Poker
Whiz Sartori Hopes to Deal an Ace in Music
The maverick musician from Buffalo,
N.Y., travels the country singing his songs
and raking in the chips.
Thirty-year-old
Tom Sartori is using his fame at the poker table
to boost his career onstage and in the recording
business.
"The
publicity has been helpful," Sartori said
last week while in town competing with 450 other
poker players in the Doyle Brunson North American
Poker Championship, a World Poker Tour event,
at the Bellagio. He was ousted about halfway
through, but picked up $20,000 in side games.
Sartori
came in 26th out of more than 5,600 entries
in Harrah's World Series of Poker at the Rio
over the summer, taking home $300,000.
He
used that money to hire a first-rate producer,
Geza X (producer of Meredith Brooks' multiplatinum
"Bitch"); a Latin Grammy-winning mixer,
Charles Dy (2001's Latin album "Arrasando");
and a publicist.
All
of whom helped Sartori create his first major
album, "All In," which will be released
in late December.
"The
title is a poker reference, since all of my
poker winnings are being dumped into my music
career," Sartori said.
The
album is being produced by his own independent
label, Ace High.
A
cut from the album, "You're Still Standing,"
will be played when ESPN2 airs an interview
with Sartori on Channel 31 at various times
during the day on Tuesday.
ESPN
taped the World Series of Poker last year and
is airing it over the next several weeks.
Since
placing among the top Texas hold 'em poker players
in the world, Sartori has become a target for
every would-be poker player on college campuses
around the country.
"My
band was always fairly popular on the college
circuit," Sartori, a pop artist, said.
"Then I got into the poker thing, and a
lot of fans found out -- now when I go to college
towns, everyone wants to play poker after the
concert. They want to take on a winner."
And
he says he wins about 90 percent of the time
against the college students, who are getting
an education in losing.
"That's
been helping out a lot," he said.
Which
came first, the poker or the music?
The
music.
Sartori
has been playing professionally since leaving
high school. In the early years he mostly played
small clubs in and around Buffalo.
Although
his five-piece band mostly plays clubs and colleges
in the East, he has toured five countries and
opened for such artists as Meatloaf, 98 Degrees,
Chuck Berry and Cheap Trick.
Music
-- playing and writing -- is his passion. Poker
didn't become a factor in his life until about
18 months ago when he decided to look into the
game to see what all of the fuss was about among
today's younger generation.
"I
was intrigued," Sartori said. "I would
watch the games on TV, and I kept seeing all
the same faces coming into the money.
"I
had always assumed poker was mainly luck, but
I decided there must be something more to it."
So
he read some books on the subject and started
playing online.
"My
first online tournament, I won $50,000,"
he said.
For
a year he played a lot of online poker.
"We
were touring, living out of the van," Sartori
said. "It's pretty difficult to make money
when you don't have a hit record and you're
trying to do original music.
"Basically
you starve."
Poker
was a salvation.
"I
was doing so well, I used the poker earnings
to fund the band's tour," Sartori said.
"We would be traveling on the road in our
van, and I would have a laptop with me to play
poker.
"I
played pretty much every day, and I'd win 75
to 80 percent of the time."
His
second online tournament, the Satellite World
Series of Poker, he won a free trip to Las Vegas
for a week and $10,000 for the buy-in for Harrah's
World Series of Poker -- which he turned into
$300,000.
He
says he earns most of his poker money in cash
games, not tournaments.
"The
cash games are where the money is," he
said.
Sartori
will be in Las Vegas again in December to play
in the Five-Diamond World Poker Classic, another
World Poker Tour event, at the Bellagio.
Meanwhile,
he will continue to make music and win jackpots
around the country.
"I
have never looked at poker as a job, it's a
hobby I do really well," Sartori said.
"With the poker celebrity I'm gaining right
now, it's helping get my music career to another
level. It's a springboard, affording me the
opportunity to put out a good, quality album
and a little extra money to keep the band on
the road for a few more months."
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