Jerry Moss, Co-Owner Of Zenyatta And A Music Industry Legend, Passes

Jerry Moss formed two partnerships with musician Herb Alpert that would have a significant impact on the music and horse racing industries.

Alpert and Moss started A&M Records in Los Angeles in 1962 and recorded some of the era's biggest artists while becoming the music industry's most successful independent label over the next 25 years. Their success earned them entry into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2006.

It was Alpert who also partnered with Moss on some claiming horses in the late 1970s that brought Moss into Thoroughbred racing, where he achieved success with victories in the Kentucky Derby by Giacomo and the Breeders' Cup Classic with Zenyatta, whose only defeat in a 20-race career came in her final start. The latter brought Moss to another Hall of Fame, the National Museum of Racing Hall of Fame in Saratoga Springs, N.Y., where he and his then-wife, Ann Holbrook Moss, were on hand for Zenyatta's induction in 2016.

Moss, 88, died peacefully in his home in Bel Air, Calif., on Wednesday. According to an obituary posted online by his family, he was “surrounded by family and friends who loved and cherished him.”

Born May 8, 1935, during the Great Depression in New York City, Jerome Sheldon Moss was raised in the Bronx. He graduated from Brooklyn College as an English major and served in the U.S. Army before beginning his music industry career in the late 1950s as a promoter for Coed Records in New York. After moving to California in 1960, he met Alpert (a trumpet player whose Tijuana Brass band would go on to achieve great success) and the two men each put up $100 to start A&M Records in a garage.

The business grew, thanks to popular albums like Carol King's “Tapestry,” Peter Frampton's “Frampton Comes Live,” and hit singles from a variety of artists from the Captain and Tennille to the Police. Other artists A&M discovered or signed included Joe Cocker, The Carpenters, Janet Jackson, Soundgarden and Styx.

Moss would name Giacomo after Police lead singer Sting's son. Zenyatta was named for the Police's third studio album, “Zenyatta Mondatta.”

Alpert and Moss sold A&M Records to Polygram for a reported $500 million in 1989.

As a horse owner, mostly in partnership with Ann, Jerry Moss campaigned more than 60 stakes winner, including Grade 1 winners Ruhlmann, Gormley, Tiago, and Sardula. The latter filly by Storm Cat won the 1994 Kentucky Oaks, giving the Mosses the first leg of a rare Oaks-Derby double as owners.

Moss served as a commissioner on the California Horse Racing Board for eight years from 2004-12 and was elected as a member of The Jockey Club in 2009. After his marriage with Ann ended in 2017, Moss would remarry the former Tina Morse in 2019, and the couple campaigned horses in the name of Jerome S. Moss and Tina Moss, including Lady T, winner of the Grade 3 Las Flores Stakes in 2022. Lady T. gave the couple their last racetrack victory when she won a Del Mar allowance race on July 27.

Moss was a supporter of Thoroughbred aftercare, making generous donations to, among other organizations, Old Friends Equine in Georgetown, Ky.

Outside of racing, Jerry Moss was a philanthropist committed to a variety of causes. In 2004, he established the Moss Scholars program at UCLA for students interested in art, architecture and music. In 2020, he  and Tina donated $25 million to the Music Center in Los Angeles, where the 25,000 square foot Jerry Moss Plaza will be a long-lasting legacy, hosting free outdoor concerts thanks to what was described as the largest gift of its kind. Moss also supported numerous health care initiatives, the Geffen Playhouse, Exceptional Children's Foundation and many other causes.

“We respected him for his accomplishments, but adored him for his kindness,” the family's obituary said. “Jerry was a strong, genuine, intelligent, resilient, and hilariously funny, man. … They truly don't make them like him anymore and we will miss conversations with him about everything under the sun … the twinkle in his eyes as he approached every moment ready for the next adventure.”

 

 

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Music Mogul, Horse Owner Jerry Moss Dies at 88

by Bill Finley and Dan Ross

Jerry Moss, who rose to fame in both the music business and in horse racing, died Wednesday in Los Angeles. He was 88.

Moss owned horses in partnership with then his wife, Ann, and while they campaigned many top horses, none could compare to the superstar in Zenyatta (Street Cry {Ire}). A winner of a remarkable 19 races from 20 career starts, she was named Horse of the Year in 2010 and champion older mare in 2008, 2009 and 2010. Her lone defeat came in her final start when was beaten a head by Blame (Arch) in the 2010 GI Breeders' Cup Classic.

“She was unbelievable, just unbelievable,” Moss told TVG in 2019. “Everybody felt like they owned a piece of her. Everybody felt she was their girl and she wasn't going to disappoint them and she never did. She never lost to a filly.”

Zenyatta was ridden by Mike Smith in her final 17 starts. On Wednesday, the Hall of Fame rider shared his memories of Moss.

“He was all class, a wonderful man and wonderful to ride for,” he said. He made you feel special. I will miss him dearly.”

Moss, who co-founded A&M Records along with Herb Alpert, was encouraged to get into the racing business by a longtime friend and colleague Nate Duroff. Along with Duroff and Alpert,

they claimed a horse named Angel Tune for $12,000 in the late sixties. Moss took a step back from racing briefly but started to get more heavily involved in the seventies.

One of his most prominent stars was Giacomo (Holy Bull). Sent off at 50-1 and with Smith riding, he won the GI Kentucky Derby in 2005. It was Moss's first visit to Churchill Downs since he won the GI Kentucky Oaks with Sardula (Storm Cat). Moss never worried that few gave Giacomo a chance.

“Critics are entitled to opinions,” he told the Associated Press. “I never let those opinions get in the way. We think he ran a tremendous race in the Derby and had to surmount tremendous obstacles to win the race. We think maybe the best is yet to come. That he's still growing still learning and still relaxing. He can certainly do better.”

Giacomo won just one other race during his career, the 2006 GII San Diego H. Other top horses owned by Moss include GI Santa Anita Derby winner Gormley (Malibu Moon), GIII winner Keri Belle (Empire Maker), two-time GI winner Zazu (Tapit ), and Cozi Rosie, the winner of the GII John C. Mabbee S., the GII Buena Vista S. and the GIII Senorita S.

Along with Alpert, Moss turned A&M Records into one of the country's leading independent record labels. The Police were among the bands signed by A&M, and that is how Zenyatta got her name, It was taken from the Police's 1980 album release Zenyatta Mondatta.

“Jerry was a great, great man and a dear friend to myself and my family,” wrote Dottie Ingordo-Shirreffs, Moss's long-time racing manager and wife of trainer, John, in a text message Wednesday.

“He was passionate about our sport,” Ingordo-Shirreffs added, about Moss. “Loved every moment of being with his horses. Mornings at the barn was the best way to start his day–then off to the office. He cherished his horses and all of the people who cared for them each day. ”

Trainer John Sadler conditioned a number of top-class runners for the Moss family, including the two-time Grade I winner, Zazu (Tapit). Sadler concurred with Ingordo-Shirreffs's assessment, calling Moss a “great American in every sense of the phrase.”

“So much of his life is well documented on TV in documentaries and biopics,” said Sadler. “He was just a wonderful person, beloved by anyone who knew him. And obviously, he had a great passion for horse racing.”

Sadler highlighted Moss's less heralded efforts in horse racing beyond the flashing light bulbs of the sport's glitziest stages, like his tenure on the California Horse Racing Board (CHRB).

“I still think when I read about him that his philanthropic [largesse] is probably under-reported. He was great at giving back. He was just an amazing man and an amazing American story,” said Sadler.

“I remember some of our conversations. To hear him talk about Joe Cocker. To hear him talk about one of my early favorites as a teenager, Cat Stevens. The artists that he worked with, it was just a who's-who. The other great one is Sting. There was that much depth to him.”

When it comes to horse racing, Moss's most enduring contribution, said Sadler, was his enduring love of the horse.

“He loved his horses with a passion. A passion. Always wanted to do the right thing–that was a given,” said Sadler. “He'll be missed because he was a great man. A truly great man.”

Services will be held in Los Angeles this weekend at Pierce Brothers Westwood Village Memorial Park & Mortuary.

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Wet Paint ‘Really Knuckled Down’ In Tough Race, Stretches Out To 10 Furlongs In Alabama

Godolphin's Kentucky homebred Wet Paint notched a breakthrough Grade 1 score last out in Saratoga Race Course's nine-furlong $500,000 Coaching Club American Oaks. The daughter of Blame will look to build upon that effort when stretching out to 10 furlongs for the first time in Saturday's Grade 1, $600,000 Alabama presented by Keeneland Sales for sophomore fillies at the Spa.

Trained by two-time Eclipse Award-winner Brad Cox, Wet Paint's CCA Oaks victory came in thrilling fashion when flying home late under regular pilot Flavien Prat to nail Sacred Wish at the wire and secure a neck score in a final time of 1:50.68. She equaled a career-best 89 Beyer Speed Figure for the effort, which came on the heels of a runner-up finish to Hoosier Philly in the Monomoy Girl at Ellis Park where the latter was alone on the lead and coasted home a 3 1/2-length winner.

Michael Banahan, Director of Bloodstock for Godolphin, said the Monomoy Girl set up Wet Paint well for the CCA Oaks.

“The race at Ellis was purely a prep race and when we saw the field and the way it was going to develop, we knew we were up against it,” said Banahan. “But we were very pleased with the way she ran and with a paceless race like that, she really knuckled down and ran well. In the CCA Oaks, there was concern if she would get there at the end, but you could see her lower her head and make her run at the top of the stretch. We didn't know if she would get there, but we knew she would try hard. Even in races with not enough pace, she still seems to run her best race.

“She's doing very well and she's in great shape,” Banahan added. “Brad is very happy with her and we were pleased with her coming out of the Coaching Club, so we feel she should give a good account of herself on Saturday.”

The CCA Oaks was Wet Paint's first visit to the winner's circle since April when she took the Grade 3 Fantasy at Oaklawn Park, her third consecutive stakes triumph at the Hot Springs oval before finishing a closing fourth as the post-time favorite in the Grade 1 Kentucky Oaks.

Wet Paint kicked off her sophomore campaign with a two-length victory in the Martha Washington traveling 1 1/16 miles over wet-fast and sealed conditions and followed with an impressive win over sloppy and sealed conditions next out in the Grade 3 Honeybee in February, which she won with a devastating late rally from 12 lengths off the pace to cross the wire 2 1/2 lengths in front.

Though Wet Paint has not traveled beyond nine furlongs, Banahan said he is confident she can flourish over the added ground.

“Her running style and the way she finishes her races makes you think she can stretch out. This is maybe the one and only time these fillies have to go this far, and we just hope that there's a little bit of pace to run at,” said Banahan. “She goes from way off the pace and we just want something run at. We're very hopeful we can get the Alabama on her honor roll.”

Prat retains the mount from post 2.

Black Type Thoroughbreds, Swinbank Stables, Steve Adkisson, Christopher Dunn and Anthony Spinazzola's Sacred Wish will try to turn the tables on Wet Paint after nearly fending off her familiar foe in the CCA Oaks. Trained by George Weaver, the Not This Time dark bay tracked in second throughout before taking the lead at the stretch call and powering down the lane under Manny Franco. She ran on bravely and drew clear from all but Wet Paint, who nabbed the victory in the final strides.

Sacred Wish is yet to defeat winners, but boasts a strong runner-up finish to Affirmative Lady in the Grade 2 Gulfstream Park Oaks in April at its namesake track. The $50,000 Fasig-Tipton Midlantic Sale of 2-Year-Olds in Training purchase has banked $215,500 through a record of 6-1-3-1.

Sacred Wish will emerge from the inside post in rein to Hall of Famer John Velazquez.

Hall of Fame trainer Todd Pletcher brings a trio of skilled competitors as the New York-bred Kentucky Oaks runner-up Gambling Girl [post 7, Irad Ortiz, Jr.], Grade 1-winner Chocolate Gelato [post 6, Jose Ortiz] and Grade 2-winner Julia Shining [post 3, Luis Saez] attempt to give him his fifth win in this event. Pletcher has won this event the past two years with Nest last year and Malathaat in 2021, both of whom where named Champion 3-Year-Old Filly following their respective seasons.

Leading the triad is the Repole Stable-owned pair of Gambling Girl and Chocolate Gelato, the former of which enters from an even third-place finish behind Wet Paint in the CCA Oaks. The daughter of Dialed In, bred in New York by Gallagher's Stud, has hit the board in both of her tries at the top level, including the CCA Oaks and a gutsy second in the Kentucky Oaks when closing furiously down the stretch to come up just a neck shy of the victorious Pretty Mischievous.

Gambling Girl is in search of her first win since September when taking the state-bred Joseph A. Gimma at Belmont at the Big A, but has posted a respectable sophomore campaign that includes an additional two stakes placings when second in the nine-furlong Busanda in January and the Grade 3 Gazelle in April, both at Aqueduct Racetrack. The bay filly was also a game third behind stablemate and returning rival Julia Shining in the Grade 2 Demoiselle last year at the Big A.

Chocolate Gelato, a dark bay daughter of Practical Joke, finished fourth in her lone outing this year in the six-furlong Jersey Girl at Belmont, ending a seven-month respite that followed a distant off-the-board finish in the Grade 1 Breeders' Cup Juvenile Fillies in November at Keeneland. Chocolate Gelato graduated at second asking by 8 1/2 lengths in August at the Spa before closing from off-the-pace to notch a Grade 1 triumph in the one-turn mile Frizette in October at Belmont at the Big A.

Rounding out the Pletcher contingent is Stonestreet Stables' Kentucky homebred Julia Shining, who makes her first start off a four-month layoff after finishing a close third in the Grade 1 Ashland in April at Keeneland. The Curlin filly, who is a full-sister to the aforementioned dual Champion Malathaat, won her debut in October sprinting seven furlongs at Keeneland before conquering her first test against winners in style with a determined neck score over Affirmative Lady in the Grade 2 Demoiselle.

This year, Julia Shining has finished third in both her outings, including the Ashland and the one-mile and 40-yard Suncoast to kick off her campaign in February at Tampa Bay Downs. She has banked $262,575 in total earnings through her 4-2-0-2 record.

Trainer Kenny McPeek has won the Alabama twice in the past five runnings with Eskimo Kisses [2018] and Swiss Skydiver [2020], and is well-represented this year by Katsumi Yoshida's Grade 1-winner Defining Purpose.

“If I can pull this off, that'll be three of the last six Alabamas,” said McPeek. “It's pretty exciting.”

The gray Cross Traffic filly arrives from a tidy 1 1/4-length coup in the Grade 3 Indiana Oaks traveling 1 1/16 miles on July 8 at Horseshoe Indianapolis where she stalked one length off the pace before getting first run in the turn and taking charge at the top of the stretch. She was awarded a career-best 87 Beyer for the effort.

McPeek noted the filly does her best running when well-rested, evidenced by her Indiana Oaks performance that came two months after finishing a distant seventh in the Kentucky Oaks.

“She's doing super and she's ready,” said McPeek. “She does really well when we space her races good, and the Indiana Oaks was a well-spaced race. We're excited that she has a chance to win another Grade 1.”

Defining Purpose scored her first Grade 1 in April in the Ashland when delivering a 20-1 upset over the favored Punchbowl with her usual stalk-and-pounce tactics. She had previously finished a respective third and sixth in the Martha Washington and Honeybee behind Wet Paint, and won Oaklawn's one-mile Year's End on New Year's Eve by 5 1/4 lengths.

McPeek said he is hopeful Defining Purpose will relish the Alabama distance.

“None of them have done it yet, so it's wide open, but I think she's perfectly capable,” said McPeek. “She's been a filly that has been a bit of an overachiever from the beginning. She was a $14,000 RNA as a young horse, so everything she's accomplished up until now is all gravy. She's extremely smart and is very willing. She loves her tasks and she's an easy filly to train. She's training fantastic.”

Regular pilot Brian Hernandez, Jr. will look to engineer a winning ride from the outermost post 10.

Completing the field are the Chad Brown-trained duo of Klaravich Stables' Wilton-winner Randomized [post 8, Joel Rosario] and Juddmonte's allowance-winner Fireline [post 5, Javier Castellano]; Richard Bahde's graded stakes-winner Taxed [post 9, Rafael Bejarano], who finished second last out in the Indiana Oaks and won the Grade 2 Black-Eyed Susan in May at Pimlico Race Course for conditioner Randy Morse; and Valene Farms' graded stakes-placed Sabra Tuff [post 4, Reylu Gutierrez], who finished third in last year's Grade 3 Adirondack for trainer Dallas Stewart.

The Alabama is slated as Race 9 on Saturday's 11-race card, which also features the Grade 2, $200,000 Lake Placid in Race 7. First post is 1:10 p.m. Eastern.

Saratoga Live will present live coverage and analysis of the Saratoga Race Course summer meet on the networks of FOX Sports. For the broadcast schedule and channel finder, visit https://www.nyra.com/saratoga/racing/tv-schedule/.

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