Eddie
Palmieri is one of the foremost Latin jazz pianists of the last
half of the century, blessed with a technique that fuses such ubiquitous
jazz influences as the styles of Herbie Hancock, Thelonious Monk
and McCoy Tyner into a Latin context. No purist, he has also shown
a welcome willingness to experiment with fusions of Latin and non-Latin
music. However, despite a number of stints with major labels and
numerous industry awards and nominations, he has yet to break into
the American record scene in a big way.
Like his older brother Charlie, Eddie started playing at an early
age (eight) and studied classical piano while also playing drums.
He made his professional debut with Johnny Sequi's orchestra in
1955 and eventually joined Tito Rodriguez's popular band in 1958-60.
In 1961,
Palmieri formed his highly influential band La Perfecta, whose flute
and twin- or triple-trombone front line made American jazz musicians
like Herbie Mann take notice; he also scored heavily in an excellent
1966 collaboration with Cal Tjader, El Sonido Nuevo (Verve). After
La Perfecta split up in 1968 due to financial problems, Palmieri
played with the Tico and Fania All-Stars, recorded with Alfredo
"Chocolate" Armenteros, Cachao, and Justa Betancourt,
and, like his brother, cut some Latin boogaloo sessions. Around
the mid-'60s, Palmieri began formal studies of arranging, and the
Monk influence became more pronounced in his piano work.
While
recording for the Latin Coco label in the mid-'70s, Palmieri started
to mix salsa with R&B, pop, rock, Spanish vocals and jazz improvisation.
Brief affiliations with Columbia in the late '70s and Capitol (in
league with David Sanborn) in the late '80s failed to produce an
American breakthrough hit, though the latter attempt was aimed squarely
at the burgeoning "jazz-lite" market. While much of his
output as a leader remains out of print in American catalogs, several
of his older albums are available on CD; Palmieri has also remained
active in the 1990s, recording the jazz-oriented Palmas (1993) for
the normally classical Nonesuch label, as well as a series of albums
for the RMM label.
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