Taylor Hanson in Austin, Texas, on March 17, 2023.Photo:Daniel Boczarski/Getty

Daniel Boczarski/Getty
Taylor Hansonis harnessing the power of music to spread awareness about the ongoing civil unrest in Iran.
“Known as the Voices Project, the song features over 16,000 voices — includingRufus Wainwright,Ben Folds,Ryan Cabrera,Cassadee Pope,Darren Criss,Kevin McHale,Gus Van Santand thousands of everyday people — each representing a peaceful political prisoner currently jailed in Iran,” reads an official release.
Hanson, who co-founded For Women Life Freedom and is best known as one-third of the bandHansonwith brothersIsaacandZac, spoke with PEOPLE about the song, calling it “a musical expression” of “a human-rights call to action — a cry for help coming from a people, that is relevant to all people.”
“I think the power of this song — and the power of hopefully our rendition, which we created through the Voices Project — is to just bring that simple message that there is aseries of injustices going onagainst the people that, first and foremost, we need to recognize,” says the musician and activist, 40.
Hanson also hopes the song will “bring the hearts and minds of people who don’t see themselves as a part of that cause, and that movement, to the conversation — and bring awareness, so that the additional things that need to happen over time, the meaningful shifts in supporting those folks, can happen. But it has to begin with hearts and minds.”
Taylor Hanson, his kids and more for “Baraye - For Women Life Freedom”.Jonathan Weiner/courtesy FWLF

Jonathan Weiner/courtesy FWLF
Since then, women in Iran and around the world have been protesting in her name, demanding justice and rights despite facing arrest and death themselves. Because of their bravery now and in years prior,TIME named the Women of Iranthe 2022Heroes of the Year.
Hanson tells PEOPLE he “really didn’t understand this issue” himself a year ago, and his involvement “started with hearing from a few people I trust who have a connection to this cause.”
“What struck me when I suddenly really got a picture of what’s going on in Iran is our whole generation has grown up really hearing [about] Iran and thinking of a government that we’re at odds with as a nation,” he continues. “And that has been true, because this government really has no respect for human rights and has a consistent history ofperpetuating violence against specifically women, but people within their country.”
“It struck me that the people of this country are actually the first who have been victims of the government running Iran,” Hanson says. “And suddenly something happened in me. Isaw myself as a dad, as a brother, and I thought to myself, ‘If [this happened to] my daughter or my wife or my sister’ — for that matter, my brothers, as women are not the only victims, but they’re certainly the extreme target of violence — I have to believe I would be in the streets protesting with them.”
Cover art for “Baraye — For Women Life Freedom”.Jonathan Weiner/courtesy FWLF

The original version of “Baraye” (which translates to “Because of” or “for”) nabbed Hajipour the first-everGrammy Award for best song for social changeearlier this year.
And for its new iteration, Hanson tapped into the “iconic” Henson Recording Studios in Los Angeles, influenced partly due to the fact that it was where “We Are the World” was recorded in the 1980s (when it was previously known as A&M Recording Studios).
“We basically put out a call to action to many of the incredible leaders of Iranian and Persian background across L.A. especially, because there’s many people of that heritage in Los Angeles,” he says. “And we said, ‘Join us, bring your flags, bring your energy, and sing on this new project.’ "
To that end, Hanson helped recruit 16,000 people — including the aforementioned celebrity musicians, and even his three daughters Penelope, 18,Wilhelmina, 10, andMaybellene, 2 — to sing in what he describes as “a marathon session” of about 250 people at a time in one studio, with “special guests” in a second.
“The Voices Project is really not simply about recording something and sharing a song,” says Hanson, who is a father of seven and also president of the Recording Academy’sTexas Chapter. “It’s about reaching people with a simple message: You have a voice that can elevate the voices of those who have been silenced through what’s going on in [Iran].”
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A protester with a drawing of Mahsa Amini in Toulouse, France, on Dec. 3, 2022.Alain Pitton/NurPhoto via Getty

Asked about whether he is in contact with Hajipour, who is currently on house arrest in Iran, Hanson says that “there is communication” between Hajipour “and people throughout the movement.”
The new version of “Baraye” also includes a video accompaniment, which is similar toHajipour’s original videoand “shows Shervin and myself, as well as the video of the many, many, many participants,” Hanson tells PEOPLE.
“And as simple as that sounds, it’s actually incredibly bold,” Hanson adds. “I would share with him that he’s been a huge inspiration and continues to be an inspiration to people who are hoping that one day they’ll have a chance at the basic freedoms that his song and the movement have articulated the desire for.”
“Baraye — For Women Life Freedom” is streaming nowSpotify.
source: people.com