Detroit Free Press
CAN HANSON COME OUT AND PLAY?
Teen idols' tour is putting their live performance skills
to the test
DETROIT FREE PRESS
June 28, 1998
By Brian McCollum
Free Press Pop Music Writer
So here's where Detroit gets the answer to one of the most
pressing questions in contemporary art.
Do those Hanson kids really have the chops?
Oh, we know that was them performing on their breakthrough
album, last year's 3.8-million-selling "Middle of Nowhere" - even if they did
get some snazzy production help from the Dust Brothers and other grown-ups.
And we know it was them on the recently released "3
Car Garage," a collection of lo-fi demos cut before the groups signing with Mercury
Records.
We've even seen the young group onstage, albeit for quick
spots on shows like "Saturday Night Live," "Late Show with David
Letterman" and the Grammy Awards, where the song of choice was the band's ubiquitous
No. 1 hit, "MMMBop."
But we'll get our first extended look at Hanson's live
skills Monday night at sold-out Pine Knob, as the three Oklahoma brothers kick out the
jams for an honest-to-goodness concert - part of their first U.S. tour.
Hanson - featuring guitarist Ike (17), vocalist Taylor (15)
and drummer Zac (12) - will be back in town for a show at the Palace on July 28.
A few local folks were lucky enough to catch the group in
spring 1997, when the threesome played a short set for an industry party at an Ypsilanti
hotel. Supplemented by a keyboardist, bassist and guitarist, the brothers tossed together
a polished set that had the place buzzing afterward.
With a year to fine-tune the live performance, the brothers
insist, it's even better now.
'A GREAT RESPONSE'
FREE PRESS: Are you pleased with the set? Is stuff coming together?
ZAC: Oh yeah, we're definitely happy with the live show.
It's whether you're happy with it.
FP: Well, what kind of reaction are you getting from people
who have seen the full set?
ZAC: So far, it's been pretty good. People haven't known
what to expect. Because we're three guys, people thought we would dance and sing. But once
they actually heard us, they thought it was pretty cool. We've gotten a great response.
FP: What's changed since we saw you here last spring?
TAYLOR: Mostly that we've really rehearsed the show, and
everybody's really tight on what they're doing. It's just about getting down and dirty,
start being critical about each little part.
THESE GUYS ARE FOR REAL
Let's make it clear: Hanson is not New Kids on the Block. It's not the Spice Girls. It's
not the Monkees.
Yes, the groups ardent following - legions of shrieking
girls and a fan base that seems to get younger each week - resembles the devotion that's
been directed toward those fakers.
And, sure, maybe you like your music with a little more
backbeat on the bottom a little less sunshine on top. But Hanson, love or hate its sounds,
is a real band: The brothers got together in the garage, learned to play their
instruments, taught themselves to harmonize, learned to piece together chord progressions
and the melodies that go on top.
FP: Do you feel you have to prove something to the people
who have downplayed or criticized you? Or do you just shove them aside and say,
"Well, we don't need them as fans anyway?"
IKE: I don't think you ever shove anyone aside. At the same
time, I don't think you have to prove anything. I mean, I think you continue to do your
music, and there are always going to be people who don't like your music, you know? A band
like Hootie & the Blowfish, they sold 14 million albums, but there were still tons of
people that didn't like them.
You're going to have your critics. And that's part of life.
Honestly, you just hope you can expand your audience and that your initial fans will
continue to enjoy your music . . .
That's also another important thing: Continue to love what
you're doing, because I think that gets communicated in the music.
FP: What's the biggest misperception of Hanson? What do
people get wrong the most?
TAYLOR: Well, you definitely can't correct all the wrongs
of the world, that's for sure. (Laughs) That's kind of a question like, "If you could
change the world, what would be the one thing you'd do? Would you save the whales or the
endangered purple snake?"
ANY SURPRISES?
There won't be any endangered purple snakes at Pine Knob, but there will be a whale of a
stage set, including a backdrop fashioned to look like the brothers' living room.
FP: Any surprises in the set list?
ZAC: There's one song that hasn't been recorded on an album
ever, and one that's on the first album we did. And we just released our second
independent album, "3 Car Garage," so we're playing a lot of those songs. And,
of course, all the ("Middle of Nowhere") songs. Then there's, I think, three or
four covers.
FP: So it's a pretty long set, then.
ZAC: Oh, yeah, it's long. I guess.
A LONG WAIT
The show may be long, but this tour is short. Right now, Hanson is scheduled to play only
a dozen U.S. dates - not exactly time to feel the wear and tear of rock 'n roll's revered
highway. Some concert insiders speculate that's a mandate from the Hanson parents,
conservative folks ensuring that their boys don't get snared and spit out by the churning
music-biz machine.
But in fact, others say, Mercury thought the group needed
more practice.
FP: Why the long gap between your breakthrough and your
tour?
TAYLOR: It's one of those logistics things, you know.
You've go the press and all that to do. Which, of course you're psyched to do, when
somebody wants you on their TV show or whatever. But the next album is going to be coming
around, and it was time to get out there and play finally.
ZAC: The thing is, we were out on the road, and we were in
all these places. But we never got to do shows, because you have to do all these
interviews and radio stations and things, so you could never do real, full concerts.
FP: Did you need the rehearsal time?
ZAC: That was definitely part of it . . . We needed some
time to work the songs up.
A CHANGING SOUND
Hanson has started writing material for its next record, the official follow-up to
"Middle of Nowhere." It's due by year's end.
Indeed, says Ike, the oldest Hanson and the one who seems
to have the most solid grip on the groups long-term plans, the brothers are continually
writing songs - on the bus, in hotels, wherever the muse strikes.
FP: Where is Hanson's sound headed?
IKE: I think it's pretty safe to say that "Middle of
Nowhere" does not describe Hanson. There's a lot of other music that very much comes
from us . . . So along with stuff that's similar to the album, I think you'll also hear
some stuff that you didn't' expect us to do.
FP: Well, "Middle of Nowhere" attracted fans and
critics because it was so relentlessly catchy. When it comes down to it, which of you is
the one with the ear for melody?
IKE: Hmmm. Well, you know, it depends on the day and the
song. We all are very much involved in the writing process, so I wouldn't say one person
has an ear for it - I think everybody does.
FP: Sort of a family trait?
IKE: Yeah, something like that! Actually, I think in some
ways that's what you'll hear less of on the next album: a little bit less pop melody.
FP: Obviously, a lot of people want to know about Taylor's
changing voice.
TAYLOR: You've just got to go with the flow. The voices
have definitely changed a little, but that's going to happen.
FP: Have you adjusted the key of any songs to fit your new
range?
TAYLOR: There are some songs that have changed - we've gone
back and forth, definitely - but it's one of those things probably nobody will even notice
in the show, because it hasn't changed that much.
BEATLES-LIKE GROWTH
At Pine Knob on Monday, you'll hear plenty of melodies. You'll also see a lot of banners.
They'll say things like "Hanson Rocks!!!!" Girls will scream boyfriends will
glance around awkwardly, and parents will try to dig the tunes.
And the whole scene will look might familiar to anyone who
was around in 1964.
FP: Do you look to groups like the Beatles, who debuted
very much in the teen idol mode - with infectious radio hits - but grew as artists through
their career?
IKE: I think anyone would love to be able to achieve that
kind of success, as far as being able to take their audience with them on that kind of
journey, from initially great, catchy songs to interesting songs. I mean, you're talking
about the Beatles, the best band ever in rock 'n roll. It's amazing.
Really, there are bands nowadays, like Aerosmith, who I
think have their 25th anniversary is coming up. Talk about a band that's had great,
lasting power and just continually puts out great songs.
Anyone hopes that people will continue to enjoy their music
and that they can take their audience with them to other places, along with places they're
familiar with.
I think you're constantly expanding musically. You want to
make it interesting for your audience, and keep it interesting for you, because I think
sometimes what happens is people - either bands or audiences - get stuck in expecting
something from someone. And when they do something slightly different - from either end -
they get a little scared.
FP: And that's the risk you take when moving forward.
IKE: That's always the risk, but it's a risk you have to
take. You take it in stride, and hopefully everyone can adjust together.
(Inset Article)
HANSON FANS COME IN ALL AGES
By Brian McCollum
There's a misguided perception that music critics hate
Hanson, that they're all a bunch of grumpy old guys who refuse to dig the band's buoyant
pop.
Although there may be a lot of grumpy old music critics
(there are), plenty of reviewers have been kind to the young band. IN fact, Hanson has
proved to be something of a critics' darling, landing raves for "Middle of
Nowhere" and finding "MMMBop" atop countless year-end lists last December.
Critics aren't the only adults who like the group - even if
they're not as fanatic as Michelle Fick.
The 27-year-old mother of two is a Hanson nut. From her
Port Clinton, Ohio, home, she runs Hansonology, a Web site designed especially for the
elder end of Hanson's fan spectrum.
The site has attracted more than 10,000 visitors since Fick
and her 31 year-old sister, Kim Janes, launched it in March. Fick teaches at a local
college: Janes is about to graduate from Tiffin University with a degree in forensic
psychology.
"We designed it as a place where adults feel safe,
where no one's making fun of them or ostracizing them," says Fick, who will be at
Pine Knob on Monday, accompanied by friends from Texas and Chicago she met through her
site.
"People need to understand - there is a big adult
following."
The site features a page called "Adult
Obsessions," where fans submit evidence of their Hanson hysteria.
From "Jean," who's married with two children:
"You know you are an obsessed adult when you find yourself up at 2 a.m. cutting up
all the pictures you downloaded 'for your daughter' to make a 6-foot-by-5-foot collage of
Hanson pics."
Fick says she's attracted by the group's spotless image.
"They're great role models for our kids," she
says of her daughters, ages 11 and 8. "And for us, I guess."
Her husband, meanwhile, has learned to bear the brunt of
his family's Hanson fetish, including Hanson trivia games at the dinner table. It is,
after all, three against one.
"He likes country," says Fick. "He'll listen
to 'em, but, well, he doesn't have their CD in his vehicle."
You can find Hansonology at HANSONOLOGY...A new kind of
psychology based on those three talented brothers. |