"The sounds
on Home Speaks To The Wandering are as adventurous as the music
of such obvious influences as the World Saxophone Quartet and Roland Kirk and
as deep 'in the pocket' as perhaps less obvious but no less important influences
as Coleman Hawkins and Sonny Rollins. More than anything, the group, performing
ten original compositions by leader Matt Steckler, demonstrate that real freedom
is best expressed within confines - freedom within a framework. The framework
is the jazz tradition, and the freedom is the sextet's willingness to take untraditional
sidetrips while following that path. It starts with an innovative, if not unique,
lineup, featuring four reeds over a rhythm section of bass and drums, and, having
abandoned certain conventions in that way, they continue to investigate the unconventional
in a variety of ways, without ever losing sight of their essentially conventional
goal - the production of great jazz music. It's a goal they reach. This turns
out to be a great jazz album. It's great because there's virtuouso performance.
It's great because there's an original vision. It's great because they take bold
chances and break new ground. And, in a near contradiction, it's great because
it's essentially accessible. Every time I find myself saying "Wow, I can't
believe they did that!," I find myself responding "But I'm glad they
did!" It's innovation with the audience in mind. Lesser talents often confuse
the boldness of the experiment with the quality of the outcome. Steckler and
his musical comrades never let go of the central idea that, in the end, the experiment
must serve the music, and as a result they've made an album that challenges and
delights."
- Shaun Dale, JazzReview.com
"Repeated listens reveal a depth of color, a true sense of shape and a brilliant
mix of the improvisational and the written. For Persiflage Steckler has found
players who know how to stretch the tradition as well as go beyond
it."
- Donald Elfman, All About Jazz
"What carries through each piece is Steckler's gift for rich voicings among
four
horn players... Dead Cat's music doesn't joke around."
" Steckler screams to the heavens, as if possessed by (Charles Mingus).
The group plays with precision and technique that forces listeners to take them
seriously."
– Mike
Shanley, Jazz Times & Pulp
"There's so much going on rhythmically and melodically in the music of
Dead Cat Bounce that influences are called to mind like items on a to-do list.
This band of four multi-instrumental reed players, bassist, and drummer from
moment to moment generate the pulse of Mingus, the interweaving lines of the
World Saxophone Quartet, the stop-on-a-dime timing of the Murray Octet, the swing
of the Marsalis septet, and generally perform with the tenacity of any other
crisp, self-assured, raucous, and joyful horn-driven ensemble you can think of...
When so much jazz
settles for nods of the head, DCB goes right for your midsection."
-
Jeff
Stockton, All About Jazz
"What one remembers most about it are the compulsive, seething grooves
and the brawling saxophones... Great Stuff all around: for sheer snaggletoothed
excitement
Home Speaks to the Wandering is hard to beat."
– Nate
Dorward,
Cadence
(also written as among top 10 CDs of 2005 in Canada's Exclaim!)
Recipient of a 2003 New Works: Presentation grant
from Chamber Music America/Doris
Duke Charitable Foundation:
"[Matt Steckler's] whip-smart sextet of four saxes, bass, and drums rolls
through his multi-sectioned compositions with toe-tapping ease. Skewed tangos,
deviant marches, churchy hymns, and dissonant abstraction, swing band riffs,
collective improvisations, and individual solos roll and tumble their way over
funky vamps, swinging grooves and unclassifiable beats. Great ensemble playing,
high spirits, an endearing, but twisted, sense of fun make Dead Cat's second
release a winner."
-
Ed Hazell, Signal to Noise
"Happy and groovy solo disc from the [sic] former member of Dead Cat Bounce.
Long lines dominate, though Steckler isn't afraid to blow harder and shorter
(no pun intended)... he and the band have fun, and it is infectious. Steckler
has surrounded himself with great players... Their chops would make anyone feel
confident to play in front of them, but Steckler needs no bailing out on any
of these tracks. He especially shows he play with the big boys on the free workout
'March Nor'easter'.
This is both fun and impressive."
- MusicEmissions.com
"I am sure you will be impressed by the great writing, the originality
of style, the wide variety of moods, individual solo efforts and most of all,
a real group
that is single minded and totally involved in the music."
-
Dave Liebman,
saxophonist
"Steckler's team is tight and well coordinated. Matt leaves a lot of space
for
the other musicians especially bassist Lonnie Plaxico, notably on "Hitting
The Windshield". They push they envelope into free jazz space on the title
track and then dance around a cha-cha on "Episodio pa' Osmani". There
is a lot of variety as Steckler defines his signature on Persiflage."
-
D. Oscar Groomes, O's Place Jazz Newsletter
"Saxophonist Matt Steckler is best known as the leader of the Mingus-goes-punk
sextet the Dead Cat Bounce. Persiflage, his solo debut, features a classy New
York rhythm section (Michael Cain, Lonnie Plaxico, Pheeroan akLaff) and has a
more orthodox sound than the DCB, but Steckler’s passionate delivery and
splendidly warped sensibility make this still a pretty heady brew. His tunes
often seem to be trying to weave together two grooves simultaneously, achieving
a strange combination of forward momentum and self-contradiction: “Unknown
Rebel,” for instance, starts as Dolphy arabesques then becomes a blues
that never comfortably settles into major or minor, while “Country Rake
Fight” has a witty self-consuming opening that blossoms into a monster
one-chord jam. Cain’s lucid but slightly offbeat piano solos and the stellar
rhythm section work provide an ideal setting for Steckler; trombonist Curtis
Fowlkes pops up for a few excellent cameos, too. The results are one of the best
small group jazz discs of the past year."
- Nate Dorward, Exclaim!
"Led by Matt Steckler, these cats are tight and not afraid to spew out
some powerful and inventive solos and intricate ensemble playing. Each of the
four saxes gets a chance to stretch out on different tunes, but it is often Matt's
strong writing and arrangements that stand out.Dead Cat Bounce are amongst Boston's
best kept
secrets, but hopefully not for very long."
- Bruce Gallanter, Downtown
Music
Gallery
Winner of Boston Phoenix Best Music Poll 2001 and 2002 in the category of Best
Local Jazz Act:
"Dead Cat Bounce epitomize the best of the Boston jazz scene – to
make the most of working outside conventional commercial structures, to treat
a band as a workshop of ideas, to look forward while drawing on the best of the
past. Think of Mingus's swirling counterpoint and rhythm shifts with the similarly
rich voicings and solo-ensemble balance of the World Saxophone Quartet. What
more could you
ask for?"
- Jon Garelick, The Boston Phoenix
Winner of Best Local Jazz at the 2002 Boston Music Awards and a 2002 Meet the
Composer grant to premiere the suite Home Speaks to the Wandering in several
cities on tour:
"With Dead Cat Bounce twentysomething Boston saxophonist Matt Steckler
livens up the mix: incorporating a sensibility weaned on rock and at least on
speaking terms with jam bands, the music easily morphs from straight-ahead jazz
rhythms
into a cool backbeat, a tango lilt, or a punk-derived pulse… The writing
offers enough variety to occasionally make you forget that all the music comes
from these same six guys."
- Neil Tesser, Chicago Reader Critic's
Choice
"Steckler gives Dead Cat Bounce a lively, raucous resonance."
-
Bill Beuttler,
Boston Globe profile of Matt Steckler/Dead Cat Bounce
Critic's Tip and Sound Choice honors from the Boston Globe 1/6/01 and 10/5/01:
"The six-piece group... has become one of Boston's most original jazz
units."
-
Bob Blumenthal, Boston Globe
"DCB revels in a reed-driven sound marked by sharply contrasting forms,
textures
and tones... strident, joyful, lush and strutting use of a horn section."
-
Mike Joyce, Washington Post
"Made of fresh ingredients, their music was all abrupt cadences, fast-mutating
sonorities and jagged surfaces, but it was polished brightly to an impressive
sheen, as the four-saxes-and-rhythm-section sextet just gets better and better.
Dead Cat Bounce presented uncompromisingly challenging but often jubilant tunes...
Smart,
spirited and soulful, the music rocked to exciting effect all night."
- Michael Hochanadel, the Daily Gazette (NYS)
"Dead Cat Bounce is addictive... this group takes the sax quartet, mixes
in bass and drums, and ends up with the unique sound that results when high caliber
musicians share a musical vision and a love of innovation. DCB possesses these
qualities,
which combine to make Legends of the Nar a triumph."
- Katie
DeBonville,
Northeast Performer, Spotlites Section
"[DCB's] reputation – for knife-sharp technique, and formal and stylistic
elasticity – is quickly beginning to precede them. The Cats drop proverbial
science with headstrong melodic and structural foundations, Mingus-tinged arrangement
sensibilities, and an almost Mancini-like accessibility and playfulness. They
conjure solid, straightforward grooves as well as more interstellar regions,
while continually presenting tight riffs, and expressing memorable melodies."
-
Jordan Weeks, Pittsburgh City Paper
"Straddling studied experimentation and flat-out irreverence... Home
Speaks
to the Wandering, with its self-consciously artsy song titles and ambling, pell-mell
structures, offers pockets of bristling exuberance bordering on hyperactivity...
the
uniconventional roster yields hearty results, shining a light on the possibilities
inherent in the interplay of tenor, alto, soprano and baritone."
– Kevin Forest Moreau, Atlanta Creative Loafing
"Working some of the outside-the-box terrain favored by bands such as the
29th
Street Sax Quartet and the World Sax Quartet... Dead Cat Bounce manages to
blend serious composition and improvisation with wit, never an easy trick to
pull off."
- Bob Young, Boston Herald
"The solos are almost always exciting. The compositions nicely combine a
gritty, bluesy feel with intricate, catchy heads. The final product is fun, good
music, probably a lot of fun to shake your hips to. In other words, this
is definitely
worth a listen, and then several more."
- Eric Saidel, Cadence Magazine
"Excellent disque proposé par le label americain Innova, qui propose une
large palette de grandes artistes affiliés au jazz et à la musique
expérimentale.
On vous conseillera d'ailleurs de ce même label le disque
de Philip Johnston qui était fabuleux. Aujourd'hui, place à un
saxophoniste
qui se gave, j'ai nommé Matt Steckler qui nous offre pour ce
debut d'année ce très bon « persiflage ». Non, il
ne s'agit pas de persiflage de tympans, mais plutot d'un jazz excellent, croisée
entre la vieille ecole, les influences afro-cubaines, et un coté free
vraiment
intéréssant. Une formation en quintet sur une base piano, basse,
guitare, trombone. Matt steckler occupe le 5eme role en prenant tour à tour
un saxophone ou une flute, insufflant une tonicité aux 10 morceaux exclusivement
instrumentaux. Vous rajoutez à cela un excellent artwork, et nous voila
doté d'un pur opus de jazz que l'on recommandera aux amateurs, ainsi que
tout le catalogue du label innova."
- Webzine Pepper Zone (France)
"Matt Steckler intones the frivolous and laughable - the distinctly non-uptight
- with his compositions on Dead Cat Bounce's Lucky By Association. [He] proves
himself a talented composer, and this group shows substantial potential in revealing
the best in his material."
- Jonathan Babu, Northeast Performer,
Spotlites
Section
• Featured on WGBH's "Eric
in the Evening" 10/01 and 1/02; on
WERS 88.9 FM Boston as part of Live Music Week 4/99 and 4/00; on WBUR/National
Public Radio
90.9 FM's "Hear & Now" 7/00; WEMU Ann Arbor, WGYU Grand Rapids,
Miles Ahead Jazz Radio Chicago, KDHX St. Louis, KCCK Cedar Rapids, WHFR Dearborn
MI, WMPG Portland ME, CHRW Ontario, KEUL Alaska