Composer, Songwriter And Horse Owner Burt Bacharach Passes Away At 94

Burt Bacharach, a famed music composer and songwriter and a Grade I winning horse owner, passed away Wednesday at his home in Los Angeles. He was 94.

The Associated Press reported that he died of natural causes.

When not in a music studio, Bacharach could often be found at the racetrack, enjoying a sport he called “exhilarating.”

According to a 1994 feature in the Los Angeles Times, Bacharach, who was born in Kansas City, became a racing fan while growing up in Queens. He said he would make “mind bets” on that day's card at the New York tracks.

“I was hooked,” he told Times columnist Jim Murray. “But I was ignorant. When I saw 114 under the jockey's name, I thought that was the horse's weight.”

Once he began to have success in the music industry Bacharach started to invest in horses and teamed up with legendary trainer Charlie Whittingham. His first horse was a claimer named Battle Royal. Bacharach said he was crushed when the horse was claimed from him in 1968 and told Whittingham to claim him back the next time he started.

His first big star was the mare Heartlight No. One, who was named after a song he wrote for Neil Diamond. A winner of three stakes in 1983, including the GI Hollywood Oaks and the GI Ruffian H., she was named champion 3-year-old filly in 1983. She was bred by Bacharach's Blue Seas Music.

“We named her Heartlight No. One because we hoped the song would be number one on the charts,” Bacharach said following the Ruffian. “The song only got to number three but I guess the filly's number one.”

Bacharach's next “big horse” was Soul of the Matter, a horse he bred in West Virginia. Trained by Richard Mandella, Soul of the Matter won four stakes, topped by the GI Super Derby in 1994. He also won the 1994 GII San Felipe S. and the 1995 GII Goodwood H. He finished fifth in the 1994 GI Kentucky Derby, fourth in the 1995 GI Breeders' Cup Classic and gave Cigar all he could handle when finishing second behind the Horse of the Year in the inaugural Dubai World Cup in 1996.

It was at the same time that Mandella was developing a promising colt for Bacharach named Afternoon Deelites. The winner of the 1994 GI Hollywood Futurity, Afternoon Deelites, another West Virginia bred, won his first five races before finishing second in the GI Santa Anita Derby. After finishing eighth in the Kentucky Derby, he won the GI Malibu S.

Bacharach was still active as an owner at the time of his passing, owning Duvet Day (Starspangledbanner {AUS}) in partnership with Jane and Richard Schatz. Duvet Day last started on Jan. 21 at Santa Anita for trainer Micheal McCarthy.

“Why do I race? I think it's because most of us are in a world we have control over,” Bacharach told Murray. “We control what's going on, whether it's a concert, a TV series, a movie to score or a tune to be written. Then, we have something we love but can't control. You can't make a horse run faster than he wants to. That's the pain of it. But it's exhilarating for people who otherwise control their lives.

“Besides, the race crowd is different. More understated, more calm, more comfortable to be with. We're like the $2 bettor. We deal with the disappointments, shrug off the defeats, go back to the drawing board, the Form. You know how we are. There's always tomorrow.”

When reached Thursday, Mandella had nothing but fond memories of his time working for Bacharach.

“It is so sad to think of him gone,” Mandella said. “He was one of the most fun owners I ever had. I'll always remember the first Dubai World Cup. Soul of the Matter came from last at the top of the stretch and went through the field and actually got his nose in front of Cigar at the eighth pole and it looked like we had it won. Cigar dug back in and beat us. After the race we had to go down some winding stairs and halfway down I looked back and he was crying like a baby. That's how much it meant to him. He was a terrific person and we had some great times together.”

Bacharach compassed hundreds of pop song from the late 1950s through the 1980s, many of them in collaboration with Hal David. A six-time Grammy Award winner and a three-time Academy Award winner, his songs were recorded by more than 1,000 artists including Dionne Warwick, Perry Como, Tom Jones, Herb Alpert, B.J. Thomas and the Carpenters.  Music writer William Farina called Bacharach “a composer whose venerable name can be linked with just about every other prominent musical artist of his era.”

Among his biggest hits were the song “Raindrops Keep Fallin' On My Head,” “That's What Friends Are For,” “They Long to Be Close to You,” and the theme song to the movie Arthur. In 2012, the Bacharach and David received the Library of Congress Gershwin Prize for Popular Song, the first time the honor has been given to a songwriting team.

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Turcotte: Secretariat Was Better

Secretariat vs. Flightline (Tapit): Who was better?

“I think Secretariat would have beat him,” Secretariat's jockey Ron Turcotte said of a hypothetical match up between the two legendary horses. “That's no knock against the other horse. He's a beautiful horse. Well put together. I can't fault him in any way. But he has hasn't done enough for me to say he is better than Secretariat.”

That's not to say that Turcotte isn't a Flightline fan.

“He's a fabulous horse,” he said. “We don't know how fast he could run.”

Turcotte, 81, resides in Drummond, New Brunswick, Canada. He watched the GI Breeders' Cup Classic live on television and took a look back at Flightline's previous races on YouTube. He sees some similarities between Flightline and Secretariat.

“He's very muscular like Secretariat,” Turcotte said. “He's got a real large stride like Secretariat and it looks to me than he's taller than Secretariat was.”

But Turcotte added that he finds it difficult to compare a horse who ran only six times to Secretariat, who made 21 career starts.

“There aren't enough races for me to really judge him,” he said. “It's very hard to judge a horse against Secretariat when he only had six races. Secretariat was a machine  The same goes for some of the great horses like Kelso. He won the Gold Cup five times in a row. I rode against him and know what a great horse he was.

“I would have loved to see Flightline run another year because it's very hard to judge him on just six races. it would have been much better for racing if they ran him another year, but I can understand why the people did what they did, with all the money there is now in breeding.”

Turcotte said another factor that makes a comparison difficulty is that Secretariat did not run as a 4-year-old while Flightline did.

“Comparing a 4-year-old and a 3-year-old, that's awful hard to do,” he said. “Secretariat was just maturing when he was retired. His last two races were just unbelievable.”

He also pointed to Secretariat's versatility and the track records Secretariat set in his three Triple Crown wins.

“Secretariat would run in the slop , the mud, on a fast track, the grass. He would run on anything.” he said. “The other horse only ran on fast tracks. And he never broke a track record, like Secretariat did.”

It's been 49 years since Turcotte rode Secretariat and there have been some tremendous horses that have come after him, like Seattle Slew, Affirmed, Spectacular Bid, Cigar, Zenyatta and, of course Flightline. But will there ever be a horse that compares to Secretariat?

“I've always said we'd never see a horse as good as Secretariat,” Turcotte said. “But you never know.”

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Riley Mott to Start Own Stable

Hall of Famer Bill Mott's son, Riley Mott, will go out on his own as a trainer later this year after serving as his father's assistant for the past eight years. The younger Mott has been a familiar face of his father's stable, often traveling with the barn's stars to major races around the world. The 30-year-old took out his own training license in Florida this winter.

“I learned from an early age that training horses wasn't just a business, but a lifestyle,” said Mott. “I walked my first horse when I was 6-years-old and immediately developed a love for the game.”

Mott began rubbing horses and walking hots in his father's barn, eventually ran the shedrow, and was finally named assistant trainer in 2014. He also majored in economics at the University of Kentucky. His father is not only in the Hall of Fame, but is also a three-time winner of the Eclipse Award for outstanding trainer and has trained numerous champions, including two-time Horse of the Year Cigar.

“Following in my dad's footsteps is something I think about every day,” said Mott. “I hold him in such high regard both personally and professionally. I often use his accomplishments as motivation to step up my game as both a horseman and a human.”

He continued: “I have learned so much from working under the boss and everyone else in our operation, but by far the most important lesson I've learned from him is that no matter what, it's all about the horses. You strive to look out for your owners' best interests and provide a healthy working environment for your staff, but to do that you must do right by your horses. You do that, and the rest will follow.”

Mott said that several of his father's owners have offered to support him with horses. He has also started to pick up new clients.

He and his wife, Megan, reside in Saratoga during the summer months, but plan to move to Hot Springs for the upcoming Oaklawn meet and then to Kentucky for the rest of the year. They have a 9-month-old daughter, Margot.

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Trainer Hofmans On Alphabet Soup: ‘A Good Horse To Be Around’

Trainer David Hofmans understandably had nothing but fond memories of his 1996 Breeders' Cup Classic winner Alphabet Soup, who was euthanized Friday at Old Friends Thoroughbred Retirement in Georgetown, Ky., due to chronic kidney disease.

Foaled on March 31, 1991, Alphabet Soup was 31.

“I guess his kidneys finally gave out,” said Los Angeles native Hofmans, who turned 79 on Thursday. “He's been a good horse to a lot of people. He was super; I've got all good memories about him.”

Alphabet Soup, a descendant of Nearco, was a gray son of Cozzene out of the Arts and Letters mare Illiterate. He compiled a 10-3-6 record from 24 lifetime starts, earning $2,990,270 for Mrs. Georgia Ridder's Ridder Thoroughbred Stable.

He set a track record for 1 ¼ miles at Woodbine when he won the 1996 Classic, defeating both the great Cigar and Preakness winner Louis Quatorze. Upon the death of A.P. Indy on Feb. 21, 2020, Alphabet Soup became the oldest living winner of the Breeders' Cup Classic.

Alphabet Soup raced in 1997 at age six, his best effort coming in defense of the San Antonio Handicap when he finished second to Gentlemen. Alphabet Soup retired to stud duty at Frank Stronach's Adena Springs in Kentucky.

“He was an absolute pleasure to train and an absolute pleasure to race,” Hofmans said. “He tried hard almost every time.

“If he didn't win it was usually because I had him in the wrong race, but he was a good horse to be around, I'll tell you.”

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