
All Jazzed Up
The Matt Savage Trio |
Savage Records
All Jazzed Up is the third album by pianist Matt Savage. Nothing too
remarkable about that, one must concede — but give the kid a break, he's
only nine years old! Matt had been playing piano for all of three years when
this date was recorded for an enthusiastic audience at the Deertrees Theatre
in Harrison, Maine. There's no way to know whether those people actually
believed what they were seeing and hearing, but in case they harbored any
doubts the evidence has been safeguarded on this disc. On the one hand,
there are many rough edges — Savage is not yet ready to challenge the likes
of Oscar Peterson — but on the other, it is truly remarkable how much
musical knowledge this precocious preteen with the glasses, wavy brown hair
and incandescent smile has absorbed in only three short years. He's not yet
in long pants but holding his own with bassist John Funkhouser, former head
of Jazz Studies at Manhattanville and Concordia colleges, and drummer Steve
Silverstein, a former instructor at the University of North Florida in
Jacksonville who has performed in the U.S. and overseas with a who's who of
wellknown Jazz artists. Two years ago, when he was seven, Matt was accepted
as a private Jazz student at the prestigious New England Conservatory in
Boston where he studies piano with Eyran Katsenelenbogen who was tutored by
Paul Bley and Ran Blake. Besides playing, Matt wrote four of the seven
numbers on All Jazzed Up — the others are Bird's “Scrapple from the
Apple,” Miles Davis's “Seven Steps to Heaven” and Billy Strayhorn's “Take
the 'A' Train.” It's so delightful to hear his obviously nineyearold voice
announce that “I'm going to play one of my originals. It's called Nonstop
Bebop,” followed by an irrepressible giggle. “Bebop” gets the session off to
a flying start, with “Scrapple” next on the menu. Matt's “Summer Fever” and
“Rebecca's Waltz” (written for his sister) precede “Seven Steps” and “'A'
Train” before the trio wraps things up with another of Matt's bristling
flagwavers, “All Jazzed Up” (as, he says, “An encore!”) The concert spans
less than fortyfive minutes, but in Matt's defense it was probably past his
bedtime. Before ending the review we should note that a part of the proceeds
from each of Matt's recordings is donated to a most worthy cause, that of
autism research and development. While one can easily spot the flaws in
Matt's technique and use of dynamics, the young man is far more than a
novelty act; he's a serious Jazz musician who's bent on making his mark, and
the opinion here is that we'll be hearing much more from him as he reaches
double figures and continues to mature as a player and a person. Meanwhile,
Jazz enthusiasts are encouraged to hear and appreciate a nineyear-old to
whom the word “phenomenal” is by no means misapplied.
Contact:Savage
Records, P.O. Box 35, Francestown, NH 03043. Web site, www.savagerecords.com
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Jack Bowers
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Track Listing: Nonstop Bebop;
Scrapple from the Apple; Summer Fever; Rebecca’s Waltz; Seven Steps to
Heaven; Take the ”A” Train; All Jazzed Up (45:38).
Personnel: Matt Savage, piano;
John Funkhouser, bass; Steve Silverstein, drums.
Style: Mainstream
Review Published: February
2002
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