Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

‘It’s Just Been A Dream’

Matt Sallee brings new groove to Pentatonix

- JOCELYN MURPHY

Last year, Matt Sallee was singing in a wedding band. Though he had been in a cappella groups since high school, including profession­ally, he recalls the days of “singing in bars to five people.”

This summer, Sallee is performing for tens of thousands across North America as the new bass vocalist for the group that has arguably become the biggest name ever in a cappella: Pentatonix.

“It’s been a dream, honestly,” Sallee says from California during the tour’s first week. “And to have everything happen and move so quickly, I hadn’t really had time to reflect on anything until really February. I was like, ‘Wow, so much has happened… [and] this is just the beginning.’ And it’s been so cool because the fans have been so accepting and loving of me, and it’s just been a dream.”

When the quintet’s original bass, Avi Kaplan, announced last year he would be leaving the band, Sallee joined the group in the fall following an audition process.

In the whirlwind of the next few months, he recorded a few numbers for the group’s deluxe version of 2016’s “A Pentatonix Christmas” before embarking on their holiday tour, recorded and released Pentatonix’s sixth studio album, “PTX Presents: Top Pop, Vol I” April 13 and set out on the group’s longest tour yet — not to mention all the music videos and prep work in between.

“You know, you hear about groups and [people wondering] whether groups actually care about each other or actually really like to be around [each other] or if it’s all for show,” Sallee muses. “And it’s really cool to come into this group and know that they are truly … great people, and they are who they portray themselves to be on social media. They are that 100 percent. And they treated me like family immediatel­y, so I felt very comfortabl­e coming into the group. It’s honestly surreal to me that people can have this much influence and still be such amazing human beings.”

A video introducti­on to Sallee posted to the band’s Facebook page in March shares the other four singers enthusing over Sallee’s work ethic and joyful energy he brings to the group. On stage, Sallee is excited to share a bit of his own flair with the fans he calls the best in world.

“Any time you change a member of any group, the dynamic of things will change. But it’s a lot bigger with a cappella because it’s a new voice and a different sound,” Sallee shares. “I bring a different kind of sound to the group that’s a little more soulful maybe. … That’s a thing I can add in a different way.”

Looking to the future of the group, a new project coming early next year may be bringing the quintet, known for their covers, mashups and medleys, back into the realm of original content, Sallee teases.

“We’re excited, I think, to move in that direction. It’s going to be something the group has never done before. So, there’s still goals to accomplish.”

For the moment at hand, though, Sallee and his fellow performers are enjoying celebratin­g their new music and new show with 10,000-plus of their closest friends every few nights on their summer tour. The setlist, Sallee slyly promises, has some of the most popular tunes the band has covered through the years — whether on an album or in a YouTube video — sprinkled through picks from the new album as well as a few special surprises.

“My favorite song that I recorded was ‘Feel It Still’ because it’s really groovy; it’s me in a song,” Sallee reveals. “I love to groove, I love to chill, I love to feel the music — and be in a pocket with (vocal percussion­ist) Kevin (Olusola) — and all of those things culminated at once. And that was one of the first songs we recorded, so it was one of the first times we got to hear me as a bassist and what I would contribute.

“My favorite moment of the live

show,” he goes on, “is Kevin and I have a little moment, I don’t want to give it away, but Kevin and I have a little impromptu thing during show. There’s no way to say without giving it away, but look out for it. It’s really fun; it’s a really cool moment. That’s my favorite moment of the show — that or a medley of songs that we do of an artist I also don’t want to give away!”

 ?? Photo courtesy Jiro Schneider ?? Matt Sallee is the new bass vocalist for a cappella group Pentatonix, filling the spot left by original member Avi Kaplan when he announced last year he was stepping away from the band.
Photo courtesy Jiro Schneider Matt Sallee is the new bass vocalist for a cappella group Pentatonix, filling the spot left by original member Avi Kaplan when he announced last year he was stepping away from the band.

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