Jacques Presburg (born Isaäc Jacob Presburg; 26 December 1881 – 5 February 1943) was a Dutch composer of theatre music, pianist, violinist, and conductor. After training as a musician in his native Amsterdam, he was active as a chamber musician and accompanist in England. In 1917 he relocated to the United States and settled in New York City, where he worked as a music educator and a musician in the orchestra of the Rialto Theatre. He co-wrote with Charles Jules, and Orchestration, the music to the musical Oh, What A Girl!, which played in 1919 on Broadway theatre.
By 1924, Presburg was again working in England as a pianist at the Pleasure Gardens Theatre. He returned to his native country, where he had a success with the American western-themed operetta Hallo, Californië ( Hello, California) which opened in 1926 and played well into 1928 in Amsterdam before touring the Netherlands. He relocated to Berlin, Germany, where he worked under the name Jack Presburg as the band leader of a jazz orchestra. He also made recordings in Germany on the Ultraphon record label using both this name and the pseudonym Jack Burg. With the rise of Nazi Germany he was forced to leave in 1938, because of his Jewish ancestry, and returned to the Netherlands. Following the German invasion of the Netherlands in 1940 during World War II he was taken to the Auschwitz concentration camp, where he was killed in 1943.
By 1906 Presburg moved to the United Kingdom, where, into the following year, he gave concerts as a pianist and violist at the Westgate Road Assembly Rooms in Newcastle upon Tyne, under the auspices of the Classical Concert Society. In 1907 he was a member of the classical Albert Fransella Quartet, in which he played both violin and piano in chamber music concerts in the United Kingdom. In June 1908 Presburg served as the accompanist to New Zealand violinist Vera French for her second recital given at Aeolian Hall, London. That October he was the accompanist for the soprano Nellie Melba for a concert she gave at Victoria Hall in Sunderland. The following month he accompanied the Dutch violinist Haidee Voorzanger for her recital at St James's Hall, which was organized by diplomat Herman van Roijen. In June and July 1909 he reunited with Albert Fransella as his accompanist for flute recitals given at Queen's Hall. A 1920 newspaper article claims that he was employed at the Royal Opera House during his years in England, but it does not provide further details.
In 1910 Presburg travelled to the United States on the RMS Majestic and arriving at Ellis Island on 6 October 1910.Jacques Presburg in the New York, U.S., Arriving Passenger and Crew Lists (including Castle Garden and Ellis Island), 1820–1957 His stay was relatively short, as he was back in England by April of the following year working in Staffordshire as a musician at the Grand Theatre, Hanley. In 1912 he married Emily Marks in Kingston upon Hull.Isaac Presburg in the England & Wales, Civil Registration Marriage Index, 1837–1915
In collaboration with Swiss-born composer Charles Jules, Presburg cowrote the music to the musical Oh, What A Girl!, which played on Broadway theatre in 1919.
Presburg was a member of the orchestra of the Rialto Theatre when that orchestra began labor disputes in 1921, leading to a mass exodus of players. He was named president of the body of 50 musicians that had left the theatre. In September and October 1921 Presburg served as the conductor of this group for performances at the Manhattan Opera House and Brooklyn Academy of Music in which they accompanied the silent film The Three Musketeers (1916). Initially this group played under the name the Original Rialto Orchestra, but a court enjoined them from using the name after a legal action by the owners of the Rialto Theatre. In November 1921 Presburg conducted an orchestra that accompanied the silent film Theodora for performances at the Pitt Theatre in Pittsburgh.
Following the success of Hallo, Californië, Presburg relocated to Berlin, Germany, where he was the band leader of a popular jazz orchestra. The Berlin music publisher Albert Stahl published Presburg's tango music "Ich kenn ein kleines Mädchen" in 1929. He made several recordings with the Ultraphon record label, sometimes using the pseudonym Jack Burg. He remained in Berlin until 1938 when the Nazism forced him to leave Germany due to his Jewish ancestry. He returned to the Netherlands and lived there until, after the German invasion of the Netherlands in 1940, he was forcibly taken to the Auschwitz concentration camp. He was killed there by the Nazis on 5 February 1943.
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