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Inaugural Aurora Games Kicks Off This Week In Albany With Star-Studded Lineup Of All-Women Athletes

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The Capital Region is about to make women’s sports history. The Albany Times Union Center and the Albany Capital Center are hosting the inaugural Aurora Games, a one-of-a-kind, international, multi-sport, female-athlete-only competition. The games kick off on Tuesday, August 20 and run until Sunday, August 25, showcasing nearly 150 world-class athletes from more than 20 countries, including rising superstars such as 13-year-old US Figure Skating champion Alysa Liu, who just this year became the youngest ever national figure skating champion; Canadian tennis player Bianca Andreescu, who won both the 2019 Rogers Cup and Indian Wells Masters; and 2019 Beach Volleyball World Champions Melissa Humana-Paredes and Sarah Pavan.

The driving force behind bringing the unique event to the Capital Region? Jerry Solomon, a sporting events creator and longtime sports agent/manager, who’s been in the business for nearly four decades. Solomon’s written a book on the subject, entitled An Insider’s Guide to Managing Sporting Events, and his long list of clients has included eight-time grand-slam-winning Czech-American tennis champ Ivan Lendl; Olympic gold-medal swimmer Janet Evans; and Shannon Miller, a two-time Olympic gold-medal gymnast. (Solomon’s wife is figure skater Nancy Kerrigan, who won Olympic silver in ’94, despite being brutally attacked at the games.) About his inspiration for the Aurora Games, Solomon says: “I was watching the 2016 Olympics when it occurred to me that there were way more women than men on the US Olympic Team that year.” Though 2012 was the first year that women outnumbered men on the US Olympic Team, with female athletes outnumbering their male counterparts by six, 2016 saw that number jump to 30. “The women were doing much better than the men that year, but I noticed the men were getting the bulk of the coverage,” says Solomon. “And it occurred to me that there should be a standalone sporting event, where women weren’t under the umbrella of male athletes or being compared to them.”

Solomon started discussing the Aurora Games concept with some of the athletes he’d represented and other people he was connected to in the business and everyone seemed to think it was a great idea. Fast-forward three years and now Solomon is serving as the executive producer of the inaugural games. The six-day competition will group athletes onto one of two teams, Team Americas or Team World, and will see them face off against one another in six different major women’s sports—tennis, gymnastics, basketball, ice hockey, figure skating and volleyball—one for each day of the games. The overall winner of all these sporting events will take home the Babe Didrikson Zaharias Trophy, named for “Babe” Zaharias, the 1932 Olympic gold medalist, professional golfer and all-around athletic polymath. “We’re providing a platform for these great female athletes to really showcase their talents,” says Solomon. “It’s going to be a great opportunity for adults and kids alike to come out and get a taste of what’s going on in the highest echelons of women’s sports.”

Though the opening ceremonies commence on the 20th, the Aurora Games officially kick off Monday evening at 5:30pm, with a free community celebration, featuring live music, a movie screening, meet-and-greets with former Olympians and a fireworks display, all at the Empire State Plaza. All week during the Aurora Games, the Albany Capital Center, which is linked to the Times Union Center and Empire State Plaza via a walkway, will be hosting a free, festival called the Fan Zone. Guests to the event will be treated to everything from sports clinics and seminars to autograph sessions, a table tennis exhibition and a “Conversations with Champions” workshop series led by female champions and empowerment role models.

As for why Solomon chose Albany as the site for the inaugural games, he says that had a lot to do with Bob Belber, the Times Union Center’s general manager. “[Belber] and I have known each for quite some time, and he said that he wanted me to bring [the games] to Albany, and only Albany,” says Solomon. He’d previously been thinking of hosting the competition at Madison Square Garden in New York City. “But at the end of August, the people who live in New York City are primarily up near Albany and Saratoga and Lake George, so by going there, we’re really taking it to the same people,” he says. “And it’s just a beautiful area that has so much to offer.” Solomon also cites the area’s connection to the women’s suffrage movement, which this year is celebrating its centennial, as another reason he wanted to bring the games to Upstate New York. “This area was really the cradle of the women’s suffrage movement,” he says. “There’s a lot of symmetry there, which makes it that much more exciting.”

The Aurora Games run through Sunday, and tickets are still available. For more information, click here.

Slipknot: A Love Story, Or How A Nine-Piece Metal Band That Wears Halloween Masks Will Be Shredding SPAC Into Oblivion

It was the middle aughts, and all things considered, life was pretty good in Astoria, Queens. I had a job that paid the bills. I had tons of friends in and around the city. I ate my way through Astoria’s many Greek food spots. And I’d gotten a membership at this old-school, badass gym that was peak Queens: It was mostly blue-collar types, pumping massive amounts of iron; engaging in all-out combat in the gym’s makeshift boxing ring; and always there to help the small guy (me) try to bench-press his weight a few times. I loved it, but I had a big problem: I had only so many songs on my iPod, so on any given day, I’d likely be listening to the same few albums. It got really old, really fast.

That is, until a colleague of mine, Ed, who I’d worked with at a place where, I swear to you, we sat around all day and night, watching TV shows and writing trivia questions, gave me this mixed CD he’d made of one of his favorite metal bands, Slipknot, and like a doctor writing a prescription for a miracle drug, said that I’d never need any other workout music ever again. If I remember correctly, the disc included, in this exact order, the Slipknot songs “(sic),” “Eyeless,” “Wait and Bleed,” “Surfacing” and “Liberate” from the band’s eponymous first record; “My Plague” and “Left Behind” from the band’s second album, Iowa; and “The Blister Exists,” “Three Nil,” “Duality” and “Opium of the People” from their third, Vol. 3: The Subliminal Verses, which was their newest album at the time. I remember burning the disc to my computer, then transferring the tracks to my iPod, which I registered as “Slipknot Album.” Since none of the songs I’d uploaded still had their ID, I had no idea what any of the songs were called, so I was, basically, flying blind.

Within a few short weeks, just as Dr. Ed had ordered, it had become my go-to gym mix. Within a few short months, I was “singing” along with the songs—and when I say “singing,” I mean angrily lip-synching, because the rage-and-ruin growl that lead singer Corey Taylor emits from somewhere deep within his soul was impossible to recreate in a public gym in Queens without somebody telling me to shut the front door. (One particular song, “Eyeless,” features this one, long drawn-out curse word, between the 3:26 and 3:31 marks, which would provide me with that extra oomph needed to run that extra mile on the treadmill or do that extra set.) And after a few short years, I became a Slipknot fan. It so happened that, when 2008 rolled around, the band was readying the release of its fourth album, All Hope Is Gone, and being that I was now a diehard fan, decided to pitch a review of the album to one of my many freelance contacts, the Hartford Courant. My editor there, who knew me more as a folk-rock/alt-country guy, was surprisingly all for it. That’s when the real fun began.

With their latest record, ‘We Are Not Your Kind,’ metal band Slipknot has No.1 albums in both the US and UK. (Factor Metal/Flickr)

You see, at that point in the band’s career, they were exploding, and there was a tremendous amount of buzz surrounding the release of the forthcoming album. Their record company, Roadrunner Records, a subsidiary of Warner Music Group, hadn’t sent out advances of the album, despite music journalists like me needing them to write our reviews. After a back-and-forth with the label, Warner invited me into their corporate headquarters at 1633 Broadway in Manhattan, to listen to the album in a special room, on a special headset, for as long as I needed to. I remember going in with a notepad and pen and sitting in this chair, with Slipknot screaming into my ears, feverishly writing notes that would help me decide how to rate the album. My resultant review, which ran in the paper and online on August 26, 2008 read like so:

“SlipKnot’s fifth album finds the nine-piece alternative metal band at an unquestionable creative peak – but the effort may only further alienate some of its diehard, shred-metal fans. Once the darling of Ozzfest for its brutal stage mayhem and disturbing Halloween masks, SlipKnot is trying to reinvent itself as thinking-man’s metal, a la Metallica’s “The Black Album.” As on the band’s 2004 album “Subliminal Verses,” the latest set features a little bit more “easy” listening. “Psychosocial” mixes muddy chord progressions with mutable melodies, with the faintest hint of a country twang in its sung chorus. “Dead Memories” veers between a driving Danzig-like melody and a Queensryche-like chorus. The ultimate shocker, though, is the hauntingly pretty “Snuff,” which finds a crooning Corey Taylor accompanied by a simple acoustic guitar. All this new territory raises the question: How will the angsty kids in the mosh pit respond when the lighters and glowsticks come out?”

Album reviews are a funny thing; they’re really this tightrope walk between the reviewer’s knowledge of similar-sounding music (or an entire genre), opinion, taste and one’s ability to identify an album’s je ne sais quoi or like-ability—all while condensing those facts into discernible English. Plus, I didn’t have that many words to do it in. I think what I was getting at was that Slipknot (the way I styled the band’s name back then still annoys me!) wasn’t just some run-of-the-mill metal band making noise; they were bringing in influences that the average metal band might lose street cred for, but which somehow worked really, really well within the confines of a band, who just happened to wear Halloween masks and matching prison jumpsuits and had become a real-deal “pop” sensation. So what if the majority of their songs were littered with words you’d be sent to the principal’s office for for saying to your teacher? Wasn’t that what rock music was about in the first place? Pushing the envelope?

Eleven years later, Slipknot is still putting out albums, and short of a few key lineup changes, as well as the tragic death of original bassist Paul Gray in 2010, is even more popular than it was when I wrote that review. (The son of Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band’s Max Weinberg, Jay, for instance, is now the band’s drummer.)

On August 9, the band released their sixth studio album, We Are Not Your Kind, and unbelievably, it’s already hit No.1 on the US’ Billboard 200 (its third) and across the pond in the UK (its first chart-topper there in 18 years). That’s no small feat for a metal band. This has been fueled, in large part, by the band’s tireless touring, which this year, it’s accomplished via the sonic circus, Knotfest, which has been snaking all over the globe and will touch down at the Saratoga Performing Arts Center (SPAC) on August 21. It’s also been driven by the fact that We Are Not Your Kind is like no other Slipknot or metal record I’ve ever had the chance to listen to (I subscribe to Spotify, so that’s where I heard it for the first time last week); it’s a 14-song set—with three short connective-tissue-y tracks mixed in—chock-full of non-metal inventiveness (see the staccato piano-led number “Spiders” or the goth-y electronica of “My Pain”); plus, a few bizarro, surprise influences, including, as far as I can tell, A Flock of Seagulls’ “I Ran” in the melody and chorus of lead single “Unsainted;” and Scots-Gaelic folk music, complete with lead singer Corey Taylor rocking a fake accent, somewhere between Scots-Gaelic and The Dark Knight‘s Joker, on album-closer “Solway Firth.” On the album, the band’s sound has veered as far away from metal, at times, than it’s ever gotten, and that means the ability to rein in more fans.

Knotfest will be a rare treat for SPAC concert-goers, who will be able to catch an international array of opening acts such as Polish metal band Behemoth, French metal-heads Gojira and Danish hard-rockers Volbeat on the tour. And for some locals, seeing the nonet pulverize eardrums at SPAC will be old hat; they’ve been performing at the Saratoga Springs venue since 2012 and have returned to the venue two other times before this show. But it’ll be my first Slipknot show. And as yet, the second lawn ticket I bought for a fellow Saratogian, who couldn’t make the midweek show from the city, has yet to be claimed. Meet me on the lawn?

Travers Week 2019: Everything To Do In Saratoga The Week Of The Historic 150th Running Of The Travers Stakes

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It’s that time again, Saratogians. Get ready for Saratoga Springs to be at or above capacity all week and especially, this weekend. Parking will be scarce, and there will be thousands of extra “locals” to rub elbows with. That’s because this Saturday, August 24, marks the historic 150th running of the Grade 1, $1.25 million Travers Stakes, the oldest major Thoroughbred race in the country, and the gem of Saratoga Race Course’s summer meet.

The Travers Week festivities begin early, with a Travers 150 Celebration throughout Downtown Saratoga on Tuesday, August 20 (a dark day). From 5:30pm to 8:30pm, venture out on Broadway to experience live entertainment and music, horse racing-themed window displays in certain stores, as well as a jockey meet-and-greet and autograph sessions outside of Impressions of Saratoga.

Additionally, here’s a full lineup of the events happening in Saratoga—and the featured races at Saratoga Race Course—this week:

Wednesday, August 21
Wednesday’s another Race Course Giveaway Day, with fans getting a free Saratoga beach towel for every ticket of admission (arrive early as there’s a limited supply). Wednesday is also New York Sports Day at the track, celebrating different local sports teams that call the Capital Region their home. From 11am to 5pm, head to the Coca-Cola Saratoga Pavilion for Sports Day displays, ticket giveaways and activities with members from local sports teams. Also featured on the Wednesday card: the $100,000 John’s Call.

Thursday, August 22
$100,000 Riskaverse
Grade 1, $150,000 New York Turf Writers Cup

Friday, August 23:
No Travers Week celebration would be complete without heading over to the 21st Annual Travers Wine Tasting from 6-10pm on Friday, August 23. This beloved track-season fundraiser will be held at The Lodge at Saratoga Casino Hotel and will raise funds for LifePath Albany (formerly Senior Services of Albany). Also for wine-lovers, the National Museum of Racing and Hall of Fame will be hosting its Travers Eve Wine and Cheese Social from 6-7:30pm. Enjoy wine and other beverages, plus hors d’oeuvres and a book signing of The Travers: 150 Years of Saratoga’s Greatest Race with co-authors Brien Bouyea (saratoga living‘s sports editor) and Michael Veitch, a local author/historian.

The Friday card at Saratoga Race Course includes New York Breeders’ Showcase Day:
$250,000 Albany
$200,000 Fleet Indian
$200,000 Funny Cide
$200,000 Seeking The Ante
$150,000 West Point
$150,000 Yaddo

Saturday, August 24: TRAVERS DAY!
Grade 1, $1.25 million Travers
Grade 1, $850,000 Sword Dancer Invitational
Grade 1, $500,000 Ballerina
Grade 1, $600,000 Forego
Grade 1, $500,000 H. Allen Jerkens Memorial
Grade 1, $700,000 Personal Ensign
Grade 2, $400,000 Ballston Spa

Sunday, August 25
$100,000 Better Talk Now

Also capping off Travers Weekends will be one of the Bubbles & Brunch events at the track’s new 1863 Club. Enjoy a medley of buffet items plus bottomless mimosas and bloody marys, all before a day at the races.

To add to the fun of Travers Week, there’s a whole lot of other entertaining events in and around Saratoga and the Capital Region. (Our guess is that you won’t be looking to venture too far away, with the Travers over the weekend.) Take a look at a list of all the other great events below:

Monday

Superstar pop band the Jonas Brothers is coming to the Times Union Center in Albany (August 19)

Get in a little exercise at the 7th Annual Saratoga Casino Hotel Monday Night Mile, starting on Jefferson Street in Saratoga (August 19)

Take a hayride, eat some fried dough and ride the ferris wheel at the Washington County Fair all week in Greenwich (August 19-25)

Tuesday

Catch a film screening and reception of the documentary Born to Rein at the National Museum of Racing and Hall of Fame in Saratoga (August 20)

The Thoroughbred Retirement Foundation will serve up some delicious barbecue at its first annual “Summer Night BBQ at the Barn” fundraiser at Saratoga Winery (August 20)

The inaugural Aurora Games kicks off with a week of women’s sporting events at Albany’s Times Union Center (August 20-25); check back for exclusive coverage and photographs at saratogaliving.com

Wednesday

Metal-heads can get their thrash on at Knotfest Roadshow 2019, which features Grammy-winning nontet Slipknot at the Saratoga Performing Arts Center (SPAC)  (August 21)

Pulitzer Prize-winning author Richard Russo will discuss his latest novel, Chances Areat Skidmore’s Arthur Zankel Music Center in Saratoga (August 21)

Proctors in Schenectady presents “Rush: Cinema Strangiato 2019,” a worldwide fan event, featuring the best performances from Canadian classic rock band Rush (August 21)

Take part in a free Bluegrass Jam at Fort Edward’s Little Theater on the Farm (August 21)

Thursday

Don’t miss the season’s final Upbeat on the Roof performance with bell’s roar at Skidmore’s Tang Teaching Museum and Art Gallery (August 22)

Caffè Lena in Saratoga presents its Bright Series with Irish artist Wallis Bird and a pre-show Hangin’ & Sangin’ Podcast (August 22)

Friday

Santana With Special Guests The Doobie Brothers will be performing the Supernatural Now Tour 2019 at SPAC (August 23)

Don’t miss one of Lake George Village’s free Friday at the Lake concerts this week with local bands Soul Session and Yellow Dog at Shephard Park (August 23)

Enjoy Friday Night Live, a Klezmer and New Orleans Jazz-style Shabbat, at Congregation Beth Shalom in Clifton Park, with the Adirondack Klezmer and Jazz Band (August 23)

The Canfield Casino Gala takes place in Saratoga, with all proceeds benefitting the Saratoga Springs History Museum (August 23)

The Albany Berkshire Ballet will perform Paula Weber’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream (a two-act ballet based on the famous Shakespeare play) at The Egg in Albany (August 23)

Catch a one-night-only performance of The Man in Black, a Johnny Cash tribute show at the Charles R. Wood Theater in Glens Falls (August 23)

Boaters, get ready for a free public show, with the 46th Annual Lake George Rendezvous at the Lake George Village docks on Beach Road (August 23-24)

Fans of astrology will have to check out Neon Nights: Leo vs Virgo Affair 2019 at Putnam Place in Saratoga (August 23-24)

All weekend, famed American jazz trumpeter (and Tonight Show Band leader) Doc Severinsen will be performing at Caffè Lena in Saratoga (August 23-25)

The Jonah Bokaer Arts Foundation is launching this year’s The Hudson Eye, a weeklong contemporary art exhibition at various venues throughout Downtown Hudson (August 23 through September 2)

Saturday

Jaguars at Saratoga, a Jaguar-only show, will be held on the lawn of the Saratoga Automobile Museum (August 24)

The Hyperion Quartet, the North Country’s leading chamber group, is giving a 20th Anniversary Concert at The Sembrich Studio in Bolton Landing (August 24)

Rock and Roll Hall of Famers KISS are bringing their End of the World Tour to SPAC (August 24)

Two-time Grammy-winning artist Terrance Simien and The Zydeco Experience will kick off the 2019/2020 Premiere Season of the Park Theater in Glens Falls (August 24)

Celebrate Hispanic culture all day at the 2019 Albany LatinFest in Albany’s Washington Park (August 24)

Catch the comedy of George Lopez’s The Wall Live in Concert! at the Rivers Casino & Resort in Schenectady (August 24)

Enjoy great food and music at the Capital District Ukrainian Festival at the Ukrainian-American Citizens Club in Cohoes (August 24)

Sunday

Go for a run and raise money for charity at the What Would Trevor Do Run N’ Roll for Hope 5K starting at The Warming Hut in Saratoga Spa State Park (August 25)

Head over to the National Museum of Racing and take a special Photo Finish Tour of Saratoga Race Course’s famed Oklahoma Training Track (August 25)

Pet lovers can’t miss the CDJW Help A Dog BBQ & Pet Fest at the Albany-Saratoga Speedway in Malta (August 25)

Take a Summer Stroll through the restored historic West Side of Saratoga Springs and learn about the Irish and Italian history there (August 25)

Philadelphia Orchestra To Honor Beethoven’s 250th Birthday During 2020 SPAC Season

Now’s the time to brush up on your Beethoven. Next summer, from August 12-15, 2020, The Philadelphia Orchestra, under Music Director and Conductor Yannick Nézet-Séguin, will be presenting Beethoven’s complete symphonic cycle in celebration of the composer’s 250th birthday at the Saratoga Performing Arts Center (SPAC) in Saratoga Springs. The complete cycle will be performed over just four consecutive days. To put that into perspective, the orchestra will be performing the same run at Carnegie Hall, but over the course of several weeks. “Traversing the complete symphonies of Beethoven is a profound and deeply moving musical experience,”  says Elizabeth Sobol, President and CEO of SPAC. “To hear them under the baton of the great Yannick Nézet-Séguin, in such a concentrated period, will be an artistic experience unlike anything we have ever presented at SPAC.”

Below, is a full schedule of when each of the symphonies will be performed (each performance will also be accompanied by a commissioned lecture, covering some aspect of Beethoven’s work):

Wednesday, August 12th
Beethoven: Symphony No.8
Beethoven: Symphony No.4
Beethoven: Symphony No.7

Thursday, August 13th
Beethoven: Symphony No.2
Beethoven: Symphony No.3 (“Eroica”)

Friday, August 14th
Beethoven: Symphony No.5
Beethoven: Symphony No.6 (“Pastoral”)

Saturday, August 15th
Beethoven: Symphony No.1
Beethoven: Symphony No.9 (“Choral”)

A special Beethoven 2020 Pass for all four programs can be purchased here.

Pulitzer Prize-Winning Author Richard Russo Returns To Skidmore To Discuss His Latest Novel, ‘Chances Are’

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Award-winning novelist Richard Russo may have a Pulitzer Prize and several bestselling books under his belt, but he hasn’t forgotten his humble roots here in Upstate New York. “The Saratoga area is my old stomping ground,” says Russo, who grew up about 45 minutes west of Saratoga Springs in Gloversville. “My father was, well, a gambler, and during the summers, I can remember many a trip with him to the track in Saratoga for the flat races and even the trotters.”

The author of Empire Falls, which fetched him the 2002 Pulitzer Prize for Fiction, Russo will be returning to the Spa City on Wednesday, August 21. Though just in time for Travers Week, Russo isn’t returning to Saratoga to relive old racing memories, but rather to discuss his latest novel, and his first standalone book in a decade, Chances Are. The event will take place at Skidmore College’s Arthur Zankel Music Center as part of WAMC’s Off the Shelf author series, and Russo is slated to discuss and read portions from Chances Are.

The novel is a bit of a departure for the veteran novelist; it’s his first mystery. Set on an ideal September day in Martha’s Vineyard in 2015, the book examines the lives of three old friends and the secrets they’ve kept from each other over the decades. They’re also still haunted by a mystery on the Vineyard that changed their lives in 1971: the disappearance of Jacy Rockafellow, the young woman that each of them loved. “The mystery format seemed to be the natural format, because it’s a book about lies,” says Russo. “And one of the questions that the book raises is: ‘To what extent can friendship of the deepest sort survive lies?'”

Friendship and lies may be the central themes, but Chances Are tackles a number of complex issues, particularly pertaining to baby boomers, who grew up during the Vietnam War era. Russo, who sets many of his novels in New York and Maine, where he currently resides, chose Martha’s Vineyard as the setting for this novel to create a strong contrast between the beautiful, carefree atmosphere of the island and the suspense over Jacy Rockafellow’s disappearance, as well as the lies, secrets and war that are threatening to tear the three friends apart. “To the people who summer on the Vineyard, it’s not going to be the island that they recognize because it’s being seen through the eyes of these three middle-class men,” says Russo. “These three characters’ life experiences, what happens to them, could not be farther removed from this magical, privileged place. And yet in their own way, their friendship seems to be as powerful as the forces in the world that try to destroy affection and love.”

Russo says that the novel could’ve easily been set in Saratoga during the glitzy, tourist-rich track season—that is, if he hadn’t already used the setting in one of his earlier novels, 1993’s Nobody’s Fool. “That book’s about an unlucky town called North Bath [based on Gloversville] and a lucky town called Schuyler Springs, which is clearly based on Saratoga,” says Russo. “It has all the things that Saratoga has: a performing arts center, a racetrack, an artists colony.” In 2016, Russo published a sequel called Everybody’s Fool, also featuring North Bath and Schuyler Springs.

As for returning to his old stomping grounds, or close enough to it, Russo says that Saratoga always brings back fond memories for him. “My mother was particularly in love with Saratoga because, back when she was a girl, it had all those grand hotels,” he says. “So we spent a lot of time there when I was young.”

For more on Russo’s upcoming talk or to purchase tickets to it, click here.

 

 

Supermodel Gigi Hadid, ‘Bachelorette’ Beau Spotted In Saratoga County Starbucks

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The Capital Region is no stranger to Hollywood‘s rich and famous. (Heck, Jane Fonda went to high school in Troy!) It turns out that the area’s also a magnet for supermodels and their secret getaways. Especially, in the Saratoga area.

A quick-thinking Instagrammer (via Bachelor podcaster The Snatchelor‘s account) snapped a grainy photo of supermodel Gigi Hadid, along with reported new beau Tyler Cameron, the runner-up on Season 15 of ABC’s The Bachelorette, grabbing some iced coffees at a Starbucks in Queensbury, NY, near Lake George, on August 15. (It’s unclear where in the area the photo was taken exactly, as there’s no Starbucks in Lake George proper; the closest brick-and-mortar is about 13 minutes away in Queensbury.) Page Six also confirmed that Hadid had been spotted at a Starbucks earlier that day in Malta, NY—just 15 minutes away from Saratoga Springs!—but that the supermodel had been with a few other girls, not Cameron. (There are two Starbucks shops in Malta, one located on 1 Kendall Way, part of the Price Chopper plaza; the other, right off of Exit 12, Hadid’s more likely stop.)

 

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While Hadid and Cameron haven’t made their relationship official yet, celebrity media outlets in New York City and Los Angeles have been having a field day. Elle, for example, referred to the sighting as the couple’s “fifth date.” Maybe they’ll have their sixth one at the Travers Stakes next weekend?

Philadelphia Orchestra, Wynton Marsalis And The Jazz At Lincoln Center Orchestra Perform ‘Swing Symphony’ At SPAC

The Philadelphia Orchestra kicked things into high gear during the final week of its summer residency at the Saratoga Performing Arts Center (SPAC), with a little help from friends Wynton Marsalis and the Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra.

On August 15, the Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra performed a program featuring the enduring music of Duke Ellington, while the two orchestras teamed up for the first time ever to perform Marsalis’ own Swing Symphony composition, conducted by William Eddins.

Later that night, for the first of two “Live at the Jazz Bar” nights, Chuck Lamb performed at the Hall of Springs Jazz Bar.

saratoga living‘s Francesco D’Amico shot photos for the Philadelphia Orchestra-Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra part of the program. Catch more of D’Amico’s work, featuring Live Nation/SPAC performances, here.

Multiple Grammy-Winning Trumpeter Wynton Marsalis Visits The Double H Ranch

It’s difficult not to be in awe of jazz legend Wynton Marsalis. For one, he’s won nine Grammy Awards. His playing’s also earned him a Pulitzer Prize for Music. And well, if you’re a fan of CBS Sunday Morning—how can’t you be?—that’s him playing its “theme song.”

Add singer, dancer, second-liner and maybe most importantly, teacher, to that list of accomplishments, and you have the perfect guest star for a day at the Double H Ranch in Lake Luzerne, NY, co-founded by Paul Newman (yes, that Paul Newman) in 1992 to provide programs and support for children and their families dealing with life-threatening illnesses. “Wynton Marsalis was a gentleman, and the kids at Double H Ranch ate it up,” says saratoga living Photographer Francesco D’Amico, who was onsite, doing what he does best. (Check out his full gallery of images from the event above.)

For his part, Marsalis, along with the Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra—featuring Victor Goines (saxophone/clarinet), Chris Crenshaw (trombone), Carlos Henriquez (bass), Dan Nimmer (piano) and Jason Marsalis (drums)—performed a program entitled, Jazz for Young People: What is Jazz?, as part of the Saratoga Performing Arts Center’s (SPAC’s) new partnership with Double H Ranch.

For D’Amico’s latest from SPAC’s Live Nation summer lineup, click here.

After The Race Cocktail Party Honors An ‘Old Friend’

On Sunday, August 4, Old Friends at Cabin Creek hosted its 10th annual After the Race Cocktail Party at Saratoga National Golf Club. Proceeds from the party went to support the horses living at the Old Friends at Cabin Creek Thoroughbred retirement community. Featuring food by Prime, the event honored late Hall of Fame trainer Bobby Frankel. One of the evening’s silent auction items was a halter and horse shoes worn by European champion racehorse, Frankel, who was named after the event’s honoree.

“Thank you so much to everyone who came out to celebrate with us and to honor Bobby Frankel,” said Old Friends at Cabin Creek Owner and Manager JoAnn Pepper after the event. “It was our best party ever. Saratoga National was perfect. The volunteers who love and care for the horses and worked the party were amazing.” This year’s party was the foundation’s most successful fundraiser to date.

Jockeys Battle Trainers In Annual Charity Basketball Game

This season, Saratoga Race Course jockeys and horsemen competed in a sports arena other than the flat track: a basketball court. The 12th annual Jockeys Vs. Horsemen Basketball Game pitted the jockeys against the trainers at the Saratoga Springs YMCA in front of an audience of more than 300 attendees. All proceeds from the event went to New York Race Track Chaplaincy programming.

For the third year in a row, the jockeys, assisted by NBA star Charles Smith (to add some height to the roster), outplayed the trainers. Hall of Fame jockey Angel Cordero Jr. coached the jockey squad, and trainers Todd Pletcher and Kiaran McLaughlin coached the horsemen. Colorful commentator Mitch Levites of NYRA television served as house announcer, while Sam “The Bugler” Grossman raised crowd spirits. “Every year this game enables fans to see some of their favorite jockeys and trainers in a fun and relaxed atmosphere,” said Humberto Chavez, the New York chaplain. “Besides all the fun the fans and players have, we are raising money for a great cause.”

The New York Race Track Chaplaincy serves the Backstretch community—the workers who make racing at each of the NYRA tracks happen, and their families.