Zack Whyte
American jazz bandleader

Zack Whyte

The basics
Quick facts
Intro
American jazz bandleader
Gender:
Male
Work field:
Birth:
1898(Richmond, Madison County, Kentucky, USA)
Death:
10 March 1967(Kentucky, USA)
Instruments:
Biography menu
Menu

Jump to

Introduction Biography Legacy
The details
Biography

Introduction

Zack Whyte (sometimes spelled Zach Whyte) (1898 – March 10, 1967) was an American jazz bandleader, best known for leading the territory band the Chocolate Beau Brummels.

Biography

Whyte was born in 1898 in Richmond, Kentucky. He studied at Wilberforce University, where he played banjo with Horace Henderson and arranged pieces for him. He led his own Cincinnati-based bands from the early 1920s, and put together the Chocolate Beau Brummels late in the decade. This ensemble recorded for Gennett, Supertone, and Champion in 1929, amounting to about ten tunes. Some of the recordings were released under the names "Eddie Walker & His Band" and "Smoke Jackson & His Red Onions". Whyte died on March 10, 1967, in Kentucky.

Legacy

Among those who played in Whyte's bands were Herman Chittison, Jerry Blake, Truck Parham, Sy Oliver, Roy Eldridge, Vic Dickenson, and Al Sears. Whyte's entire discography was reissued to CD on a Jazz Oracle compilation, Richmond Rarities 1927-31.