Both of these were wide-ranging territory bands. Zack eventually made it back to Chicago, working for a lengthy period in an orchestra under the baton of Eddie Neibauer as well as developing a solo act that spotlighted vocalizing strongly influenced by Louis Armstrong. Muggsy Spanier put Zack on the piano chair in 1939, shortly before the latter decided to check out the Big Apple jazz scene. An illness unspecified in several biographical accounts truncated these activities in the early '40s. Zack bounced back into action by the middle of the decade, once again showing up in Chicago, where he held down a shadowy regular gig at the Club Silhouette. He also provided accompaniment for a series of vocal music performers. Zack went west in the '50s, working in Arizona into the ensuing decades with Dixieland players such as Ray Bauduc, Nappy Lamare, and Bob Scobey. This is not the same George Zack who is the former conductor of the Lexington Symphony Orchestra. ~ Eugene Chadbourne, Rovi
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