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Daily Racing Form: Pre-Entries For Breeders’ Cup Classic Include 19 Horses

A record number of pre-entries, an overflow field for the event’s richest race, and the potential for at least two unprecedented feats highlight the 35th Breeders’ Cup on Nov. 2-3 at Churchill Downs, for which pre-entries were announced on Wednesday.

There were 221 individual horses pre-entered in the event’s 14 races, with 25 cross-entered in a second race, bringing the total pre-entries to 246, eclipsing the previous records of 201 individual horses and 229 total pre-entries, both set at Santa Anita in 2014.

That year also marked the last time the maximum 14 horses lined up in the $6 million Classic, the richest and last of the 14 races worth $28 million in purses to be run during the two-day festival. A full field seems certain for this year, as 19 horses were pre-entered in the 1 1/4-mile Classic, and though six of those horses were cross-entered in a second race, 17 are denoted as having the Classic as their first choice.

Included in the Classic field is Mendelssohn, last year’s winner of the Juvenile Turf, who will be trying to become the first horse in Breeders’ Cup history to win a race on the grass and a race on the dirt.

He’s not the only international star looking to make history. The filly Enable, a two-time winner of the Arc de Triomphe, is pre-entered in the Turf and will try to become the first horse to win the Arc and the Turf in the same year.

Mendelssohn is one of five pre-entrants who have won a Breeders’ Cup race. Roy H (Sprint), Stormy Liberal (Turf Sprint), and Talismanic (Turf) are trying to repeat in races they won last year at Del Mar, and Oscar Performance will try to win the Mile two years after capturing the Juvenile Turf.

The Classic field is headed by Accelerate, who will be trying to lock down the Eclipse Award as champion older male. Accelerate has won three major 1 1/4-mile races already this year – the Santa Anita Handicap, the Gold Cup at Santa Anita, and the Pacific Classic at Del Mar. He is favored at 3-1 on the line set by Mike Watchmaker, Daily Racing Form’s national handicapper.

In addition to Mendelssohn, Accelerate’s expected rivals include Axelrod, Catholic Boy, Discreet Lover, Gunnevera, Lone Sailor, McKinzie, Mind Your Biscuits, Pavel, Roaring Lion, Thunder Snow, West Coast, and Yoshida. Bravazo and City of Light are pre-entered in the Classic but have the Dirt Mile listed as their first preference. If that holds, Seeking the Soul, Collected, and Toast of New York will need unforeseen defections to get into the race. Seeking the Soul has the Dirt Mile as his second preference and can go there if he can’t get into the Classic.

The pre-entry stage is the first of a two-step process toward entering Breeders’ Cup races. Pre-entries were due Monday, and a horse could be put in as many as two races.

Next Monday is decision day. That morning, horses must be entered in a single race, and then posts for the 14 races are drawn late Monday afternoon. A maximum of 14 horses can start in each Breeders’ Cup race, with the exception of the new Juvenile Turf Sprint, which is limited to 12 runners.

Both the Juvenile Turf Sprint and the Turf Sprint will be run at 5 1/2 furlongs. Last year’s Turf Sprint at Del Mar was at five furlongs, and now 14 can run in the Turf Sprint, as opposed to 12 last year. Other changes germane to this year’s Breeders’ Cup being at Churchill Downs are that the Dirt Mile is run around one turn, and the Filly and Mare Turf is back to 1 3/8 miles after being shortened to 1 1/8 miles last year.

Of the 14 races, 12 have more than the maximum number of pre-entries, with only the Juvenile Fillies (11 runners) and Distaff (12) failing to overfill.

In the oversubscribed races, the field was determined first by including horses who had secured automatic berths through the Win and You’re In program, then horses who had earned points in graded stakes throughout the year. That combination totaled half the field (seven runners in 14-horse fields, six in the Juvenile Turf Sprint).

The rest of the field was determined by an international panel of racing secretaries. Once the full field was set, the remaining runners were placed on a list in order of preference of the panel. Those horses can only get in if there are defections from the main body of their race.

In the Classic, for instance, Accelerate, Discreet Lover, and Pavel got in via the Win and You’re In program. The next four spots – Axelrod, Lone Sailor, McKinzie, and Mind Your Biscuits – went to the horses with the most points who were declared as having the Classic as their first preference.

Bravazo would have been in the Classic on points, but he was pre-entered with the Dirt Mile as his first preference and thus was relegated to being ranked by the panel per the following Breeders’ Cup rule:

“Once a horse has been ranked among the maximum number of starters, as applicable, in its race of first choice at pre-entry, its ranking in its race of second choice will be based only on the judgment of the Panel regardless of the number of points earned in American and/or Canadian Graded Stakes Races.”

As a result, Bravazo is ranked 15th for the Classic, ahead of, in order, Gunnevera, Seeking the Soul, Collected, and Toast of New York, with the panel preferring Catholic Boy, City of Light, Mendelssohn, Roaring Lion, Thunder Snow, West Coast, and Yoshida.

On entry day next Monday, as many as two also-eligibles will be allowed in 11 of the races where more than the maximum were pre-entered. There will be four also-eligibles allowed in the Juvenile Turf Sprint, which proved the most popular race, with 28 pre-entries.

Scratch time for all 14 Breeders’ Cup races is 8 a.m. Eastern on Nov. 2. After that, also-eligibles cannot get in.

The Breeders’ Cup is returning to Churchill Downs for the first time since the track played host to the event in consecutive years, 2010 and 2011. This is the ninth time Churchill Downs will host the Breeders’ Cup, equaling Santa Anita, which will host it in 2019.

The Classic is the finale on a Nov. 3 card that also includes, in order, the Filly and Mare Sprint, Turf Sprint, Dirt Mile, Filly and Mare Turf, Sprint, Mile, Distaff, and Turf. In addition to Accelerate, Watchmaker’s respective favorites in those races are Marley’s Freedom (5-2), Stormy Liberal (7-2), Catalina Cruiser (9-5), Wild Illusion (7-2), Imperial Hint (7-2), Polydream (4-1), Monomoy Girl (2-1), and Enable (6-5).

The new Juvenile Turf Sprint – which brings this year’s Breeders’ Cup to 14 races, one more than last year – is the first Breeders’ Cup race on Nov. 2, part of a Future Stars Friday card whose five Breeders’ Cup races are all for 2-year-olds. The Juvenile Turf Sprint will be followed, in order, by the Juvenile Fillies Turf, Juvenile Fillies, Juvenile Turf, and Juvenile.

Brad Free, DRF’s Southern California-based handicapper, made the prices for the Nov. 2 card. His favorites in those races are Shang Shang Shang (4-1), Newspaperofrecord (3-1), Bellafina (5-2), Anthony Van Dyck (7-2), and Game Winner (5-2).

This story originally appeared on DRF.com


Visit DRF.com for additional news, notes, wagering information, and more.

Daily Racing Form: Nisha Back At Same Level As Favorite

ELMONT, N.Y. – The last time Nisha raced, she beat the heavily favored Your Love in a third-level allowance/optional $80,000 claiming race at Belmont Park. On Thursday, 119 days later, Nisha will be the horse to beat in a third-level optional $80,000 claiming race going six furlongs at Belmont Park.

Nisha, a 4-year-old daughter of First Samurai, was not offered for the tag the day she beat Your Love by a length. She is eligible to be claimed for $80,000 on Thursday.

Nisha has won 7 of 11 career starts and has been claimed three times. Last October, trainer Jeremiah Englehart and owner James Riccio took her for $25,000 from David Jacobson off a winning effort. Nisha has won 3 of 5 starts since the claim, with one loss coming when she lost her rider leaving the starting gate.

Last time out, on June 28, Nisha defeated Your Love by one length under a heady ride by Jose Ortiz, who kept the odds-on favored Your Love bottled up. Ortiz is at Keeneland on Thursday, so Manny Franco will have the call on Nisha, who breaks from post 5 in the six-horse field.

Yorkiepoo Princess finished third behind Nisha in that June 28 allowance. Yorkiepoo Princess has since run in two stakes, finishing seventh behind Your Love in the Shine Again at Saratoga and third behind runaway winner Liz’s Cable Girl in the Roamin’ Rachel on Sept. 15 at Parx Racing.

“The winner went wire to wire, opened up four or five, and was gone,” said Eddie Barker, trainer of Yorkiepoo Princess. “I think you have to run over that Parx track a couple of times to be successful.”

Barker sees ample speed in this race, so he would like to see Junior Alvarado have Yorkiepoo Princess come from off the pace Thursday.

This race attracted shippers Angel At War from the Delaware Park-based barn of Michael Gorham and Treble from the Churchill-based Ron Moquett. Peaches and Spice and Liz Mimi complete the field.

KEY CONTENDERS

Nisha, by First Samurai
Last 3 Beyers: 85-85-84

◗ Has won five of her last seven starts, though she hasn’t run over a fast main track since September 2017.

◗ In February, she beat Sounds Delicious, who came back to win her next two starts, including the Correction Stakes.

◗ In June, she defeated Your Love, who came back to win the Shine Again Stakes and run second in the Grade 2 Gallant Bloom.

Yorkiepoo Princess, by Kantharos
Last 3 Beyers: 80-63-81

◗ She reeled off three straight stakes wins at Aqueduct from November 2016 through February 2017, but is winless in nine starts since.

◗ Her only non-stakes try in that span was a third-place finish behind Nisha in a race similar to this in the mud at Belmont in June.

◗ Liz’s Cable Girl, who beat this filly in the Roamin’ Rachel Stakes, came back to win an allowance, while She’s Stunning, fourth in the Roamin’ Rachel, also came back to win her next start.

Angel At War, by Shackleford
Last 3 Beyers: 85-79-73

◗ Speed and the rail are always a dangerous combination, and this filly has both.

◗ Beaten only 1 1/2 lengths when third to Cairenn in Laurel Park’s restricted Shine Again Stakes on Sept. 29.

This story originally appeared on DRF.com


Visit DRF.com for additional news, notes, wagering information, and more.

The Calendar: What’s Going On In Saratoga Springs This Weekend

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Halloween’s next Wednesday, but that hasn’t kept local businesses from getting in the trick-or-treat spirit—including your friends at saratoga living! (Make sure to RSVP for our upcoming “Icons & Legends” Halloween costume party that’s taking place next Tuesday, October 30, from 7-10pm at Putnam Place.) For those Saratogians looking to get a (spooky!) jump on winter sports, go to the Halloween Skate at the Weibel Avenue ice rink from 6-8pm on Friday, October 26. Trick or treat on the ice and, of course, skate your heart out under a Halloween disco ball. Children five and under get in for free; costumes are encouraged but not required.

If you got a ticket to the now sold-out Vampire Brunch from 6-10pm on Saturday, October 27, at the Saratoga Polo Association, consider yourself lucky. Guests will enjoy delicious food courtesy of B-rads Bistro and then “Trick-or-Drink” through a tasting maze of delicious witch brews and potions (not to mention a standalone Bloody Mary bar). There will also be a Glow-in-the-Dark Tournament of Champions, lawn games and a best-of costume challenge. Although the ponies are gone for the season, fear not! From 10am-4pm on the 27th, too, head over to the National Museum of Racing and Hall of Fame to take part in the Saratoga Halloween Celebration. There will be a museum-wide scavenger hunt and free treats for every child in costume (not to mention free admission to children in costume with their families). Saturday night marks the 10th Annual Monster Ball at Vapor Nightclub. Doors open at 8pm, and boys and ghouls will enjoy tunes spun by Deejay Element and Host J Wil, as well as a costume contest with a total of $3000 in cash prizes.

If you’re not Halloween-ed out before Halloween’s even happened by Sunday (October 28), the National Museum of Dance will be staging its Night of the Living Dead – LIVE!, which runs through Saturday, November 3. A tribute to the 50th anniversary of the original Night of the Living Dead film, this unique and immersive theatrical event will feature live drama, original music and zombie actors with professional SFX makeup for a terrifyingly real, multimedia production. Tickets are just $25 for adults and $15 for students.

For more spook-tacular Halloween events, and a few non-Halloween happenings, check out the following listings:

Friday, October 26

To Life! Pink Ball 20186:45-11:30pm at the Hall of Springs, 108 Avenue of the Pines.
A Lasting Legacy: The Hyde Collection’s Annual Gala – 6-9:30pm at The Hyde Collection in Glens Falls.
Halloween Parade on the Common – 4:30-6pm at Clifton Common in Clifton Park.

Saturday, October 27

HALLO-wine Party at The Saratoga Winery from 8pm to midnight.
17th Annual Saratoga Downtown Business Association Fall Festival – 9am-1pm in Downtown Saratoga.
Maple Avenue Firehouse Fall Vendor/Craft Fair – 10am-3pm at Maple Avenue Fire Company #4.
Jeeptoberfest 2018 – 12-4pm at Nemer Chrysler Jeep Dodge Ram of Saratoga, 617 Maple Avenue.
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Sunday, October 28

Harvest for the Pantry – 2-5pm at the First Reformed Church of Scotia, 224 North Ballston Avenue.
Whiskey Riot: A Festival of Whiskeys – 1-4pm at the Desmond Hotel in Albany.

Peter Belmonte, Owner Of Belmonte Builders

A family-run business, Belmonte Builders has been building high quality, new homes in the Capital Region for more than 40 years. The company is personally involved in every phase of construction, from choosing the site itself and shaping its integration with the community around it, to working closely with its customers to build a home that exceeds their expectations.

You can find Belmonte Builders’ latest work in cities such as Saratoga Springs, Wilton, Round Lake, Halfmoon, Stillwater and Clifton Park. saratoga living recently had a chance to talk with Belmonte Builders’ owner, Peter Belmonte about his business, and what it’s been like building top-quality homes for four decades.

How did you get your start in your business?
My father had started in the construction business in 1977 and had great success. After I graduated from college, I worked in corporate America for a few years. In 1985, my father invited me to work with him to grow Belmonte Builders into a larger company. I was excited to have the opportunity to help create a family business in an industry that I had a lot of interest and am very proud of the company Belmonte Builders has become.

What makes the Saratoga area such a great place to run a business?
I’ve lived in many locations across the US, and I truly think Saratoga is unique. Saratoga County has some of the most beautiful vistas in the area! Whether you’re looking for lakes, streams, rivers or mountains, it has something to offer everyone. The City of Saratoga offers a small town feel with many large city amenities. We have incredible restaurants and shopping Downtown. Terrific entertainment at SPAC to cater to anyone’s musical tastes, museums, parks, golf and of course, the track! It really has something for everyone.

As the owner, what do you think sets Belmonte Builders apart from its competitors?
At Belmonte we work very hard at trying our best to do right by our customers. Building a new home is fun and exciting, but can be stressful at times, too. Although we do this work every day, this may be the first time our customer has gone through the process, and we want it to be a streamline as possible for them. We also never lose sight of the fact that no matter how well things seem to be working, there is always a way we can make it better. We always strive to be better than the day before.

What’s your favorite part of running Belmonte Builders?
I’m very thankful that I’ve been able to grow the business into a brand that not only my family, but also my work family can be proud of. Many members of our team have been with us for more than 15 years, some more than 20! They have grown right along with us, and that means a lot to me. I’ve also had the opportunity to meet people in so many different businesses. Learning about the backgrounds of our customers, tradespeople, suppliers, municipal leaders and others has given me an appreciation for how important it is to be open to new ideas and ventures. I love talking with people. My family calls me the “mayor” because no matter where we go, I run into someone I know and have to stop to talk with them.

What impact do you hope your business has on the Saratoga area community?
Saratoga County is an enormously viable area. For the county to grow, each of the industries that support the lifestyles that people are looking for when choosing a place to live need to grow, too. I am very proud that Belmonte Builders has been able to provide not only homes, but also neighborhoods that people want to live in. It is very gratifying to know that we have been a part of the evolution of this area, and that our communities have been chosen by so many people to call home now and in the future.

Wine Wednesdays With William: Navigating The Bubbly Waters Of Champagne

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Exactly half of champagne sales are made in export markets and half in France. Outside of France, the champagne market’s dominated by well-known brands, such Veuve Clicquot, Moët & Chandon, Dom Pérignon, Krug, Ruinart and Mercier, which are all owned by luxury goods conglomerate Louis Vuitton Moët Hennessy (LVMH), which also owns, inter alia, Dior, Givenchy, Céline and TAG Heuer. These well-known champagne houses, along with the likes of Bollinger, Taittinger and Pol Roger are known as “Grandes Marques” (major labels) and account for 88 percent of the champagne sold in export markets.

In France, by contrast, the brands have barely half the market.

As wine consumers outside France have become more adventurous, they have become more like the French, willing to buy champagne made in cooperative wineries, or by the farmer that grew the grapes, and happy to forego the reassurance implied in the big brands. That is certainly the case in the United States.

In small print, usually on the front label, is an abbreviation that identifies which type of producer is responsible for the champagne in the bottle. The most common abbreviation is NM (Négociant manipulant). These producers buy grapes and make wine, and most of the big brands fall into this category. CM stands for “Coopérative de manipulation,” and the wine will have been made in a cooperative winery whose members grew the grapes. The third and most interesting category employs the abbreviation RM (Récoltant manipulant). This is also known as Grower Champagne and identifies the wine as being made by the same people who grew the grapes, often in a single vineyard or from a single village. This emphasis on “place” and artisanal winemaking strikes a contemporary chord such that the popularity of these wines is expected to increase further.

Wine Challenge No.16:
Try this test of a good wine store, suggested by former Wine Editor and Chief Critic of the San Francisco Chronicle, Jon Bonné in his best-selling The New Wine Rules, published last year: “Champagne is the wine with perhaps the clearest split between big corporate names and little ones. So, (unless you are a wine geek) if you walk into a wine shop and recognize more than half the Champagne brands on the shelf, keep going.”


Can’t get enough wine wisdom from William? Read last week’s column here.

EXCLUSIVE Q&A: Comedian Jon Fisch Bringing His ‘Late Show’-Tested Act To The Capital Region

You’ve no doubt heard that laughter is the best medicine. And though I wouldn’t bank on laughter physically curing your ailments (please, go see a doctor!), it’s vital to getting us through the hard times and making the good times even sweeter. Comedian Jon Fisch is certainly of that philosophy. Though many comics tend to lean into more vulgar and controversial subject-matter these days (standup comedy has a tradition of it), Fisch has made a name for himself over the past two decades doing comedy about the more quotidian—dating as a single forty-something or navigating the idiosyncrasies (and absurdities) of living in New York City—and it’s worked well for him. The NYC-based comic has appeared on The Late Show with Stephen Colbert, as well as its predecessor, the Late Show with David Letterman, in the pages of Maxim magazine and as the host of the popular comedy podcast series, In the Tank.

On Friday, October 26, Fisch will headline the first-ever Comedy Night at the Park Theater in Glens Falls, along with Caitlin Peluffo and Jim Felter. saratoga living interviewed Fisch about his history of doing standup in the Capital Region, and why he avoids political humor altogether.

You’ve done standup in the Capital Region before. Is it a good area for comedy?
I love Glens Falls. I was there many years ago. I used to do a show—I forget where—but it was upstairs at a restaurant, a Thursday and Friday gig. I did that a couple of times, including once with my good friend Andy Pitz. And I’ve been up to Lake George the past few summers for Americade. It’s like a motorcycle conference that somehow I’ve performed at a couple of times. If you’ve seen my act, it doesn’t scream motorcycle conference. [Laughs] But I’ve always had pretty good experiences in the Albany area. And Saratoga Springs is such a great city to hang out in. I love it.

Because of the country’s political climate right now, I’ve heard some comedians say it’s a difficult time to do comedy. What do you think of that?
I will say this: I’ve been doing comedy for 20 years, and I’ve never, in that time, had so many requests to just stay away from politics. I’ve had people say, “Don’t do sex, don’t do religion,” but I’ve never had so many [people] ask me to just stay away from politics. It’s extremely touchy right now, and you can feel it, too, when you’re talking about it. But I perform every night, and, of course, tons of things come up, but I do try to stay away from it, because I can’t get a real gauge on whether anyone thinks it’s really funny or not. You’re either preaching to the choir, or you’re just immediately turning somebody off.

Politics aside, do you think audiences are more sensitive these days in general?
No, I feel like audiences have been really good lately, other than those specific areas. I feel like people really do need to laugh and get away from things. Even the other night, I was doing a show, and a few people came up to me afterwards and said, “Oh, I really needed that.” So when times are tougher, people really do just want to escape and get a few laughs in. There’s nothing like live comedy to have that guttural response of laughter. So hopefully, that’s what I can bring to people.

How did you get started in standup? I imagine your parents weren’t like, “You should be a standup comedian.
[Laughs] No, they definitely didn’t say that. Although my brother and my father and I all have a similar sense of humor, and we really connect through humor. I actually ended up graduating from college with a degree in psychology, and was working in that field, inside hospitals in Boston, but I was always interested in [comedy]. So I took a workshop in Boston with Rick Jenkins at Brookline’s continuing education center, and I got hooked. I started doing it while I was working and then eventually tried to give it a real go. I moved to New York, and it’s been the best thing I ever did.

What got you hooked? People’s laughter?
Yeah! I always loved that, but there was always the writing as well. I wasn’t like a class clown or anything. I was funny, but I just liked coming up with a good line. Just the way you can have your life happening, write about it and then bring it to a group of people and have them connect with what you’re saying…there’s no greater feeling to me.

So what do you have coming up next?
I’ve got a podcast coming back this month called Spiraling Up that I’m very excited about. And that’s where I can get a little more into heavier subjects without the pressure of making every line laugh. So I’m excited to get back to that. I talk to comedians, so inevitably, it will be funny, but the subject-matter is about how people get out of life struggles and deal with their daily problems.

How The Capital Region Is Pitching In To Help Families Of The Schoharie Limo Accident

On Saturday, October 6, a limousine headed for a birthday party barreled through an intersection at the bottom of a steep hill in the small town of Schoharie, NY, crashing and killing its driver, all 17 passengers inside it and two pedestrians. It was the deadliest accident in the United States in nine years, and an investigation has been launched to find out just what went wrong and who, ultimately, is to be held responsible for it. A little over an hour southwest of Saratoga Springs, Schoharie’s a town not unlike many in our neck of the woods, and the story has hit close to home for many of us.

Since the accident, there’s been no shortage of outreach, support and fundraising efforts launched to help the families of the 20 victims—even in our own backyard. Locally, Downtown Saratoga restaurant Pig N’ Whistle hosted a paint-and-sip fundraiser on Thursday, October 18, to help victims’ families. “You just never know when something is going to hit your community,” the restaurant’s co-owner, Scott Solomon, told NBC’s local affiliate WNYT. “The community supports us every day of the year so when we get a chance to support the community we love to take advantage of it,” Solomon said.

Multiple GoFundMe pages, as well as a few Facebook fundraisers, have been set up as well, with nearly all efforts reaching or surpassing their desired monetary goals. One such Facebook page, set up for the The Ashton Family (see below), had a goal of $1000 and has already amassed more than $7500. The page was set up by friends of Mary and Kyle Ashton for their 34-year-old son, Michael Ukaj, who died in the crash. One female victim, Amanda Halse, had two separate GoFundMe set up in her honor. Some of the online fundraisers aimed to pitch in for funeral costs and additional needs for families of victims, while others have tried to provide financial support to the six children who lost at least one or both parents in the crash. A memorial has also been erected outside the Apple Barrel Country Café, the Schoharie store where the crash occurred, and in whose parking lot the two pedestrians killed in the accident were standing.

But fundraising is just one way the community has kicked into gear to help support victims’ families. One newly launched nonprofit and charity organization, Reflections Memorial Foundation, is working to establish a permanent memorial for the Schoharie crash victims, and already has fundraisers in the works to help raise money. The Foundation believes a memorial will be an important “way for all of us to express our sorrow and remember,” and its treasurer, Lois Goblet, told the Times Union the Foundation hopes to erect the memorial in time for the accident’s one-year anniversary.


Interested in pitching in? Here are several fundraising pages that have been launched for the families of or in the name of the Schoharie crash victims:

GoFundMe: The Dyson Family

Facebook Fundraiser: The Ashton Family

GoFundMe: The Hough/Schnurr Benefit

GoFundMe: Amanda Halse’s Family
GoFundMe: In Loving Memory Of Amanda Halse

Facebook Fundraiser: The King Family

GoFundMe: College + Expenses for Archer and Elle

 

Portland Cello Project, The Shins’ Patti King Bringing Radiohead’s ‘OK Computer’ To Troy Music Hall

I remember the first time I heard a track from Radiohead’s 1997 tour de force, OK Computer. It was senior year at Saratoga Springs High School, and I was in AP English class, taught by Mr. Brandt, who had assigned the big year-end presentation: You had to pick your favorite song, research and analyze it and present it to the class. (The class would first listen to the song, and then you’d give your speech.) Despite the fact that I wore plaid shirts and listened mostly to punk and grunge rock, the song I chose was James Taylor’s 1970 folk-rock tearjerker, “Fire and Rain.” As a cellist, I think I was going through a big bowed-bass phase, and that’s what drew me to the track. Plus, I’ve always enjoyed sad songs more than happy ones.

Something to note up front before I get to that big moment: I was probably one of the earliest, biggest Radiohead fans of my friend group. I know, I know; everybody says that. But it’s true. I’d bought their debut album, Pablo Honey, like everybody else had, because of that violent ker-crunch of guitar before the chorus in “Creep,” but ended up liking everything else on the album way better. (Still do.) Especially, “Thinking About You,” “Stop Whispering” and “I Can’t.” I even bought an imported single (and later the $40 Japanese import CD in England) that included unreleased tracks and B-sides such as “Pop Is Dead,” which still has one of my favorite mid-song guitar riffs in it. (You’ll know it when you hear it.) When follow-up The Bends was released a few years later, I enjoyed it with as much gusto as the debut, and the album grew on me immensely throughout the years (The fade-in “Black Star” is still my go-to track).

But then OK Computer was released, and all bets were off. I didn’t run out to Strawberries to buy it. I can’t remember hearing any of the singles on the radio either. And well, at that point, my parents had finally gotten us kids cable, but MTV/TRL Live sure as hell wasn’t going near it. All I knew was what I’d heard in the hallways and read in Rolling Stone magazine. I think I was sort of scared of (possibly) hating it.

And then that fateful day in AP English class. This kid named Pete, who was ultra-smart and -confident and loved all of these obscure (at the time) Brit pop bands, such as the Stone Roses, Blur and Pulp, chose the song “Paranoid Android” as his song to analyze. I don’t remember what he said about it, but all I can remember thinking was that it sounded ghastly. This wasn’t my Radiohead! How could they do this to me? I guess my 18-year-old ears, which were more attuned to two-minute punk songs, just weren’t ready to hear it.

Fast-forward to 2000, and I’m a stranger in a strange land—an American studying abroad in Edinburgh, Scotland, and I’m having an in-depth, decades-spanning rock music discussion with my British friend, Nick (a.k.a. “Brit Nick”), and we get to talking about The Question. As in, What is the greatest rock album ever produced? I can’t remember how that morphed into which one’s the better album, Pink Floyd’s Dark Side of The Moon or Radiohead’s OK Computer, but Brit Nick was adamant that the former was not even close to as good as the latter, and he was willing to bet his life (and probably more than a few pints of Guinness Extra Cold) on it. I, of course, was arguing for the majesty of Dark Side. It had been a staple on classic rock radio in Upstate New York, and I’d listened to it a thousand times. It was, like, the concept album to end all concept albums. And plus, it supposedly synched up with portions of The Wizard of Oz! Also, remember that this was just three year after OK Computer had been out on the streets compared to Dark Side, which had been out since ’73 and was revered and set aside by most respectable rock critics as one of—if not the—greatest album(s) of all time. By that point, I was still not entirely an OK convert, though a few songs on the album had snuck into my consciousness: “Let Down” and “No Surprises.” But I left that conversation bewildered: “Wow. Brit Nick really believes this album is that good? Maybe I should give it a second chance.”

Two years later, in the aftermath of September 11th, I found myself once again living abroad, this time in Madrid, Spain, teaching Spanish businesspeople English for the year. These were the days before I had an iPod, so I packed half of my suitcase full of jewel cases. One that I brought on a whim was OK Computer. I still had a weird relationship with it, but it was slowly starting to take hold. That year in Madrid, during which my Discman finally bit the dust, I think I listened to that album more than any other one in my collection. I’m still not sure if it had to do with my location or post-9/11 state of mind or some less tangible thing, but I finally saw eye-to-eye with Brit Nick: OK Computer was a far superior album to Dark Side. There was so much to love about it, and it was always something I digested in a single sitting, whether it be on a park bench or the Metro or my local tapería. It was the perfect album to enjoy alone, because there was so much going on with it, and you needed to turn your brain off to listen to it. I felt like I had cheated my 18-year-old self. This was how music should sound. How had I been so shortsighted?

These days, OK Computer has long since been hailed as the Second Coming of concept rock music and put on so many best-of lists, it’s impossible to count them all. It’s even gotten a repackaged, 20th anniversary reissue, with all of the B-sides and outtakes that I would’ve had to search far and wide for and spend hundreds of dollars on to listen to back in the ’90s. I can hear the entire honking thing on Spotify, too, front to back, and every which way, as I’m doing right now. I’ve read an actual book on the album, and it sits among my top most-listened-to albums in the stacks of my now mostly virtual record collection. I learned how to play most of the songs on my acoustic and electric guitars, and have even written about Radiohead myself. But never this album.

While Radiohead, a band that’s difficult to catch live because of mere-seconds show sell-outs and geographical issues, will likely not be making the trek across the Atlantic to the Capital Region anytime this century (hey, you never know), you can find the next best thing at the Troy Savings Bank Music Hall on Saturday, October 27. That’ll come courtesy of the Portland Cello Project (PCP), a revolving cast of cellists and other classical musicians and vocalists, which will be playing Radiohead’s OK Computer front to back, as part of a two-set night of music. The PCP’s Artistic Director Douglas Jenkins tells me that the night the group’ll be in Troy, the lineup will feature six cellos, a French horn player, trumpeter, two drummers and a bassist, along with guest vocalist, Patti King, a multi-instrumentalist, who plays keyboards, violin and sings in Portland-based indie rock band The Shins (I spent an entire day in Brooklyn with the original four-piece for my first major feature in American Songwriter magazine; the first album I owned of theirs, Chutes Too Narrow, I bought in Downtown Saratoga). “She’s wonderful,” says Jenkins. “We’re really lucky to have her every time she can do this with us.” As noted, this isn’t her first turn with the PCP. King’s been performing with them since 2014, when the group recorded and toured in support of their take on Beck’s Song Reader. Some of the players in this tour’s variation of the PCP will be virtuosic cellist Diane Chaplin, who’s played with the renowned Colorado Quartet; and West Coast jazz cellist Skip vonKuske.

The PCP is no stranger to the Radiohead canon: In 2012, when OK Computer turned 15, the group played a similar run of shows, but with a men’s choir sitting in for Radiohead lead singer Thom Yorke. They also linked up with The City of Tomorrow woodwind quintet, who had just won the prestigious Fischoff Competition, to round things out. The PCP’s Jenkins, who wrote all the arrangements for the ’12 performances, says that the way the songs are played has been constantly evolving since then, and that some of the songs have even been absorbed into the group’s always ballooning catalog. And how does King factor in? As the vocalist notes, she and the group perform most of the songs together, with the exception of “Paranoid Android” and “Electioneering,” which are played as instrumentals. “[For] the song ‘No Surprises,’ one of the drummers who’s on tour with us, Tyrone Hendrix, is singing that song and playing drums, and I move over to glockenspiel.” The track that gives the PCP the most trouble, night after night? “Hands down, it’s ‘Let Down’; that’s been the most difficult track [to arrange],” says Jenkins. “I think we just like it so much that we don’t want to mess it up. It’s gone through the most evolutions.” In fact, at one recent tour stop, King started crying during the song, because it filled her with so many emotions. “There’s just something about that last verse that gets me every time,” says King. All tears aside, the crowd favorite seems to always be track No.4, “Exit Music (For A Film).” “I play guitar on that song, and it’s too low for me to sing in Thom Yorke’s range, [so] instead of changing the key, I just sing it an octave higher and adjust the melody,” says King. “After every show, everyone’s like, Man, ‘Exit Music’ tonight…it was so good.”

If you’re worried about this being another staid classical music concert experience, with the older gentleman next to you slowly nodding off and his wife shushing you periodically, you’ll be happy to learn that Jenkins has heard “a lot of screaming and yelling and happiness” from the audience on this tour. (Hopefully, no one will yell “Free Bird”…at least until the encore.) And the PCP will be playing two full sets of music: the first, a smattering of the more than 1000 pieces in their repertoire, which could include songs by Pantera, Taylor Swift, Elliott Smith or Kanye West (Jenkins likens this to the “opening band”). Then, they plow through OK Computer.

I don’t know about you, but I can’t wait to see “Radiohead” in Troy. Tickets can still be purchased for the show here.

Senator Gillibrand Pulls Out Of Skidmore College Debate (Updated)

Just 48 hours before Incumbent Democratic Senator Kirsten Gillibrand was set to debate her Republican challenger, Chele Farley, at Skidmore College on Sunday, October 21, Gillibrand has pulled out. Last night (October 19), Gillibrand’s campaign reached out to saratoga living, telling us that Gillibrand would be withdrawing and providing the following statement to constituents:

“I believe deeply that an open public debate is essential to democracy. That is why months ago I agreed to a statewide debate with Spectrum News/NY1 before the upcoming election. However, I am also deeply committed to the working men and women of the labor community and support the 1,800 members of IBEW who went on strike for fair pay and benefits and I will not cross a de facto picket line scheduled for Sunday. That is why I will withdraw from participating in the Spectrum News/NY1 debate this Sunday unless the workers’ strike of Charter has been resolved. It is my hope that Charter’s management will come to the table and agree to a fair resolution with the hardworking members of IBEW before then. I remain willing and eager to debate on Sunday and hope this can be resolved in time to allow the debate to continue as scheduled. If not, my campaign stands ready to debate Sunday night with a different media partner or will explore another date and venue to conduct a debate before the election.”

Spectrum News was set to air the debate live across New York State, and the debate was to be moderated by Spectrum News’ host of Capital Tonight, Liz Benjamin, as well as NY1’s political anchor Errol Louis.

This would’ve been Gillbrand’s second debate at Skidmore College (her first was in 2012 against Wendy Long), as the junior Senator from New York is seeking a second term in office. An Albany native, Gillibrand was first elected to the US House of Representatives in 2006, representing the 20th district. She was then picked in 2009 by New York Governor David Paterson to fill the Senate seat left vacant by Hillary Clinton, who had been confirmed as Secretary of State in the Obama administration. Since then, Gillibrand has won large majorities in a special election in 2010 and a full-term bid in 2012, and this past February announced that she would no longer receive corporate PAC donations.

In the lead-up to the debate, Senator Gillibrand told saratoga living: “Having represented Saratoga Springs in my old Congressional district, and having grown up not far away in Albany, the area has always been a special place for me. After spending time listening to constituents in all 62 counties last year, I am excited to be back at Skidmore College for this statewide debate, and I look forward to earning the privilege of continuing to serve New Yorkers for another term.”

Her Republican opponent, Chele Farley, is a Stanford-educated financier who’s spent the past 25 years in New York City. Following the 2016 election, Farley was named the New York City Finance Chair for the New York State Republican Party, and this marks her first campaign for political office. She’s running on her outsider status and a strong background in business and finance, including years of experience at UBS Capital, Goldman Sachs and currently, Mistral Capital International, a private equity investment firm. She told us: “I’m a businesswoman who will fight for New Yorkers, and only New Yorkers. I support term limits for all elected officials, because taxpayers are fed up with the dysfunction in DC. As your US Senator, I will bring back the over $48 billion Washington insiders are stealing from hardworking New Yorkers each year and bring that money home to build better roads, cut property taxes and make our state a better place to live, work and raise a family.” (Farley’s campaign could not be reached for comment about the debate’s cancellation, but did offer up this blog post by means of a response.)

Even though the midterm elections are still three weeks off, they’re already being called another Elise Stefanik and Tedra Cobb for New York’s 21 Congressional District (which includes nearby Wilton, Glens Falls and Queensbury). 

2019 Season Preview: Opera Saratoga’s Lawrence Edelson And SPAC’s Elizabeth Sobol Go In-Depth On Next Year’s Packed Arts Calendar

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On the evening of October 18, The Friends of Opera Saratoga hosted a public conversation between Executive Director of Opera Saratoga, Lawrence Edelson, and the CEO and President of Saratoga Performing Arts Center (SPAC), Elizabeth Sobol, in SPAC’s Gold Room in the Hall of Springs. Patrons of the two organizations, as well as a handful of Skidmore College students interested in arts administration and management, nibbled on light refreshments and drinks while Edelson and Sobol discussed some of the successes and lessons from the 2018 season, the intricacies of programming and funding, and what initially brought them both to Saratoga. “One of the first people I met when I moved here was this guy,” Sobol said pointing to Edelson. “We had lunch at the Thirsty Owl, and if I had any doubts about finding anyone in Saratoga to work with with, they were gone when I met Larry.” SPAC and Opera Saratoga have been in partnership for two decades, and the latter has been staging opera productions at the Spa Little Theater for as many years (it was previously known as the Lake George Opera).

Some of the most exciting news to come from the evening’s discussion was specifics on Opera Saratoga’s 2019 season (SPAC recently released its own schedule for next summer). Opera Saratoga will be rolling out two classics, as well as staging two newer productions, including a world premier. It’s part of Sobol and Edelson’s dual effort to add more contemporary pieces to classical music programming. “I really believe we need to be continually infusing the repertoire with new work,” said Edelson. Sobol concurs: “A performing arts center of our size and stature must be commissioning new works. That’s where the sparks fly.” The world premiere will be Ellen West, with music by Ricky Ian Gordon, along with a libretto featuring the poetry of Pulitzer Prize winner Frank Bidart. This brand of new work explores the emotional, psychological and physical challenges facing a woman as she struggles with negative perceptions, both personal and social, over her body.

Opera Saratoga
A scene from a previous season of Opera Saratoga’s production of ‘The Cradle Will Rock.’ (Susan Brink)

Opera Saratoga will also have the honor of presenting the East Coast premiere of Chicago-based Manual Cinema‘s innovative and visually stunning production of Hansel and Gretel by 19th-century German composer Englebert Humperdink (not to be confused with the English pop singer). This reimagined Hansel and Gretel will feature shadow puppets, colorful projections and silent movie imagery, as well as guest voices from the Glens Falls Symphony Children’s Chorus.

Opera Saratoga’s slated classics won’t disappoint either. Expect a charming production of The Daughter of the Regiment by Italian composer Gaetano Donizetti. This popular opéra comique about love between a handsome soldier and tomboy raised by an army regiment, has not been performed by Opera Saratoga in two decades. And there will also be a staging of Mozart and Salieri, the thrilling Russian opera by composer Nicolai Rimsky-Korsakov with a libretto based on the play by the Russian Romantic poet, Alexander Pushkin. The original play, published in 1832, was the inspiration for the Academy Award-winning film Amadeus (which was originally a play as well). The opera will also be preceded by a number of arias composed by Mozart and Salieri.

Even though fall’s in full effect and winter’s right around the corner, next summer’s season is in sight. Mark your calendar: From June 29 to July 14, make sure your opera glasses ready; it’s going to be another unforgettable season at Opera Saratoga and SPAC.