Melodist


Melodist was an American-bred, British-trained Thoroughbred racehorse and broodmare. As a juvenile in 1987 she showed considerable promise, winning one race and finishing third in the Futurity Stakes. In the following year, she developed into a high-class middle distance performer, winning the Oaks d'Italia and dead-heating for Irish Oaks as well as finishing second in a strongly contested edition of the weight-for-age Geoffrey Freer Stakes. As a broodmare she had some success as a dam of National Hunt horses.

Background

Melodist was a bay mare with no white markings bred in Pennsylvania by Ziw Associates. As a yearling in July 1986 she was consigned to the Keeneland select sale and was bought for $1,100,000 by Sheikh Mohammed's Darley Stud. She was sent to Europe and entered training with Michael Stoute at his Freemason Lodge stable in Newmarket, Suffolk.
She was sired by The Minstrel, a Canadian-bred horse who won The Derby in 1977. As a breeding stallion, The Minstrel sired Bakharoff, Minstrella, Opening Verse, L'Emigrant, Musical Bliss and Palace Music. Melodist was one of several good winners produced by her dam Native Nurse: the others included Love Sign and Fatih. Native Nurse was descended from the American broodmare Omayya, who was also the female-line ancestor of Americain.

Racing career

1987: two-year-old season

Melodist began her racing career by finishing fifth in a maiden race over six furlongs and then ran second in a similar event over a furlong further. In September she started odds-on favourite against sixteen opponents for a maiden over one mile at Brighton Racecourse and won by four lengths. She was then moved up in class when she was sent to Ireland for the Futurity Stakes at the Curragh Racecourse and finished third behind the colts Demon Magic and Gold Discovery.

1988: three-year-old season

In 1988 Melodist was ridden in all four of her races by Walter Swinburn. She did not run as a three-year-old until 22 May when she was sent to Italy for the Oaks d'Italia over 2400 metres on soft ground at the San Siro racecourse in Milan. The finish of the race was dominated by overseas challengers as Melodist won by one and a half lengths from her fellow British raider Asl with the French-trained Summer Trip a neck away in third. On 9 July Melodist was one of nine runners to contest the Irish Oaks over one and a half miles at the Curragh and started at odds of 11/1. The 2/9 favourite for the race was Diminuendo, ridden by Steve Cauthen, who had won The Oaks by four lengths. Both Melodist and Diminuendo were owned by Sheikh Mohammed and based at Newmarket, but whereas Melodist was trained by Stoute, the favourite was trained by Henry Cecil at Warren Place. The other fancied runners were Dancing Goddess, Miss Boniface and Silver Lane. Melodist tracked the leaders before overtaking Miss Boniface before going to the front a furlong and a half from the finish. She faced a strong late challenge from Diminuendo and after a sustained struggle the two fillies crossed the line together with the judge declaring a dead heat.
Melodist was matched against older horse and male opposition when she was stepped up in distance for the Geoffrey Freer Stakes over one mile five and a half furlongs at Newbury Racecourse on 13 August. After being restrained at the rear of the six-runner field she took the lead in the straight but hung badly to the right in the closing stages and was beaten two lengths into second by the three-year-old colt Top Class. The leading older horses Ibn Bey and Moon Madness came home fourth and fifth. On her final appearance the filly was sent to France for the Prix Vermeille at Longchamp Racecourse on 11 September but ran poorly and finished last of the eight runners behind Indian Rose.

Assessment

In 1987 the independent Timeform organisation gave Melodist a rating of 92 p and commented that she would stay at least ten furlongs and was "likely to make up into a useful three-year-old".

Breeding record

After her retirement from racing Melodist became a broodmare for her owners stud. She produced at least twelve named foals and five winners between 1990 and 2006: