This Time Around is the second studio album by American
pop rock group
Hanson, released in 2000. Although Hanson had several albums in between, This Time Around is their first standard studio release since 1997's Middle of Nowhere. This Time Around did not achieve the commercial success of its predecessor Middle of Nowhere. The album does not feature as many
bubblegum pop style tunes as Middle of Nowhere; instead, Hanson opted to focus on a more
classic rock sound, or as
MTV.com stated, "stadium rock".[1] The album also features numerous ballads, with songs such as "Sure About It" and "A Song to Sing" covering the themes of teenage insecurity and loneliness, much like "
Weird" from Middle of Nowhere. Critically, This Time Around received mainly positive reviews. To date, it has sold over one million copies worldwide.
Critically, This Time Around received mainly positive reviews. It was given a score of 67 out of 100 by
Metacritic.[1]Billboard said, "It all adds up to a collection that successfully sets Hanson apart from the current teen-pop phenomenon that it helped start -- at least from a creative perspective,"[3] and
CDNow said "This Time Around scores with more sophisticated harmonies and storytelling."[1]Rolling Stone said, "Like a blond three-headed hydra, Hanson loom over the competition, making all other teen idols sound like Gerber-sucking clowns."[7]AllMusic said, "It's hard not to miss the thrilling way Middle of Nowhere leapt out of the speakers upon its first spin with giddy fun, yet with its carefully considered craft and warmly ingratiating pop songs This Time Around is winning entertainment."[2] However, not everyone was complimentary about the change in musical style, with
Robert Christgau of The Village Voice stating "If you thought they were bad when they were cute, or even that they were cute when they were good, believe me, you don't want to hear them mature,"[6] and NME with the even harsher verdict: "But damn those cruel hormones – Hanson's collective balls have MmmDropped, and the giddy rush of adolescence seeks to mutate Mercury's finest investment into a trio of crack-voiced hulks."[5]
Singles
"
If Only" was released as the
lead single outside the United States on April 3, 2000.[8] The song features
John Popper of the band
Blues Traveler on harmonica. The
music video features the group traveling in a
desert on their
tour bus, unloading their equipment to shoot the video. The song reached the top 10 in Australia, Finland, Italy, and Spain and entered the charts of other European countries.
"
This Time Around" was released on April 4, 2000, as the
lead single in the United States and Canada,[9] peaking at number 20 on the
Billboard Hot 100. The song was also released in Australia as the second single.
"Save Me" was released on July 15 only in United Kingdom and Brazil. The song was included in the soundtrack to the Brazilian soap opera Laços de Família (Family Ties).[10][11] "Save Me" was certified gold by
Pro-Música Brasil in 2024.[12]
"
This Time Around" – 4:17 (Lead vocals: Taylor and Isaac Hanson)
"Runaway Run" – 3:40
"Save Me" – 3:40
"Dying to Be Alive" – 4:37
"Can't Stop" – 4:24
"Wish That I Was There" – 3:32 (Lead vocals: Zac and Taylor Hanson)
"Love Song" – 4:06 (Lead vocals: Isaac Hanson)
"Sure About It" – 3:27
"Hand in Hand" – 4:37 (Lead vocals: Isaac Hanson)
"In the City" – 3:27
"A Song to Sing" – 3:35 [hidden track] (Lead vocals: Taylor and Isaac Hanson)
In some locales two additional
hidden tracks, "Smile" and "Lonely Again", were also included in the foreign version of the CD. Just like Middle of Nowhere, "A Song to Sing" is track 21 with eight tracks of silence used once again, despite some reissues dropping the silent tracks to make "A Song to Sing" track 13.
Personnel
Hanson
Taylor Hanson – piano, keyboards, harmonica, percussion, vocals
Isaac Hanson – electric and acoustic guitars, vocals