Showing posts with label 2013. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 2013. Show all posts

Thursday, December 12, 2013

HMV Institute, Birmingham


Jeremy Williams, Editor
Tay
Tay
Hanson have been written off many times by the British public. Having exploded into the pop consciousness with their unforgettable earworm 'MMMBop', Tulsa brothers Ike, Tay and Zac have achieved intermittent hits on these shores. However, their loyal fanbase has never parted ways with the scarily talented trio. With each of their six studio albums adding an extra string to their diverse roster - with this year's impressive 'Anthem' showcasing their rock prowess - it is with excited anticipation that the sold out HMV Institute await the trio's arrival centre stage.

Before the band of brothers take their places under the spotlight, Welsh singer/songwriter Siôn Russell Jones takes to the mic. With a distinct vocal reminiscent of JJ72's Mark Greaney and songwriting that fuses the edge of Weezer with the playfulness of Wheatus, his set catches the attention of the audience and holds it for an intimate insight into Jones' releases to date and impending.

Ike
Ike
Arriving on stage just ahead of their expected set time, the auditorium is filled with hysteric screams as the inner teenager of every fan connects with the euphoric excitement of seeing a pop idol up close and personal.

Launching straight into the riotous 'Fired Up' from their latest album, it is clear that Hanson are set to send the HMV Institute into a frenzy. With the audience erupting into a song and dance, the three brothers bounce off the feedback and give their opening number everything they have got.

The committed approach is one that endures throughout their impressive set. With fans of all ages present in the audience, the trio ensure that they include a little something for everyone. While there is no denying that early hits 'Where's The Love' and 'Madeline' receive big love from their fans of old, newer additions to the setlist 'Scream and Be Free', 'Juliet' and 'Get The Girl Back' are equally loved. Other notable fan favourites are the often overlooked 'This Time Around', 'Give A Little' and 'Thinking 'Bout Somethin''.

Zac
Zac
While Tay is perhaps best known for his lead vocals, the band prove they are more than happy to mix it up, as per their latest album, during the live shows. While Ike's 'For Your Love' certainly impresses, it is youngest brother Zac's whose tender, rich vocal really warrants further exploration. As the trio take centre stage for an a cappella Bee Gees tribute 'Too Much Heaven', Zac's spine tingling lead vocal is beautifully enriched by Tay and Ike's harmonies.

Having climaxed their set with the a truly unforgettable rendition of 'MMMBop', the trio return to their adoring audience for a festive encore that revisits their seasonal 'Snowed In' release-with a jolly knees up to 'Run Run Rudolph' and 'Merry Christmas Baby'.

As Hanson stated so clearly in their debut hit, 'in an MMMBop they're gone', they leave to deafening screams as they promise to return soon if the audience promise the same. Judging by the epic queues at the merch stand after the show, this is an audience who will return any time the boys hit town.

Credits to Jeremy Williams

Wednesday, December 11, 2013

Friday, December 6, 2013

Review: Hanson @ The Ritz

The Tulsa trio head back on a world tour and come to Manchester as part of the first leg in Europe

Hanson
****
Hanson
Skateboarding, long blonde hair and the MMMBop video's wholesome clips of gigs in the family living room are the first images most of us have of Hanson. That was 1997.
Now, the Tulsa trio - Taylor, Isaac and Zac - are married dads with (mostly) sensible hair. But the music remains.
They are celebrating an incredible 20 years performing together as a band with latest album Anthem, and kicking off their world tour in the UK at the intimate Ritz - a setting that suits them.
Lively Fired Up gets things going and the brothers sound flawless from the outset.
The crowd need no encouragement to go wild, but Where's The Love really helps them on their way.
It is the token acoustic section where they really excel, though.
Taylor may be the lead singer but Isaac and Zac transition into soloists with ease.
The siblings' harmonies are spot-on and are laid bare when a deadly hush descends upon the venue as they sing a beautiful acapella version of the Too Much Heaven by another famous trio of brothers, the Bee Gees.
Taylor breaks up the set by sharing songwriting anecdotes, Penny and Me leads the procession of singles down the decades, while A Minute Without You sparks a mass singalong.
After an hour of teasing us, they reach MMMBop, then a festive treat in the encore with a reworked version of Run Run Reindeer.
Usually, one mention of Hanson gets people humming their signature MMMBop, and unable to recall much else.
But, on tonight's showing especially, they are so much more than just that one song.

Tuesday, December 3, 2013

Hanson bring the Mmmbop and their global tour to Glasgow

If you had walked past Glasgow's 02 ABC at around 4pm this evening, you would have been surprised to see a 50-strong crowd standing barefoot in the street.

This shoe-less movement is commonplace at a Hanson show though, as the band rustle up local fans to take part in a mile-long walk of the city for Take the Walk almost everywhere they go.
The barefoot walks raise money for Take Action, a charity which fights poverty and HIV/Aids in Africa, and the band have been supporting them since 2007.
This is the first Glaswegian walk to take place, which saw a crowd of excited fans leave their shoes behind and follow the band towards Kelvingrove park.
For a wet, windy afternoon - the turn out is admirable. Hanson is very grateful, but not particularly surprised. After all, a handful of fans have been waiting outside the venue since 6am just to nab a spot in the front row.
The most interesting thing about these fans is that none of them are from Glasgow – or anywhere particularly close. Instead they've traveled from Belfast, Brighton, Dundee and London to name but a few.
Not content with seeing the band play in Glasgow, these fans will follow Hanson across countries as they play a handful of UK dates – before moving on to mainland Europe.
It's the kind of dedication that Taylor, Issac and Zac Hanson are used to - but always appreciative of.
Taylor begins: "We've had a strong relationship with our fans for years - there's a familiarity there and, actually, we're spoiled. We look at an audience and we see a huge portion of the crowd is singing every world. It's not a casual thing."
Issac adds: "For some reason, I liken this to the way we are about our set lists and the way we are about our music and our band. Although we can't really claim responsibility for it, it definitely seems like we have an unusually high number of people who are willing to do that sort of thing."
Zac chips in: "We try not to take it for granted that people really care about what we do. They've stuck with us for 15, 20 years... this means something to them. We're lucky that we've had that kind of reaction."
Issac mentions a girl he met earlier, who showed him a tattoo she'd gotten on her foot. She said that's the only Hanson tattoo she's gotten so far but that she'd "probably get more". Another girl is doing every date on the European tour, with the exception of just one show.
Taylor hastened to add: "Not everybody's that way, but there's definitely a community."
It's that community that has allowed Hanson to flourish over the years.
Taylor says: "As the businesses changes, it's more about how you cultivate that direct connection. We do it through running our label, having a strong web community and through our fan club. It gives us a good foundation to navigate.
"We were able to build an internet fan base before internet fan bases really existed. It was hugely because we had an opportunity to connect with our peers, when they were emerging into that world.
"The first era was about ten years ago, when people became fully saturated into that technology. Labels were screaming and fighting that transition, instead of embracing it. The playing field is beginning to truly start over and the content creator - in our case, the band - is in a totally new position. The cost to get out there is way less than it used to be."
This do-it-yourself way of approaching their music is something that steered the band towards the position they're in now - recording music under their own label, 3CG Records. Hanson originally signed to Mercury in 1997, before the label merged with Def Jam Records.
After the merger, the band quickly realised that they didn't want to be there anymore.
Issac puts it simply: "They didn't care about what we were doing."
Zac adds: "Def Jam wasn't a good place for us - they just acquired us as an asset."
In terms of choosing to record under their own label, Zac adds: "We wanted to be on the side of the business that was growing, instead of the side that was shrinking."
Taylor brings the conversation back to a positive note: "For us, we're able to keep the same trajectory we've always had. We've always made music that we're passionate about - we've never made an album that wasn't ours."
Releasing Anthem, the band's ninth studio album, in July - the band are well-versed in the art of writing, recording and touring. But which aspect of being musicians do they prefer?
Issac answers: "I don't think you can separate one from the other. Creating is a very introverted process, while touring is very extroverted... the road gives you energy to create new material."
Taylor agrees: "One fuels the other. You can't not create but [with touring] you get to test yourself as a performer - it's a way of looking out into the world and understanding what your audience reacts to.
"One of the most interesting tours is when you go out and play to an audience that aren't your fans. As an early band, you're tested by walking out to a bunch of people who couldn't care less. When they don't sing back, you have to do something different."
The band are no stranger to touring - after all, they've been together for 21 years - but this is the first time Hanson have visited Glasgow since 2005.
Taylor still remembers the first time the band played the city: "We played King Tuts in 2003. It was this tiny little acoustic show and you could touch the ceiling from the stage. By the time the show got going, it had this really intense, amazing energy."
On Anthem, the band cite influences like James Brown and AC/DC - but do they draw influence from any current artists?
Taylor answers: "Honestly, a lot of current artists we love are influenced by the bands we're talking about. When we talk about influences, it's a way of trying to describe what the music sounds like - but it's hard to describe music until you hear it.
"We recorded [Anthem] live off the floor mostly and, when you make a record that way, you're trying to capture something that happens in a very real way. When it's really right, the listener can hear it. When three people sing around one mic, it's different than when each voice records parts of the harmony separately.
"Anthem is a bigger and more intense-sounding album. The influences are still harking back to our core - good melody and hooks that stick out - but with a slightly harder edge."
Zac considers this: "It's not that there aren't current artists that we listen to, like and feel inspired by. But [bands like AC/DC] are timeless. They set a bar - like, no matter what you're doing, you have to be that good. I wouldn't call anyone an influence until they reach a maturity of their own and stand the test of time.
What does the new year have in store for Hanson then?
Taylor answers simply: "Lots of touring".
Hanson promised the fans a world tour following the release of Anthem and they're still in the process of delivering that promise. Next year the band will tick Asia and Australia off the list but, unfortunately, rule out another trip to the UK in 2014.
Zac thinks ahead: "The main thing is that we're going to start on whatever's next... there will be new music next year."
Now though, it's time to soundcheck - because you can't finish a European tour if you don't start it.


Are you going to see Hanson tonight? Tweet us @STVGlasgowor find us on Facebook.

By  on Tuesday 3 December 2013

Saturday, November 23, 2013

Another one bites the...prank?: Hanson pranks David Ryan Harris

And so, we knew it. Hardcore, passionate fans that have attended and/or kept track of the Hanson shows during the years saw this coming, somehow. Because when it is about the last show of a long Hanson tour where a new opener artist ends his journey it only means one thing: prank time! Yes. This time was the time for David Ryan Harris to fall in the trap. Harris has joined Hanson in the past month or so as an opener for the second half of shows of the US/Canada leg of the Anthem World Tour, which ended in Charlotte, NC on November 20th, 2013.

Hanson and his crew could not wait for the last song of the opening act to end when they interrupted the performance by playing a very particular and pretty funny song on every speaker of the venue. As soon as Harris turned around they showed up on stage forming a line while dancing ridiculously throughout the stage. Did we mention that Taylor had a box in his head? See it for yourself below:




No one is safe. Future openers, watch your back!


The Anthem World Tour started in Buenos Aires (Argentina) on July 18th, made its way through USA and Canada from September to November, starts the European leg on December 3rd in Glasgow (UK) and ends on December 17th in Milan (Italy). Click here to see if it hits your city and get tickets now!


Article by Thinking 'Bout Hanson Argentina.

Monday, November 18, 2013

Ike's Birthday

On November 17th, 2013 Isaac turned 33 years old, and what could be better for a band guitarist than to celebrate it while on Tour?
As the day went on he got some presents from fans (even days before his actual birthday) and by the time they were doing the show, as a tradition in the Hanson history of shows, they prepared a little unusual surprise for the birthday boy, or we should say, the birthday Old Man! Moncton fans were the lucky ones to witness it and join the birthday celebration.
After they finished the Acoustic set with "Hand In Hand" being played in a solo version by the night's host, everyone backstage took their places on stage and started playing "Living La Vida Loca" as Taylor showed up with a chocolate cake in hand. As if that wasn't enough, Taylor also caused many heart attacks in the crowd when he began dancing to the music with some particular movements that only the strongest fans can handle. Watch the video below:





After the show Isaac thanked the fans and the crew on Twitter:



...and Taylor also tweeted and instagram picture of the earlier "lucky" cake:





The Anthem World Tour is currently through Canada and US and on its way to Europe in December. Click here to check for Tour Dates and see if it might hit your city!


Saturday, November 9, 2013

Audio: Too Much Heaven


HANSON
TOO MUCH HEAVEN
LIVE
#Hanson singing “Too Much Heaven” A Capella - (Better Quality)

Hanson fans walk to raise awareness of poverty, AIDS in Africa

Hanson on Hanson: a few things that define Tulsa’s band of brothers




Oklahoma's trio of blond-mopped brothers, most famous for their breakout 1997 single MMMBop, have been performing together for 21 years. They have always written their own tunes and played their own instruments. They still tour the world regularly.

But when we sit down at the Thompson Hotel this past summer, Taylor (now 30), Zac (28) and Isaac Hanson (32) – now all brunettes, actually – aren't particularly hell-bent on proving themselves. By now, they seem settled and confident as a self-run band who certainly don't have the fame they once did, but don't seem to mind, either.

They've got southern charm and friendliness to spare. They're also very professional, media-familiar in the way most former child stars are, and focused on promoting their sixth studio album, Anthem, whose supporting tour they bring to the Danforth Music Hall Saturday (November 9).

It seems like you always have a novel approach to your live shows.

Zac: Some of the early people we worked with – business partners and managers – were all big fans of the jam band scene. One thing we pulled from them was the idea that each concert is an individual experience, which is part of building the relationship with your fans, giving them the sense that they’re always going to get something special. It’s not a broadway show where you’re going to hit your marks every night. There's supposed to be risk.

Taylor: It’s not just, "We’re here to go through the city and check it off the box." It’s a calling card. Our statement about who we are as a band is very much about the community, very much about the show. A lot of people know Hanson for having pop hits, but really what makes Hanson is that relationship with the fans.


You guys have released albums at a really civilized pace. Is that because you want some normalcy and downtime?

Taylor: Honestly, we have a long track we have to run every album. We have, thankfully, fans in different parts of the world, and the truth is we’ve tried to do it faster but it always ends up being about three years because it usually takes us about two to make the rounds.

We take our records really seriously as far as the production goes. We really like to fine-tune it. We’re just old-school I guess. As much as we like to cram it out, it almost always ends up being a three-year cycle.


Is that track exhausting?

Zac: It plays two roles. It’s exhausting but it also exhausts you of that process, allowing you to be ready to come back and write another record.

Taylor: We really believe in the idea of shorter cycles, the concept of it. We would love to be in a place where we could be releasing shorter pieces of music with more consecutive release. But there is a physical positive and negative, which is, if you want to be a touring band and you want to connect with your fans, you can only get so many places in so many days.

Isaac: There is actually one other thing to say, too, which is we actually record a five-song EP for our fan club every single year.

Taylor: That’s one of the ways that the core fans don’t feel completely starved. In the future, signing up to be in the community is where it’s going. People pay 40 bucks a year to be a part of the fan club and that includes extra music and access to web stuff and lots of events that we do. The truth is, few people are actually buying albums these days. It’s not long before we feel like anyone that's actually going to buy a record might as well be in the fan club.


You’re selling me on the fan club right now.

Isaac: There’s literally more music for the fan club than there is mass releases. Collectively.


You're all family men, so how do you balance all of that output with your family time?

Zac: Balance is not a great word for what we do. You really just have to live in the moment and focus on what’s in front of you and be really present when you are with your family.

Isaac: Being married or being a parent doesn’t necessarily quote on quote “change” you. It’s a different part of your life, it’s an important part of your life, but it doesn’t mean that just because I got married, just because I had kids, that I stop being a musician. No, the antithesis of that.

Thank god we’re not doing tours of Iraq, getting shot at. You know? There are a lot of guys and a lot of girls that have situations where they’re gone a lot from their family.


Most of the other acts that were charting during your peak have long since disbanded. How much of your longevity is because you’re a family and because you’re brothers?

Zac: Ultimately, what holds a band together is not that. It's the quality of the relationships and keeping those good and realizing that, once you go there, once you act like an asshole, you’ve always gone that far. So you have to really be conscious of your interactions with each other and not let yourself become a stereotype of what bands are like.

Taylor: Just to bring it back to the album: this record’s called Anthem. In a lot of ways, it’s like a self-titled album. These songs are anthemic to us. And hopefully become anthems for our fans. But when we started off, we had a plan to record it and write it in pieces. And release it [piece by piece] last year. And we hit a total brick wall. Internally we were all just up in each other’s space. We were clashing.

Isaac: Actively

Zac: There were swords and shields.

Taylor: We’re not a band that would have just fallen apart by accident, but we definitely had to say: do we want to make another record? And that's what defines Hanson: the decision to rethink and recalibrate and come back to music. Ten years ago when we started the label, most bands would have broken up. But we chose to find a way to keep doing it, and really, it’s not because of some broad metaphoric reason. It is about the music, this is what we do, and we’re too stubborn to quit. And this record, it’s probably our best. And six albums in, 21 years in, we feel like we're making our best music.
• Nov 9, 2013 at 11:02 AM
source: NOW Magazine

Hanson singing "Too Much Heaven" A capella








Friday, November 8, 2013

Thursday, October 10, 2013

Hanson stays true to itself with ‘Anthem’ CD release


Hans— Isaac (from left) Taylor Zac. | JIRO SCHNEIDER PHOTO
Hanson — Isaac (from left), Taylor and Zac. | JIRO SCHNEIDER PHOTO
Hanson, 8 p.m. Oct. 13-14, House of Blues, 329 N. Dearborn. $33.50-$36; (312) 923-2000; houseofblues.com
Updated: October 11, 2013 2:26PM
 

Pop-rock trio Hanson never left the music scene entirely, while it might have felt that way for casual listeners whose love for the band went only as far as singing along with their ’90s breakthrough hit “MMMBop.” In fact, Isaac, Taylor and Zac Hanson remain a worldwide favorite who continue to sell albums and sell out concerts.
Taylor Hanson recently spoke to the Sun-Times about the band’s staying power, the power of social media and the new crop of boy bands.
Question: So I wake up today and Hanson is in the headlines again thanks to a viral video in which Zac was spit on after a recent show. What happened?
Taylor Hanson: We were actually walking in from the venue onto the bus and this man decided to walk into the middle of the lounge of the bus. If anyone has ever interacted with someone who is homeless or slightly unbalanced, you know that communicating verbally with them doesn’t always do the job. We respectfully asked him to leave, but he had no intention of leaving. Saying anything else is only going to inflame the situation more, but the one thing I will say is that this was not a fan. Just another day on this travelling circus, I suppose.
Q.Long before viral videos, many have said that Hanson was one of the first true Internet-driven bands. What’s it like promoting yourself these days?
TH: We had the great fortune of succeeding really young and always have felt that it was important to connect to the audience, but always keep music at the center of it all. What has changed is how you connect to your audience these days has fragmented into a thousand different jobs compared to just having a website back in the ’90s. It’s not just about succeeding in radio and TV and the charts anymore.
Q.What’s your advice to new artists coming up regarding social media as a whole? These days, must you share everything in order to succeed?
TH: The biggest danger out there right now is that, to some degree, there is a bit of mystique that is lost between artists and fans these days. Sure, it may be cool to see what Bono is having for breakfast, but I have always thought there needs to still be a degree of mystery and distance between the artists you admire. I don’t think everyone wants to understand every facet of an artist’s world, you know? We have always tried to balance that. We have always wanted to be relatable and connectable with our fans, but there is a point where you say ‘I’m not going to Tweet that.’ If we do share something, we always try to connect it back to what we do as artists.
Q.Your new album “Anthem” has received a ton of critical acclaim. What did you set out to accomplish with this one?
TH: It was all about creating more size and intensity of the instruments, and in turn, creating more songs that were perfect for the stage. We have always been about making live shows count and making each show interesting and different. Getting to play two nights in Chicago allows us to change things up from night to night, and go back and forth between our entire catalog of music.
Tricia Despres is a Sun-Times free-lance writer.