Eddie Palmieri
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EDDIE PALMIERI's musical career spans 40 years as a
bandleader of salsa and Latin jazz orchestras. His discography includes
more than 32 titles. He has been awarded Seven Grammys, including the
first presentation in the Best Latin Album category for his 1975 release
The Sun of Latin Music, and the following year for Unfinished Masterpiece.
Palo Pa' Rumba won in 1984, Solito in 1985 and La Verdad in 1987. He
received two Grammy's for his 2000 release with Tito Puente Obra Maestra/Masterpiece
one from the traditional Grammy awards and one from the Latin Grammy's
EDDIE PALMIERI was awarded the Eubie Blake Award by Dr. Billy Taylor in
1991 and he is among the few Latin musicians recognized by the Legislative
Assembly of Puerto Rico and the New York State Assembly. In 1988, the
Smithsonian Institution recorded two of Palmieri's performances for their
catalog of the National Museum of American History in Washington, D.C., a
rare public honor.
The 1998 Heineken Jazz Festival in San Juan, PR, paid tribute to EDDIE
PALMIERI's contributions as a bandleader, bestowing him an honorary
doctorate degree from the Berklee College of Music. As a member of the New
York chapter of the National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences, EDDIE
PALMIERI was instrumental in creating a new category for Latin Jazz in
1995. His 1994 album, Palmas, was among the nominees for the first award
presented in that category in March 1995. In 1996, he was once again
nominated for his album Arete.
Born in Spanish Harlem in 1936, EDDIE PALMIERI began piano studies at an
early age, as did his celebrated older brother, the late salsa legend and
pianist Charlie Palmieri. For Latin New Yorkers of Eddie's generation,
music was a vehicle out of the barrio. At age 11, he made his classical
debut at Carnegie Hall, a venue as far from the Bronx as he could imagine.
Possessed by a desire to play the drums, Palmieri joined his uncle's
orchestra at age 13, where he played the timbales. Says Palmieri, "By 15,
it was good-bye timbales' and back to the piano until this day. I'm a
frustrated percussionist, so I take it out on the piano."
EDDIE PALMIERI began his professional career as a pianist in the early
'50s with Eddie Forrester's Orchestra. In 1955 he joined Johnny Segui's
band. He spent a year with the Tito Rodriguez Orchestra before forming his
own band, the legendary "Conjunto La Perfecta," in 1961. La Perfecta
featured a trombone section (led by the late Barry Rogers) in place of
trumpets, something that had been rarely done in Latin music, and which
demonstrated the early stages of Palmieri's unconventional means of
orchestration. They were known as "the band with the crazy roaring
elephants" for the configuration of two trombones, flute, percussion, bass
and vocalist. With an infectious and soaring sound, Palmieri's band soon
joined the ranks of Machito, Tito Rodriguez, and the other major Latin
orchestras of the day.
EDDIE PALMIERI's influences include not only his older brother Charlie but
Jesus Lopez, Chapotin, Lili Martinez and other Cuban players of the1940s;
and jazz luminaries Art Tatum, Bobby Timmons, Bill Evans, Horace Silver,
Bud Powell, McCoy Tyner, Herbie Hancock and Miles Davis. Equally important
were influences derived from Palmieri's curiosity and incessant search to
unearth his family's roots and seek out the origins of the music that
profoundly inspired him. Says Palmieri, "In Cuba, there was a development
and crystallization of rhythmical patterns that have excited people for
years. Cuban music provides the fundamental from which I never move.
Whatever has to be built must be built from there. It's that
cross-cultural effect that makes magnificent music." EDDIE PALMIERI's
solid interpretation of Afro-Caribbean music and its confluence with jazz
is evident in Eddie Palmieri's astute arranging skills, which assemble
those components in dramatic and compelling compositions.
EDDIE PALMIERI's accomplishments have taken him through Europe, Japan and
Latin America, showcasing his assemblage of seasoned musicians and
kaleidoscope of musical styles. He served as a consultant to Paul Simon on
his 1990 release Rhythm of the Saints and in 1993 was appointed to the
board of governors of the New York chapter of the National Academy of
Recording Arts and Science. His interest is in expanding recognition of
Latin music in its diverse forms.
EDDIE PALMIERI remains a powerhouse of brilliance and sound that has
stirred audiences for more than 37 years, continually and successfully
seeking to captivate and elevate the senses, and taking them down paths of
intensity to a place where there are no musical boundaries.
Eddie Palmieri announced his retirement from the world of music in 2000.
However, he recorded Masterpiece with Tito Puente and won 2 Grammys;
additionally he was also named the "Outstanding Producer of the Year" by
the National Foundation of Popular Culture. Palmieri has won a total of 7
Grammy Awards in his career.
On November 6, 2004, Palmieri directed a "Big Band Tribute" to his late
brother Charlie at Avery Hall at the Lincoln Center for the Performing
Arts.
Eddie Palmieri currently continues to be actively involved with music. He
formed a new band La Perfecta II, with whom he recorded the CD Ritmo
Caliente (Hot Rhythm). On April 30, 2005, "Mi Día Bonito" a tribute to
Eddie Palmieri, celebrating his 50 years in the world of music, took place
at the Ruben Rodriguez Coliseum in Bayamon, Puerto Rico. The event
included the participation of Lalo Rodriguez, Ismael Quintana, Cheo
Feliciano, La India, Herman Olivera, Jerry Medina, Luis Vergara and Wichy
Camacho.