Hanson
date:Monday, September 8, 2008 time:7:00 PM venue:The Moore Theatre address:1932 Second Avenue Seattle, WA 98101 View map from:Paramount Theatre
Seattle Theatre Group (STG) presents Hanson at The Moore Theatre. Bono
called their music 'genius'. Hip producers like the Dust Brothers and
Stephen Lironi worked with them early on, even before millions of fans
screamed their names and critics applauded them. But for Isaac, Taylor
and Zac Hanson, it's always been about the music, and there's always
been a message in the music for those who were really listening.
On HANSON's fourth studio album, The Walk, the messages
are more direct. "It's the first record in a decade that we made
completely from scratch as an indie", Taylor says. "We've stepped it up
a notch creatively, writing songs that connect to really personal
experiences and recording them live 'from the floor'" (playing together
in the studio as they would in front of an audience). It's a further
exploration of the sound that prompted New York's 'Village Voice' to
proclaim Hanson as simply "the best straight-up rock band in America,
now sowing sonic oats as independents". And it's the independence in
the approach to both recording and releasing their music that fans and
critics alike will appreciate about The Walk.
Recorded at their Tulsa studio and released on their
own 3CG Records, The Walk builds on the success of HANSON's last album,
"Underneath", which debuted on the Billboard Independent Chart at #1
and on Billboard's Top 200 at #25, making it one of the most successful
self-released albums in history. Taking the reins both artistically and
as entrepreneurs, the band came up with an innovative approach to
rolling out their new CD. Each week leading up to the album's release
date, HANSON will podcast an episode of a docu-series they've titled
"Taking The Walk". Fans will be treated to an inside look at the making
of the album and the building of an independent label. "The docu-series
lets people inside the process of writing, producing and releasing
music in a way that has never been possible in the past. Now we can
give people more than just a music video, this is TV for the ipod
generation", Taylor says.
To kick off the series, the band released their
documentary "Strong Enough To Break" on iTunes -- for free. The
critically acclaimed film chronicles their departure from a major label
and the founding of 3CG. "We wanted to give everyone a chance to watch
the documentary and see where we've been, before we show them where
we're going with 'Taking The Walk,'" Taylor says.
For a band that's always written, sung and played
nearly everything themselves, the freedom of having no major label ties
was a tremendous creative boon, particularly for Zac, the youngest
HANSON brother. For the first time, Zac takes the lead vocals on two of
the album's lead singles, the moving ballad "Go" and the ebullient
"Running Man", with its party chatter intro and handclaps. "I've hit
more of my stride as a writer and have been able to bring more to the
table because of that", he says. "I pushed myself beyond the plateau.
You have to do that as an instrumentalist to find progressions that are
going to be unique, and to dig deeper into your emotions as a
lyricist".
The Walk expands upon the more introspective
songwriting that the band began to delve into on Underneath. And for
HANSON, looking inward means looking outward as well, at the state of
the music industry and at their community. "The Walk is the walk of
life", Zac says. "People make decisions to go for dreams, to do
something difficult, or they decide to be part of the crowd that
watches. You have to make those decisions by yourself."
Nowhere is that more evident than on the download-only
release of "Great Divide". Released in November in honor of World AIDS
Day, the song opens with Isaac's funky guitar riffing and the poignant
sound of an African children's choir, recorded during a trip the band
took to Mozambique and South Africa.
"The watershed moment that sparked our journey to
Africa came when friends of ours from a Tulsa medical firm were
donating technology to a South African hospital to help fight the
spread of HIV/AIDS", Isaac says. "We were so moved by their example
that we were compelled to take action."
HANSON took off for South Africa and Mozambique,
bringing with them a handful of songs for the upcoming album and some
bare bones recording gear. They stayed at an orphanage in Mozambique
and were awed by the overwhelming sense of optimism of the people they
met, despite being surrounded by disease and poverty. "We began
planning our trip to Africa right as we were finishing a song about
hope called "Great Divide". Certainly the AIDS crisis was in the
forefront of our minds, but I think it was the message of hope that led
us to Africa", Taylor says.
The group strung up some mics in the orphanage
cafeteria to record the children's choir onto a laptop. After playing a
few songs for the kids and a teacher who helped translate, they found a
handful of phrases that worked for the songs. "On "Great Divide",
they're singing 'ngi ne themba' which essentially means 'I have hope'",
Isaac says. "I got chills when I heard that."
HANSON decided to put the recording to good use by
helping those who are already doing the most important work - all
proceeds from downloading "Great Divide" will go to the Perinatal HIV
Research Unit (PHRU) at Chris Hani Baragwanath Hospital in Soweto,
South Africa. "We felt like we left Africa with a message we could
relate to others - the understanding that you already possess something
that can help in the fight against AIDS", Taylor says. "It can be as
simple as spending .99ยข on a song, or buying formula for an infant so
she won't contract AIDS from her mother. It doesn't mean we must all go
to Africa. It means we all have a role to play. We should be asking
'Are we doing all we can?'."
The Walk, however, is more than just the story of three
brothers whose interest and compassion led them halfway around the
world. It's one more step in a journey that began when HANSON
extricated itself from a major label. "Our last album was a three and a
half year process of writing, recording and moving labels", Taylor
says. "It was half major, half indie. On the new album, we took a
different approach - everything was done from the ground up."
Co-produced with the legendary Danny Kortchmar (Billy
Joel, James Taylor, The Eagles), the pace of making The Walk was
quicker and the process unfolded more naturally. Rather than doing what
is more common with many artists today, building up tracks by
overdubbing individual instruments, the group chose to record many of
the songs 'live' off the floor. It's an old-school approach that serves
the new songs well, just as it did some of the early rock 'n' roll
records that first interested the band when they began to play
together.
"The first music you really fall in love with is more
than just music", Taylor says. "It's something that clicks in you
beyond the song, it's a message or image that causes you to jump in and
not let go. For us it was Elvis, The Beach Boys, Stax/Volt records ..."
Those classic influences have remained the threads that
run through HANSON's music, and on The Walk they're echoed on songs
like "Been There Before", which talks about Otis Redding, Johnny Cash
and the roots of rock 'n' roll (embellished by another gorgeous sound
byte from the African choir). "It's rare for us to directly reference
our influences like that", Isaac says. "Ultimately, the whole world
sings their songs."
Starting out nearly 15 years ago in 1992 by releasing
their first self-made albums, HANSON could not have predicted that one
day the whole world would sing their song. Yet that's exactly what
happened in 1997, when the band's sunny single "MmmBop", a song about
the ephemeral nature of most relationships, became a worldwide number
one hit. Their pop-Motown flavored major label debut, Middle Of
Nowhere, pierced the gray fog of 1990's grunge and earned the band
three Grammy nominations. The follow-up albums kept the hooks and the
critical acclaim while revealing HANSON's evolution. Their sophomore
effort, This Time Around, leaned toward rock, blues and gospel while
2004's Underneath was a more richly textured and organic twist on the
band's signature brand of pop-rock, as heard on the album's lead single
"Penny and Me", which made it to #2 on the Billboard Singles Chart and
notched the band a top 10 in the UK Singles Chart.
The Walk combines all three approaches as seamlessly as
HANSON itself, drawn together by the tight performances that are the
foundation of the album, with each member of the band bringing a
distinct sensibility to the fold. Zac, understated and poetic, is the
master of the sweeping and structured melody, audible on songs he
initiated like the anthemic "Fire On The Mountain". Taylor, forever in
search of the perfect hook, adds the soulful pop punch of "Georgia" and
the relentless drive of "Blue Sky". Isaac, technically-minded and
truthful, brings the groove, which you can hear on the album's opener,
"Great Divide", and the straight-to-the heart emotion of "Watch Over
Me", a song he co-wrote during one of HANSON's annual songwriter
retreats.
"Every year we invite about 15 songwriter friends to
Tulsa Oklahoma", says Zac, who co-wrote "Go" and "Running Man" at the
last retreat. "But it's less about what comes out of it and more about
community building. It used to be that musicians would drop in on each
other's recording sessions, and you'd have really big events like the
'Concert for Bangladesh', where everyone played together. That type of
thing is far less common these days."
Whether it's a trek to Africa motivated by hope,
building a community of like-minded musicians or a vibrant community of
online fans, HANSON's 'from the ground up' ethos is inspirational. The
weekly podcasts of "Strong Enough To Break" and "Taking The Walk" will
show that philosophy in action, connecting listeners to the notion that
a small step can lead to anything from making music on your own terms,
to helping in the fight against a deadly illness.
Even a great message, though, is lost without great
songs, and writing great songs, as you'll hear on The Walk, is what
HANSON does best. Each brother brings his own artistic inclinations
into the studio, but their collective vision and extraordinary talent
result in a band that's in it for the long haul. The Walk full length
album was released in Summer 2007.
Tickets: $33.00 or $23.00 not including applicable fees. Tickets available Friday, July 18 at 9:00am at www.ticketmaster.com, charge by phone (206) 628-0888, Paramount or Moore Theatre box office, or online at www.theparamount.com or www.themoore.com.
