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1/25/2021 Mat and Savanna Shaw - Wikipedia

Mat and Savanna Shaw


Mathew Shaw (born July 26, 1980[a]) and his
Mat and Savanna Shaw
daughter Savanna Shaw (born 2004[b]) are an
American musical duo based in Utah. They started
releasing music videos at the start of the COVID-19
pandemic in 2020. The New York Times's music
critic Jon Caramanica said the father and daughter
duo "became a quarantine-era YouTube success
story for their acoustic duets of religious-esque
songs that were pinpoint precise, verging on
stern".[5]

At the beginning of the pandemic, Savanna's choir


practices were canceled. To remain connected with Savanna and Mat Shaw performed in a livestream
her friends, she created her first social media Christmas concert hosted by the United States Army
account, an Instagram account. For her first post Field Band in 2020
on the account, she asked Mat, her father, to sing
"The Prayer" with her since she was too shy to sing Personal information
by herself. After recording it, they published it on Nationality American
Instagram in late February 2020 and then
Occupation Singers
Facebook, where it went viral. They created a
YouTube account on March 6, 2020. The Shaws YouTube information
were interviewed by Good Morning America, The Channels Mat and Savanna Shaw (https://www.you
Kelly Clarkson Show, and a show in Japan. tube.com/MatandSavanna)
On October 23, 2020, they released an 13-song Years active 2020–present
album titled Picture This, which had an eponymous Genre Singing
original song that told the story of how they shot to
fame. After selling 12,000 copies, the album was Subscribers 559,000
ranked number one on Billboard's Emerging Total views 45 million
Artists and Classical Albums charts and 54th on the
Creator Awards
Billboard 200. On November 20, 2020, they
released a seven-song extended play titled Merry 100,000 subscribers 2020
Little Christmas. In his review of the album, The
New York Times' Caramanica found that Mat Updated: 3 January 2021
"booms like a drill sergeant" and Savanna "sings
with airy sweep".[5]

Contents
Personal life and music career
Albums
Picture This
Merry Little Christmas
Shows
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Footnotes
References
External links

Personal life and music career


Mat Shaw, whose full name is Mathew Shaw,[6] was born on July 26, 1980.[a] In his youth, Mat Shaw
was passionate about singing and had aspirations to become a Broadway performer and create music.
After Shaw's father died when Shaw was 14, the family experienced monetary difficulties and he moved
with his family from Los Angeles to Kaysville, Utah. During his high school years, Shaw was a choir
member and musical theater performer.[4] Shaw was a student at Farmington Junior High School, where
he performed in a play adaptation of the novel The Best Christmas Pageant Ever in 1994.[7] He attended
Davis High School, where in 1996 he played the banker Bobby Childs in the musical Crazy for You and
in 1997 he played the factory superintendent Sid Scrokin in the musical The Pajama Game.[6][8] Shaw
served as a missionary for two years beginning in 2000 in Cebu in the Philippines.[2] With funding from
a vocal performance scholarship, he studied at Weber State University, where he graduated with an
accounting degree.[4] Shaw was a member for eight years of the Army National Guard.[9] He runs a real
estate business with a partner.[10] Shaw concentrated on building up his real estate firm and spending
time with his new family. He devoted less of his energy on music, saying in an interview, "My priority
was to make sure that my family was secure and taken care of, and I knew music wasn't going to do that
for my family."[4] At home, Shaw continued to sing and his voice sparked his daughter, Savanna Shaw, to
start singing.[4] He is married to Brooke Shaw, whom he lives with in Kaysville, Utah, with their four
children, Savanna, Easton, Eric, and Pennie Jean.[4][11][12]

Savanna Shaw was in 2004[b] and is the oldest of her three siblings.[4][13] Shaw enrolled in a choir for
children organized by the Hale Center Theatre.[4] The shy Savanna became friends with the choir
members.[4] Owing to the COVID-19 pandemic, the rehearsals were discontinued at the start of
March.[4][14] Shaw created an Instagram account to remain connected with friends from her choir.[15]
The account was her inaugural foray into social media. As her initial post on the account, she wanted to
record a cover of the Celine Dion and Andrea Bocelli song "The Prayer".[15] But she didn't want to sing by
herself.[16] Savanna approached Mat Shaw, her father, while he was doing yard work to ask him to sing
the song with her. Savanna wanted Mat to become more presentable as he had on a Brigham Young
University hat and a family reunion T-shirt but he brushed her off, saying, "Savanna, your choir friends
aren't going to care what I’m wearing. It’s not a big deal."[4] They recorded a cover of The Prayer at the
end of February 2020.[1] The first platform they chose to upload the four-minute video to was
Instagram.[1][16] Mat uploaded the video to Facebook next to allow family members who lacked
Instagram accounts to view it.[16] They received a substantial amount of attention on Facebook and then
started their "Mat and Savanna Shaw" YouTube account on March 6, 2020.[16][17] As they had little
technical experience, they spent multiple hours to complete the YouTube upload. By a few days later, it
had 2,700 views and 60 shares and by three months later, it had received more than six million views.[4]
After the video had received one million views, the father and daughter uploaded their cover of a second
song, "A Million Dreams".[14] By May 2020, they had over 400,000 YouTube subscribers.[18] According
to Deseret News journalist Lottie Elizabeth Johnson, the Shaws' cover of The Prayer acquired them "a
massive following" and that "[w]ith one video, they've achieved more success than many people who go
on shows like America's Got Talent and The Voice".[10]

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The duo use a closet as their recording studio and practice location. They enlist a small mic connected to
an iPad and supported by some pajama pants to record their singing. While playing the audio recording
of their closet performance, they sit at their kitchen table to videotape themselves singing to it.[4] In
May 2020, Ken Davenport, an executive producer for Andrew Lloyd Webber, interviewed the Shaws. He
introduced them to the Broadway actress Sierra Boggess, who has played Christine Daaé in The Phantom
of the Opera and whom Savanna greatly admires. When Mat was a youth, he watched The Phantom of
the Opera as his initial live performance. His mother required him to read the book before he could
watch the show. During the COVID-19 pandemic, Savanna regularly viewed performances of the musical
while sheltering at her house. Davenport offered to pay for the father and daughter to travel to New York
and watch the musical live after Broadway shutdown ended. Davenport said to them, "You have put such
love and such joy and such positivity in the world. You've done obviously such good for so many millions
… of people that this is just a little small something to say thank you from all of us on Broadway."[19]

In a July 2020 livestream video, Mat Shaw said the duo were "intentionally vague" regarding the topics
of religion and politics.[20] He said, "We want people to come to our music and have it be a safe place
where you can feel what you want to feel without us pushing our beliefs or agenda."[20] In August 2020,
they created the website The Shaw Fam backed by Patreon that lets their fans send them money to
receive membership benefits such as recommending the songs they should sing next and the ability to
view videos before non-members can see them.[11][21] They decided against signing with a label because
they wanted to have full power over what music they could make and what events they could attend. In
an interview with The Daily Signal, Mat noted that he had friends signed to labels who had planned to
perform at charity events but were blocked by their labels.[11] The Shaws organized a food drive on
November 24, 2020, in Sandy, Utah, and Kaysville, Utah, after they discovered that the Utah Food Bank
was having difficulty in meeting the strong need for food caused by the COVID-19 pandemic.[22]

The Shaws have received substantial media attention including on Good Morning America, The Kelly
Clarkson Show, and a show in Japan.[4] The New York Times's Jon Caramanica said the duo "became a
quarantine-era YouTube success story for their acoustic duets of religious-esque songs that were
pinpoint precise, verging on stern".[5] They have been recognized during trips in public such as to
Costco.[10] Mat put in less time on his real estate firm, which had had its business diminished at the
beginning of COVID-19, opting to devote his time to singing practices, recording, and encasing their
albums. His colleague at the practice picked up the slack.[10] Savanna transferred from her high school to
virtual school to give her the ability to spend her energies on making music. Although she was very
bashful before going viral in The Prayer, she gained certitude and became more sociable in the months
afterwards.[10]

Albums

Picture This

The Shaws initially wanted to write an original song to share more information about themselves.
Instead of just releasing a single song, they decided to create an album since they had wanted to make
one.[16] When recording their first album, Picture This, they used a "professional" recording studio
instead of the home closet studio they had been using for their videos. For the album, they chose songs
that had been proposed by their audience, that they liked, or by Stephen Nelson, who arranged the
music.[20][23] They released their first album on October 23, 2020, containing 13 songs.[23] The Shaws
enlisted the assistance of their extended family to load and send 10,000 CDs of the album.[24] Initially
expecting it to take about half a year for the 10,000 CDs to sell out, they received a large number of pre-
orders and ran out before their album's release date, which was two weeks after they had placed the
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order.[10] The duo placed a second order for 10,000 additional CDs.[10] Their house turned into a
repository for CDs, and they worked in the living room and kitchen to prepare the albums.[10] The Shaw
children assisted and received pocket money. Pennie Jean Shaw, Mat's six-year-old daughter, joined in
by contributing to the label by writing her initials and penciling in a small heart. The album was ranked
first on the iTunes pop and classical charts, ranked third on the iTunes chart that included all song
genres, and ranked third on Amazon.[25][26] After it sold "12,000 equivalent album units" based on MRC
Data, it was ranked first on Billboard's Emerging Artists chart on November 7, first on its Classical
Albums chart, and 54th on the Billboard 200.[27]

The first song is a mashup of the songs "Fly Me to the Moon" and "Come Fly with Me". Savanna selected
the song, calling herself an "old soul".[23] The second song is "I Hope You Dance" and was recommended
by Nelson, their arranger.[23] The third song is "Picture This", an original song that the father and
daughter began composing in July 2020 to describe how they suddenly became famous. They published
a music video for the song on the same day they released their album. Mat said, "This song is about just
being brave, and what if all it takes is a moment believing, a single moment of courage, putting yourself
out there, and you just never know what will happen, what kinds of opportunities, what kinds of dreams
will come true."[23] The fourth song is "You Raise Me Up", which they first published the cover for in
August 2020 and was the song that their audience most asked for.[23] The fifth song was suggested by
their audience and is "What the World Needs Now Is Love", which they published a cover for in
September 2020.[23] The sixth song is the Colbie Caillat song "Try" and the seventh is "Only Hope",
which had been sung by Mandy Moore, whom Savanna admired.[23] The eighth song is the Coco song
"Remember Me". The ninth song is the Beatles' "Let It Be". They published their cover of it as a single in
July 2020 and it was the initial song they made in "professional" recording studio.[23] The tenth song is
Phillip Phillips's "Gone, Gone, Gone" and was proposed for inclusion by Nelson. Although they were
reluctant to perform it initially, they grew to like it.[23] The eleventh song is "Hallelujah" with Nelson
participating as a singer. Around 2009, the father and daughter were audience members at a recital
where Nelson was playing the piano and singing "Hallelujah". Mat was "spellbound" by the performance.
Mat and Savanna have another version of "Hallelujah" that they made with Peter Hollens.[23] The
twelfth song is "Tonight You Belong to Me" and the thirteenth song is "The Prayer", which has a different
arrangement from the cover they released in February 2020.[23]

Merry Little Christmas

The duo released an extended play on November 20, 2020, titled Merry Little Christmas that had seven
songs.[16] By November 27, they had sold over 12,000 copies of the album.[10] For their debut album, the
Shaws had worked on preparing the albums in their living room and kitchen. For their Christmas EP,
they relocated the packaging work to their basement where they labored at night to encase the CDs.[10]
The first song is "O Come, All Ye Faithful", which has music from a guitar, drums, a cello, and a piano
accompanying their singing. The second song is "Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas" and has their
arranger Stephen Nelson playing the piano. The third song is "Mary, Did You Know?" and was the most
asked for by their audience. The fourth song is a jazz arrangement and mashup of "Let It Snow" and
"Walking in a Winter Wonderland". The fifth song is "O Holy Night" and was the second most asked for
by their audience. The Shaws chose to include the song in their album very late into its production. The
same week that they were preparing to mail out CDs of their first album, they practiced how to sing the
song and record it. The sixth and seventh songs are "I Heard the Bells on Christmas Day" and Josh
Groban's "Thankful" from his album Noël.[24] In its first week and for the week of December 4, the
album was ranked first on Billboard's "Classical Crossover Albums" chart.[28][29]

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In The New York Times music critic Jon Caramanica's review of the album, he said that their cover of
"Mary, Did You Know?" is "poignant and elegantly spacious, almost nervy in its conviction", their
performance of "I Heard the Bells on Christmas Day" has surprising parallels to the Extreme song "More
Than Words", and their cover of "Thankful" has the two "harmoniz[ing] into billowy bliss". Caramanica
noted that in their album Mat "booms like a drill sergeant" and Savanna "sings with airy sweep".[5] In an
AllMusic review, critic Marcy Donelson gave the album 3.5 stars out of five, and praised the duo for their
"graceful, stage musical-friendly singing deliveries". She said that they "fare best here with their piano-
accompanied arrangements of the more tender selections" such as a "string-embellished" "Mary, Did
You Know?", "Thankful", and "a well-harmonized" "O Holy Night".[29]

Shows
On November 28, 2020, the duo performed at a live virtual concert titled "What The World Needs Now:
An Evening of Music and Inspiration with Mat and Savanna Shaw". Sierra Boggess was the director of
the concert. They sang Broadway and holiday songs, sang their original song "Picture This", and relayed
narratives about their lives.[30] On December 1, 2020, the Shaws were the first performers in the Temple
Square Christmas concert "Celebrating the Light of the World" during which they sang "O Come, All Ye
Faithful".[31]

On December 5, 2020, the Shaws performed at two shows at the Maverik Center alongside Gentri, a trio
of tenors, for a concert titled "’Tis the Season — A Christmas Concert with Gentri and Friends".[32][33]
On December 20, 2020, they participated in a livestream Christmas concert hosted by the United States
Army Field Band.[33]

Footnotes
a. An article in The Daily Signal published on March 26, 2020, said Mat Shaw was 39 years old.[1] An
article in Bombo Radyo Philippines published on August 19, 2020, said Mat Shaw was 40 years
old.[2] The combination of the two sources verifies that Mat Shaw turned 40 in 2020, which means he
was born in 1980. On July 24, 2020, Mat Shaw said on Twitter that his birthday was on July 26.[3]
The combination of the three sources verifies that Mat Shaw was born on July 26, 1980.
b. An article in Deseret News published on May 15, 2020, said Savanna Shaw was 15 years old.[4] An
article in Bombo Radyo Philippines published on August 19, 2020, said Savanna Shaw was 16 years
old.[2] The combination of the two sources verifies that Savanna Shaw turned 16 in 2020, which
means she was born in 2004.

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22. Johnson, Lottie Elizabeth (2020-11-24). "This viral daddy-daughter singing duo is running a massive
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com/entertainment/2020/11/11/21561608/mat-and-savanna-shaw-utah-viral-daddy-daughter-duo-the
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095904/https://www.billboard.com/charts/classical-crossover-albums/2020-12-04). Billboard. 2020-
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32. Johnson, Lottie Elizabeth (2020-10-21). "They became an online sensation. Now, this father-
daughter duo has a gig in Utah. After several months of performing from their kitchen table, Mat and
Savanna Shaw will soon be taking a significantly larger stage: the Maverik Center in West Valley
City" (https://web.archive.org/web/20210103070652if_/https://www.deseret.com/entertainment/2020/
10/21/21527127/mat-and-savanna-shaw-viral-father-daughter-duo-the-prayer-utah-gentri-christmas-
show). Deseret News. Archived from the original (https://www.deseret.com/entertainment/2020/10/2
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33. Johnson, Lottie Elizabeth (2020-12-18). "Utah's viral daddy-daughter duo goes on 'The Kelly
Clarkson Show,' sings from Temple Square" (https://web.archive.org/web/20210103070658/https://w
ww.deseret.com/entertainment/2020/12/18/22189138/mat-and-savanna-shaw-daddy-daughter-duo-u
tah-viral-the-prayer). Deseret News. Archived from the original (https://www.deseret.com/entertainme
nt/2020/12/18/22189138/mat-and-savanna-shaw-daddy-daughter-duo-utah-viral-the-prayer) on
2021-01-03. Retrieved 2021-01-03.

External links
Official website (https://matandsavannamusic.com/)
Mat and Savanna Shaw (https://www.youtube.com/MatandSavanna) on YouTube
Mat and Savanna Shaw (https://www.allmusic.com/artist/mn0003988184) at AllMusic
Mat and Savanna Shaw (https://www.facebook.com/matandsavanna) on Facebook

Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Mat_and_Savanna_Shaw&oldid=1002603567"

This page was last edited on 25 January 2021, at 05:52 (UTC).

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