Posted in Music and horses

Hazelโ€™s Christmas Blessing

Left to right: Lee Warren, The original president of the Drivers Club, (CAADA) Arthur Lisi Sr, Art Lisi Jr, Tony Panzarella, Sam, Lipton, Nancy, Lisi, and driver, Eddie Davis.

Editor: Anna Lisi

Hazelโ€™s Fury was the kind of horse that you got stuck with. Mean and contrary, seemingly slow but very intelligent. She would strike with her front feet, kick with her hind feet in any direction, and her teeth were always ready to bite the hand that feeds her, or anyone elseโ€™s. Week in and week out, she was the last horse in the last race at Rosecroft Raceway. A $2,500 claimer. We used to console ourselves with the fact that at least we were close to the restrooms. More often than not, she finished last.

Arthur Lisi loved Hazel. We had raised her from a $400 weaning. A daughter of Hazel Tuscarora, of very, very questionable bloodlines. Her mother was mean-spirited, and would not try very hard either. The sire was an unknown stallion.

She had two things in her favor. First, she was very beautiful with a shapely build, a glowing healthy coat, and a beautiful head, with a kindly eye that belied her true wicked nature. Second, she was perfectly gaited and hardly needed to wear the long hobbles, nearly a free-legged pacer. So true was her gait that once even when she was hit by another horse, she would not make a break, after staggering sideways she stayed truly on the pace.

Growing up, she loved the snow, and as a young filly would play and jump for hours, rolling and gleefully running about at the Warthen farm in Elkridge Maryland.

The only reason we could afford keeping her was that she was popular with the drivers of the bi-monthly amateur races, which earned her feed money with the automatic $150 participation payment.

All this background on a nondescript harness racehorse. How does the gypsy blessing fit in?

At this point, we were strapped. Van McCoy had died, leaving Arthur and his touring band with very few options. Because of touring, he had given up his piano lesson business and it was hard to get them started again. Thank goodness our friend Sam Lipton would pay Art to arrange and record the fun jazzy ditties that he wrote. Plus Sam would stop by the barn at Rosecroft with feed for the stable. Art had a disco band that played gigs around town. We would clean stalls, take paddocks, anything to keep things rolling.

Then one day he got a call asking for an Orchestral arrangement for a “Romanian Church Christmas Cantata.โ€ Two hundred dollars! It was a big job. Arthur set right to work. Arranging the music for violin, viola, cello, horns…the whole works.

Arthur Lisi knew his craft well and had helped arrange and copy many orchestral scores for Van McCoy and others. All parts were neatly copied for the musicians and ready to go.

The day before the recording session, he got a call from the client saying they could only pay him one hundred dollars. Arthur agreed. I said, โ€œThey sound like Gypsies.โ€ He retorted, โ€œDonโ€™t be ridiculous! There’s no such thing as Gypsies anymore.โ€

Off he went the next evening to a basement studio in Washington, DC. He came home at two in the morning, exhausted. He ruefully described the evening, adding, โ€œYou were right, one of the string players asked me about a quarter rest and said, ‘In Gypsyโ€ฆahhhโ€ฆ I mean Romanian, we write it this way.'”

Art continued, โ€œThe engineer behind the glass started to argue with the guy, gesturing wildly. I saw him pull the wrinkled up hundred dollar bill out and give it to him, I KNEW it was my hundredโ€ฆ. When we were done, I stood at the door leaving, and he grabbed my face and kissed each cheek, saying, ‘God bless you and your family.’โ€

Ugh. He got nothing for his hard work. Par for the course. Obviously, he wouldnโ€™t take any jobs from them anymore.

A rather lean Christmas passed, and Hazel was in to race two nights later. As I led her up to the paddock, suddenly a huge snow squall began. Heavy flakes flying in the cold wind. Hazel, normally calmly walking beside me, this time becoming extremely animated, snorting, leaping, and running around, trying to lie down and bucking joyfully. Could she be remembering her childhood playing in the snow? I could hardly hold her.

Eddie Davis had come to town. He only occasionally drove at Rosecroft and is considered one of the great reinsman in the sport. We had seen Eddie listed under “Harness Racing” along with the legendary Herve Filion in our old encyclopedia!

After I checked her up for Eddie, the race began with the snow flying. โ€œAnd there they goooo, theyโ€™re driving out for that lead!โ€ Billy Perkins, in his sing-song voice, unmistakable as an announcer. He couldnโ€™t see the numbers on the horses backs until they got to the front side and then quickly called out the lineup, Hazel had gotten away last as usual. Then there was silence, as they rounded the turn to the half.

By this time, Rosecroft had converted from a half mile to a five-eighths mile track, so they only went around one and a half times. Only ghostly shadows were visible on the backside as they sped past the three-quarter pole. Seated bored on the fence, I about choked as the 2,500 claimers literally exploded out of the fog. โ€œAAAAAND THREEEE WIDE ITSโ€ฆ HAZELS FUUUURYYYY -COMING HOME TO WIN THIS RACE!โ€

The squall eerily quit as suddenly as it had begun. Art wasnโ€™t there but Sam Lipton joined me. We stood there stunned and delighted in the winners circle. Of course, Sam, an avid gambler, drilling me โ€œYou could have said something!โ€œ but all smiles nonetheless.

Eddie, always a jovial character, eased her into the paddock, speaking loudly to me in front of the other drivers about what a nice horse she was and how โ€œeveryone should have a horse this nice to drive.” Everyone, including me, laughing, as I led her to the test barn as all winners and second place finishers had to go there.

This definitely boosted our late Christmas. We splurged and bought our oldest son a Tony Hawk board (little did we know Art Lisi Jr would end up ripping those skateboards right through his 40s).

Even though this is a Christmas story, we must fast-forward to Easter, when Arthur got another call, asking for an Easter Cantata. โ€œAre you going to do it?โ€œ โ€œHell yes!โ€

Same scenario, this time without the quarrel in the studio engineer booth. When they were done, he got his kiss on both sides of his cheek, โ€œGod bless you and your family.โ€ Leaving with empty pockets.

Easter was nearly here, and Hazelโ€™s Christmas purse money was long spent. Seated once again as usual, half asleep on a bucket, next to the restroom, with an outside post in the last race. As we lined up for the race, and a youthful driver Mark Gray this time taking the lines, a heavy, dense fog fell over the entire place.

Once again, we could hear Billy Perkins call, singing โ€œand there they gooooo -driving out for that lead!!” Once again, he had to wait for the lineup in front of the grandstand and of course, Hazel last. They disappeared into the fog and burst out, this time with Hazel on top by three lengths! โ€œAnd itโ€™sโ€ฆHazel Fury??โ€ Perkins cried incredulously.

A bountiful Easter was had by all, with a feast at Artโ€™s brother Dale and his wife Caroleโ€™s house.

Because Hazel was so easy on herself, she raced until the mandatory cut-off date of 15 years of age. She got an award for the most starts in an amateur race, raced 62 times one year, and retired 100% sound. We foolishly bred her. Unfortunately she was very mean to her big sweet baby – Hazel’s Nipper. The filly was so cowed that she would not race at all, rather gently watching the others as they passed her. We sold her for a show horse because she was so beautiful and Nipper became a successful dressage horse.

With Hazel’s Fury being very vicious she could not be rehomed as a pet. An Amishman with no children who had a store bought her. We made sure she was jogged up to 8 miles a day before I handed her over to him. He said he would “put her downโ€ when her days were done. We often wonder what kind of work she was doing and hoped she didnโ€™t bite anyone.

We never heard from the Gypsies again but the blessing got us through some hard times.

Merry Christmas and have a great New Year.

And God Bless You and Your Family.

Posted in Music and horses

Musical Horseman Mike Pratt: Everyone always wants more

Video: My Advice to you
Video: You Gotta know
โ€”โ€”โ€”โ€”โ€”โ€”๐ŸŒบโ€”โ€”โ€”โ€”โ€”-

further Update: Kerry Mike Pratt passed away on Tuesday, May 16th after a long-fought battle with chronic illness. He passed peacefully surrounded by his family who loved him while listening to his favorite music. Here is a go fund me to help pay for his last expenses. ๏ฟผ

I first met Kerry Michael Pratt by reading his name in the Rockingham racing program. I may have seen Mike checking up the horse as they walked out of the Paddock for the post parade, but to tell you the truth, I was watching the race on a tv monitor, and probably didnโ€™t even see that. I was only interested in his HORSE -as a business opportunity.

In the early 2000โ€™s for four years or so, Rockingham Park, generally a Thoroughbred track in New Hampshire, hosted a three-month summer harness meet. A lot of us from Rosecroft packed up and went, including the Lisi stables, which by then was pared down to ten horses. What a great time. The Maryland, Delaware, Pennsylvania, Jersey and New York horsemen made many lifelong friends with the New Englanders.

While I was stabled there in 2003, an owner of mine decided that he wanted to claim a horse.

My client preferred trotters, but would consider a pacer. He wanted to spend ten or twelve thousand bucks, and I agreed. We both felt it was a perfect time and place to claim one for racing in the autumn at Colonial Downs, and if the horse stepped up, we could go in the winter to race for big money at The Meadowlands…We had come up with several choices.

Enter my sonsโ€™ input:

โ€œMa thereโ€™s only one horse here to claim, a four year old pacer. He canโ€™t leave a lick, but heโ€™s been flying home. – a late bloomerโ€

~By this time, my son had worked as a Paddock blacksmith under Larry Ward at Rosecroft Raceway coming out of Oklahoma Shoeing School. He had done his share of gambling while on the job, and really knew how to watch a horse race. He knew how a race would shake out, and saw things that many people didnโ€™t. Because of this, I put a lot of stock in his opinion.

… He was in for $12,000 โ€œClaim him TONIGHT Maโ€ … My owner wanted me to watch the horse race first.

The blocky medium sized black gelding got away last, but came home in 26 and a piece to finish in the money, but did not win. We figured heโ€™d go right back in that class. It was the first time heโ€™d ever been in a claimer.

Next week he was in for $15,000… My owner almost decided to do it…he was on the fence. That very week, he bought an unraced seven year old Pine Chip stallion from the Amish cheap, and shipped him to us. He and I preferred trotters anyway. My son threw up his hands in frustration as I turned my attention to our new charge. He had a hitch from a suspensory, continually irritated by the callous of an old broken splint bone. Not a bad horse.

Of course, Heroโ€™s Cavalcade won for 15, and was removed from the claiming ranks. He was learning to leave, and wasnโ€™t losing anything coming home. It was a killer combination which made him very hard to beat. He kept winning his way up to the top classes by the time the Rockingham meet was over. Basically, Junior and I tried not to notice.

We went directly from โ€œThe Rockโ€ to stable for the fall Colonial Downs harness meet in New Kent, Va. At that point Colonial was very welcoming to out-of-state Horsemen, and we all urged our new friends in New England to come and race. We could stay in the dorms there, and there were many late closers, and good purses, not far from Richmond.

Arthur Jr. was shoeing on the side, and got to know Mike Pratt. โ€œMa Iโ€™m so glad we didnโ€™t claim that horse. Itโ€™s his only horse, and he really loves him.โ€ I started to notice the two of them, jogging on the track, taking long walks together, grazing him by the hour in between the barns. I struck up a conversation with him, not mentioning our desire to claim his horse this past summer.

We didnโ€™t talk about horses.

We talked about music. He had seen me playing guitar at my Rockingham barn with Angus, another bluegrasser horseman, and Mike and I started talking… chatting about guitars, songs we liked, favorite recording artists. Angus had sold me a cheap Alvarez which I had with me at Colonial.

Musicians have a unique bond, very similar to the one that fellow horsemen have. It is different than merely having a โ€œcommon interestโ€œ. It is the sharing of a passion, or even an obsession as some might call it. It is itโ€™s own world, and the people who are inside it know how the others feel, think, and express themselves.

โ€œHey Nancy, theyโ€™re having a fish fry at the back dorms tonight, I donโ€™t have my guitar with me, why donโ€™t you bring yours and play?โ€

~ Turns out, Mike was a pro.

At some point he had played the club circuit. Like me though, once he got bitten by the Harness bug he did not look back, except to play very occasionally for himself. He knew a boatload of classic rock and pop songs that he had adapted to his solo acoustic style. He was also a songwriter, which I didnโ€™t find out until later.

At sunset, the fish fry was rolling. Some of the guys had been fishing at a nearby lake, and caught a bunch of rockfish. The coals were hot on the grill, and it was a free-for-all, with plenty of beer and wine to go around. We all hung out in the space of about three dorms, on picnic benches and chairs, under a canopy of bright stars, with filet after filet served up endlessly from the grille.

We played.

Iโ€™d do one, then hand the Alvarez over to him and he would do one. If one knew the othersโ€™ song, we would sing along. Mike was a huge hit. He selected songs that were familiar to most of the folks there, they were singing along, clapping, and generally having just a great time. He was a very complementary and gracious fellow. With an easy smile and likable manner, he did not seem to need the abundant applause and admiration he got from the listeners. Mike was just doing what came naturally and what he enjoyed.

Playing music at this point was only a temporary interlude for Mike, his time was centered on his buddy, Hero.

We met up a few more times at subsequent meets at Colonial. Great singing, playing and jamming times.

He was excited when he bought his Martin guitar, and of course it was nice to be able to not have to share one guitar but to actually play together.

Mike often spoke of his kids and his wife Lisa, whom he first met at a horsemansโ€™ picnic at Foxboro Raceway in 1993. Being a racing official herself, she has supported his endeavors, both musical and equine, all the way, one hundred percent.

I would go up and race the Meadowlands, and I could see Hero in the program, winning the top classes, no easy feat in those days to race at that level at that particular track. He was amassing big earnings, that maybe could have been ours? A question never to be answered. I pride myself on my care and knowledge of horses, but Mike comes from a racing family and had as much as I did or more. Only recently I have heard of his father “Snuffy”” a savvy trainer.

Mike retired Hero, when he still could have raced him at a lower level, and continued to make money.

Typical… Mike has always left us wanting more.

Enter the age of the Internet, cell phones, …social media! It was easier for everyone to keep up with friends and family. I was so pleased to see that they still had Heroโ€™s Cavalcade, and he relaxes in luxury settings with another equine buddy Rastus on their New England farm. I think folks who malign racing would be surprised to know how many trainers and owners provide homes for their horses when the racing days are over.

Mike made a comeback to racing competition. After making sure he could still win a race, he once again retired to the farm. I would see his multiple posts and was amazed at the variety of genres that he likes. From Jazz to Country to rock ‘n’ roll. He never seemed to limit himself.

Mike writes songs. Lots of them. Iโ€™ve only heard a couple.

Like it always is with Mike, he leaves us all wanting more.

Mike amazingly has survived multiple health crisis, including liver and kidney failure. While in the hospital, he wrote a super bunch of songs, he videotaped himself doing theee of them, Lisa had me upload these two:

The first is entitled frankly: โ€œMy Advice to Youโ€œ

The second we have is a song written to and for his wife Lisa. โ€œYou Gotta Knowโ€

…As usual, Mike always leaves us wanting more.

As I write this, Michael Pratt is struggling for his life from some strange infection which has spread over his body and into his blood. He is way too young to go, and we are all hoping that the inevitable which comes for all of us will not visit him yet. I hope that I will be able to update this blog by writing and tell you that he has pulled through once again, to sing for us and play his guitars.

Iโ€™m so glad we never claimed that little Black horse.

Mike. We want more.

Update: from Wife Lisa:

Good news to share: After 51+Days, Mike is home! Kidney is functional again and blood is normal. The Drs have no explanation as to the cause of this nightmare. In true “Mike” fashion he said, “I should be good to paddock in a few weeks” Let’s hope!! I want to thank everyone for the outpouring of love and support. I truly believe all the positive energy helped him heal.”

โ€”โ€”โ€”โ€”โ€”โ€”โ€”๐ŸŒธ-โ€”โ€”——————-

Harness Jargon & terms:

[1] Most harness horses in America wear an overcheck bit which supports the head during the race. Before going out for the post parade, as the driver gets on the seat, that is when the overcheck strap is attached to a hook on top of the harness. Thus โ€œChecking upโ€
[2] An owner is a person who pays a professional racehorse trainer to train their horse. They may also have training and driving capabilities.
[3] Meaning: to start quickly in a race with the ability to get โ€œon topโ€, or to lead the race
[4] Meaning: last quarter a few fifths over 26 seconds. In 2000 that was top-flight speed
[6] Hind-end uneven gait: from lameness, a neurological problem or shoeing imbalance.
[7] We patched the Pine Chip trotter up to win a race in a respectable 1:57 at Colonial Downs, then sent him to the owner to fool with up near his home in Jersey. He eventually ended up back with the Amishman who used him to breed. I wonder if any of his offspring are around?

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