Track Listing 1. Thinking of You 2. Mmmbop 3. Weird 4. Speechless 5. Where's the Love 6. Yearbook 7. Look at You 8. Lucy 9. I Will Come to You 10. Minute Without You, A 11. Madeline 12. With You in Your Dreams 13. Man From Milwaukee - (Garage Mix, remix, CD only) 14. (Untitled) - (hidden track) 15. (Untitled) - (hidden track) 16. (Untitled) - (hidden track) 17. (Untitled) - (hidden track) 18. (Untitled) - (hidden track) 19. (Untitled) - (hidden track) 20. (Untitled) - (hidden track) 21. (Untitled) - (hidden track)
| Details | | Contributing Artists: | B.J. Cole | | Producer: | Stephen Lironi, The Dust Brothers | | Distributor: | Universal Distribution | | Recording Type: | Studio | | Recording Mode: | Stereo | | SPAR Code: | n/a |
Album Notes Hanson: Isaac Hanson (vocals, guitar, piano); Taylor Hanson (vocals, keyboards); Zac Hanson (vocals, drums). Additional personnel: Stephen Lironi (guitar, keyboards, bass, percussion, programming); B.J. Cole (pedal steel); Endre Granat, John Wittenberg, Peter Kent, Murray Adler (violin); Carole Mukogawa (viola); Larry Corbett, Steve Richards (cello); Mark Hudson (harmonica); Ron McCarley (saxophone); Doug "Flava" Trantow (trumpet); Sandy Stein, William South (keyboards); David Stone (acoustic bass); Neil Stubenhaus (bass); Abe Laboriel Jr. (bass, drums); Ged Lynch (drums, percussion); Pandit Dinish (tabla); Michael Fisher, Michito Sanchez (percussion); The Dust Brothers (programming). "MMMBop" was nominated for 1998 Grammy Awards for Record Of The Year and Best Pop Performance By A Duo Or Group With Vocal. Hanson was nominated for the 1998 Grammy Award for Best New Artist. The three teen-aged Hanson brothers continue a fine tradition of youth and bubblegumminess that has continued in one form or another since Frankie Lymon first got together with The Teenagers. Like similar groups of the past, brothers Isaac (16), Taylor (13) and Zac (11) compose and play with the help of an army of studio musicians and co-writers ranging from Brill Building legends Barry Mann and Cynthia Weil to current hit-doctors Mark Hudson and Desmond Child. Harmonies, hooks and typical teen fare (puppy love and the like) abound. "Thinking Of You" displays Osmond-like yearnings; on "A Minute Without You," eldest bro Isaac gives a vocal reading worthy of David Cassidy. This unerring pop sensibility manifests itself best on the Dust Brothers-produced debut single "MMMBop." Based on a nonsensical word, the song emulates the irresistibility of classic Jackson 5 sides and uses hip turntable scratching to update it into the perfect slice of disposable pop.
Editorial Reviews Included in Rolling Stone's Essential Recordings of the 90's. Rolling Stone (05/13/1999)
Included in Q Magazine's 50 Best Albums of 1997. Q (01/01/1998)
Ranked #50 on Melody Maker's list of 1997's Albums Of The Year. Melody Maker
3 Stars (out of 5) - ...a turntable-scratch update of the soul rhythms that served as turn-of-the-'70s bubblegum rock's secret weapon... Rolling Stone (06/26/1997)
8 (out of 10) - ...Hanson songs aren't about meaning, they're about the pure pleasures of sound. This late in the century, most of us are at home with...alienation. It's happiness that's alienating, which is why Hanson comes off so wonderfully, outer-space weird... Spin (07/01/1997)
...a mildly frustrating exercise in proving there's more to them than 'throwaway pop'...What's the point? We don't want anymore! That's what you do! Do it again! Thankfully Hanson have a naturally pop instinct that not even a load of longevity providing devices...can choke. Melody Maker (06/07/1997)
...They're a slacker Partridge Family, with flaxen-haired drummer Zac their very own Chris Partridge....Except for brazenly manufactured playthings like the Spice Girls, they don't make buoyant, all-ages-allowed pop like MIDDLE OF NOWHERE anymore... - Rating: A- Entertainment Weekly (05/09/1997)
...a mildly frustrating exercise in proving there's more to them than 'throwaway pop'...What's the point? We don't want anymore! That's what you do! Do it again! Thankfully Hanson have a naturally pop instinct that not even a load of longevity providing devices...can choke. Melody Maker (06/07/1997)
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