylor Hanson about the band’s longevity, their love for their Canadian fans and their new project.
Does Rock ‘N’ Roll Kill Braincells?! – Hanson
In Does Rock ‘N’ Roll Kill Braincells?!, we quiz an artist on their own career to see how much they can remember – and find out if the booze, loud music and/or tour sweeties has knocked the knowledge out of them. This week: the brothers take the test
On Germany’s biggest chatshow, which singer-songwriter claimed he had fought in Iraq with Hanson in a special celebrity unit?
Taylor: “He fought with us in Iraq?! I need more coffee for this answer.”
Zac: “Zero idea! Eminem?”
WRONG. It was Adam Green, whom you collaborated with at your writing retreats – dubbed Fools Banquet – where you invited artists such as Andrew W.K. and ‘Weird Al’ Yankovic to write songs together.
Taylor: “Of course! Adam is a good friend, and he would definitely say something like that. It’s very him.”
Zac: “When we finished a song with Adam, somebody commented: ‘These lyrics are really weird’. and Adam replied: ‘Yeah, that’s Zac’s fault’. It was a great source of pride to have out-weirded Adam Green!”
Taylor: “Fools Banquet created a safe and exciting environment for people to try things, so a crowning achievement was having both Adam Green and ‘Weird Al’ Yankovic there and just the collision of these brilliant and unique minds creating songs. Fabulous!”
Which metal song did you cover on April Fool’s Day 2011, joking that you were going to record an album of their songs?
Taylor: “I know Slipknot was the band. I feel I should Google myself now [Laughs].”
Zac: “We did it on the road, but the reason I don’t remember the name of the song was because I’d never heard it before we decided to cover it and I don’t think I’ve listened to it after it. No offence to Slipknot!”
WRONG. But close – it was ‘Wait and Bleed’. Ever receive any feedback from the band?
Zac: “No, we never received any feedback from Slipknot, but normally, from my experience, if someone does a version of a song and they just ruin it, you don’t really say anything about it [Laughs]. So Slipknot were probably like: ‘Yikes! OK! Next!’”
Game of Thrones actor Emilia Clarke covered Hanson’s ‘90s chart-topper ‘MMMBop’ in fictional language Dothraki in 2016. Can you complete the following of your lyrics: ‘Yer zhorre ma many relationships she jin atthirar/ Disse ato che akat tikh nakhok…‘?
Zac: “I really want to try, but I’m pretty positive anything I say will just be Klingon!”
Taylor: “The question really is: can you speak Dothraki? Wow! These are low blows [Laughs].”
WRONG. The rest – of course! – is: “Yer elat vi ei jin pain akka strife/ Arrek yer turn yeri irge akka mori’re elat ma dik”. Which means: “You have so many relationships in this life/Only one or two will last/You go through all the pain and strife/Then you turn your back and they’re gone so fast.”
Taylor: [Laughs] “It doesn’t quite have that hooky quality to it. I feel a little bit attacked by it.”
Zac: “There’s so many wild random things that song gets included in, because it’s part of a cultural moment.”
Taylor: “We should collect an entire album of ‘‘MMMBop’ covers. You’d have Phish doing it live in the guise of James Brown and the YouTube edit of all the Star Wars characters singing it.”
What did you make of Haim’s 2019 ‘HaimBop‘ cosplay of Hanson where they lip-synched to ‘MMMBop’ in blond wigs?
Zac: “It was good. And they seem like they could do a good version of it, because they can sing and there’s three of them.”
Isaac: “”We’re still angling for the Haim-Hanson collaboration.”
Taylor: “Haimson?”
Stevie Nicks and Puff Daddy both listed ‘MMMBop’ as their favourite song of 1997; does anything about that period seem surreal in retrospect?
Isaac: “The trippiest thing for me is my 15-year-old son loves Aerosmith and Bon Jovi and saw a picture of me as a 16-year-old standing next to Jon Bon Jovi and Steven Tyler at the MTV Europe Awards and he looked at me stunned, going: ‘Dad! What the hell?! What is going on?!”
In Family Guy, when Hanson’s bus breaks down in front of Peter Griffin’s house, who does he mistake you for before shooting you?
Hanson: [In unison]: The Children of the Corn.”
CORRECT. Did you see it?
Isaac: “Yes, I totally get the joke. It’s hilarious. That one definitely gets replayed.”
Zac: “My wife was watching the US version of The Office and suddenly an episode comes on where they’re discussing nepotism and whether they should have held open auditions for the band Hanson: ‘What if no one named Hanson showed up?” There’s so many weird references to the band.”
It wasn’t the only Hanson name-drop in Family Guy. In one episode, while playing a game of ‘Who would you sleep with?’, libidinous Quagmire is upset when he discovers that Taylor is actually a guy, an update of the old T-shirt slogan joke in the ‘90s: ‘I Slept With The Chick In Hanson’. Did you find it funny at the time?
Taylor: “Yeah. As the Chick in Hanson, I would say it goes with the package of having a certain level of attention. It’s like high school. People pick the thing to make a joke of – that was what they picked for me.”
Ever tempted to don one of those shirts yourself?
Taylor: “Not especially! ‘Cause it’s not scientifically possible to have intercourse with yourself in that way.”
In the 1990s, which indie musician responded to criticism that his show was too highbrow by replying: “If you want to be entertained, go and see Hanson.”?
Zac: “I want to say Radiohead? I think that sounds like a Thom Yorke kind of statement [Laughs].”
CORRECT.
Taylor: “[Laughs] There you go! We should use that quote! Never mind ‘I Slept With The Chick From Hanson’ – that’s the quote I want on a T-shirt!’”
You covered Radiohead’s ‘Optimistic’ on tour in 2005. Did Thom and co ever hear it?
Isaac: “No, we haven’t heard directly from them. It was after the Sundance festival which is when we ran into them [where Radiohead sneaked an underage Hanson into a Sundance party at the height of their ’90s success].”
Zac: “Radiohead are all about the idea of dismantling a song and being exploratory, whereas we were doing the opposite: ‘Let’s make it more of a chorus! Where’s the melody? Where’s the hook?’ I hope they didn’t feel we were doing a disservice to them, and that they appreciated it.”
Apart from Hanson, name the three other artists the New Radicals threaten to kick the asses of in their 1998 single ‘You Get What You Give’?
Isaac: “Beck.”
Zac: “And Marilyn Manson.”
Isaac: “Courtney Love, right?”
CORRECT.
Taylor: [Laughs] “We became friends with [New Radicals frontman] Gregg Alexander and asked him about it point-blank….”
Zac: “While surrounded by the three of us [Laughs]”
Taylor: “And he was very cagey about it. He replied: ‘Well… it wasn’t really meant to be negative…’. To which I asked: ‘Well, you did say you were going to kick our asses!’ He was playing a character that was combative, but he just wants to be in the studio writing songs. That was him dipping his toe into the water of ‘I’m a rebel!’”
Whose music did you once describe as “chlamydia of the ears”?
All laugh.
Zac: “I know this one! Justin Bieber!”
CORRECT. Particularly his VD-tastic track ‘Despacito’.
Isaac: “Not my favourite moment of ours, to be honest. That’s not my favourite Justin Bieber song, but I do actually like that song.”
Taylor: “What? ‘Chlamydia of the Ears’? [Laughs] We actually met Justin before he blew up when he was really young. He seemed like a starry-eyed young kid ready to go – and then he conquered the world.”
Isaac: “To get a little brotherly, I couldn’t help but see him as somewhere between Zac or Taylor. I remember thinking ,’I hope he’s able to deal with the pressure’, because it’s a lot to put on one person. Having the three of us together definitely cut against what could have been an overwhelming amount of pressure.”
Zac: “I don’t remember meeting him. But I think at the time I was probably thinking: ‘I hope that guy doesn’t end up making music that sounds like chlamydia!’”
You helped Andrew W.K. break the World Record for Longest Drumming Session in 2013. How long did it last for?
Zac: “I think he was going for 24 hours.”
CORRECT.
Zac: “He had to play consistently for 24 hours, so some of that was only one-handed. Exhausting! I don’t want to do anything for 24 hours, much less play drums. Andrew’s great. There’s his over-the-top wild party rocker persona and then his other side who will sit and play us sonatas.”
Taylor: “He’s a cross between Burt Bacharach and Cookie Monster.”
Zac: “He has a willingness to go all the way there and challenges you to be a better musician.”
Hanson cameo in Katy Perry’s 2011 ‘Last Friday Night (T.G.I.F.)’ video. Which classic John Hughes film was it based on?
Zac: “Was it Sixteen Candles?”
CORRECT. His 1984 coming-of-age comedy.
Taylor: “It’s Sixteen Candles plus acid.”
Zac: “That was surreal because we got a call in the middle of recording a record saying: ‘Do you want to play on the lawn in Katy Perry’s new video? Kenny G’s going to be there.’ Sold!”
Taylor: “She was nice and fun. In the video, we’re meant to be playing at this house party, and annoyed everyone because we kept on turning on the amplifiers. We were saying: ‘But what if we actually did a show?’. ‘Cause you’re there with your instruments in front of a crowd of people. They’d say: ‘We’re shooting a video. You don’t have to work the room, guys. Everybody here is paid to like you.’”
What date is Hanson Day?
Zac: “May 6.”
CORRECT. Which was initiated in your hometown of Tulsa to celebrate the release of your 1997 album ‘Middle of Nowhere’, before becoming an annual event. Hopefully nobody missed the post deadline for sending their Merry Hanson Day cards!
Zac: “That’s a hard one to forget! It’s really just a continuation of Cinco de Mayo [on May 5], so you celebrate Mexican independence followed by your favourite band.”
Isaac: “Someday, we hope to get all the governments of the world to agree that Hanson Day should be a national holiday because that’s one way to make yourself everybody’s favourite band – give them the day off work.”
Zac: “We do celebrate Hanson Day. It was intended to be a one-time thing [in 1997] by the state Governor but nowadays it’s become a week-long celebration for fans to come to Oklahoma and we host concerts and lectures and this will be the first place people will have the chance to listen to our new album ‘Red Green Blue’.
Tell us about the new album…
Zac: “It’s a three-part album and each of us wrote a third of it. We’ve been together over 30 years and everything we do now is on a scale. It’s no longer about, ‘Let’s make 10 more songs’; it’s what stories are we telling and what does it say about who we are? This seemed like a cool way to deconstruct who Hanson is and what makes us a band.”
Bonus question! For a half-point: Which pop-punk icon claims his band’s most-steamed Spotify track “sounds like Hanson”?
Taylor: “No idea!”
WRONG. Tom DeLonge, formerly of Blink-182, claimed in 2022 that whenever people send him ‘All The Small Things’ , he responds ‘Really?!’ It’s like Hanson. It’s like these kids playing the old pop-punk.’
Hanson break into a pitch-perfect rendition of ‘All The Small Things’.
Zac: “Hey, man – I wish we had written it!”
The verdict: 7/10
Isaac: “Yes! Over 50 per cent! I think the ratio grew when I started answering!”
– Hanson’s ‘Red Green Blue’ is released on May 20. The band embark on a 30th anniversary tour throughout the UK from June 2022. See here for full dates