A native of Chicago, Trace played
professional baseball before deciding on music as a career. His first jobs during the early 1920s included playing the drums and singing with various bands, until he formed his own band in 1933, the year in which Chicago was celebrating its centennial with a World's Fair officially known as
A Century of Progress International Exposition. The band's first engagement in May 1933 was at the Fair's
French pavilion and, when the Fair closed for the winter in November, he remained in Chicago, beginning a long engagement at the
Blackhawk Restaurant, followed by three years at the Sherman Hotel. Starting in early 1943 and continuing during and after
World War II, the Al Trace Orchestra, including the vocalists
Toni Arden and
Bob Vincent, were familiar regulars on the Chicago-based
It Pays to Be Ignorant, one of the most popular shows of the era known as the
Golden Age of Radio. Al Trace and His Silly Symphonists was one of several comedy ensembles in the early 1940s. Others included
Spike Jones and His City Slickers, the
Hoosier Hot Shots and the Korn Kobblers. He drew nation attention with the novelty song "
Mairzy Doats" (Hit 8079, an
Eli Oberstein label), in 1944. In February 1945, radio stations introduced "
Sioux City Sue", performed by Al Trace and His Silly Symphonists (
National Records 5007). The song became a hit. Trace recorded for several record companies: Hit,
Mercury Records,
National Records,
MGM Records,
Columbia Records,
Damon Records,
Regent Records and
Chance Records. He composed over 300 songs, some alone and others as a collaborator, most frequently with his brother, Ben Trace, while also writing a considerable number of songs using the
pseudonyms
Clem Watts or
Bob Hart. Among the Ben Trace/Al Trace collaborations was his most successful recording, "
You Call Everybody Darlin'", which was a #1 hit in 1948. Another very popular song was "
If I Knew You Were Comin' I'd've Baked a Cake". His other song collaborators included
Al Hoffman,
Bob Merrill and
Abner Silver. In 1975, shortly after his 74th birthday, he retired from active work as a songwriter and bandleader and joined with another ex-bandleader to form a booking agency in
Scottsdale, Arizona. Trace died of a stroke in
Sun City West, Arizona, at the age of 92. == Ensembles led by Trace ==