Artist's albums
Vuelve el Gigante
1973 · album
A Giant Step
1984 · album
Lo Duro De Charlie Palmieri
1981 · album
Con Salsa y Sabor
1977 · album
Comelon Hustle
1975 · single
Charlie Palmieri & Louie Ramirez
2023 · album
Live Lost Treasures
2023 · single
Live In NYC
2022 · album
Galletana
2020 · single
Para Caracas Me Voy / Maracaibo Oriental
1974 · single
Swing Y Son / Las Negritas De Carnaval
1974 · single
Las Negritas De Carnaval / Cuando Te Fuiste De Mi
1974 · single
Two Brothers Two Legends
2015 · album
Salsa All Stars
2014 · single
Impulsos
1974 · album
Charlie Palmieri
2013 · album
El Gigante del Teclado
1973 · album
Que Bien Lo Haces / Maracaibo Oriental
1973 · single
Swing Y Son / The Taxi Driver
1973 · single
La Herencia
2007 · album
Electroduro
1973 · album
Hay Que Estar en Algo
1967 · album
Latin Bugalu
1968 · album
Pachanga At The Caravana Club
1961 · album
El Fantastico
1962 · album
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Biography
The older brother of Eddie Palmieri, Charlie Palmieri was every bit as gifted a pianist as his sibling, very percussive and responsive to rhythm while also flashing florid passages that were clearly the product of a classical education. His piano studies began at seven and he attended the Juilliard School of Music, turning pro at 16. He started the group El Conjunto Pin Pin in 1948, and then played in a series of ensembles -- including those of Tito Puente, Tito Rodriguez, and Pupi Campo -- before forming his own Charanga Duboney group in 1958. As music director of the Alegre All Stars while recording for the Alegre label in the 1960s, Palmieri stimulated competition among Latin labels like Tico and Fania, which formed their own all-star bands in response. Like many Latin jazz artists of the time, Palmieri flirted with the popular Latin boogaloo style in the 1960s and made some records for major labels like RCA Victor and Atlantic. He endured a near mental breakdown in 1969, but rebounded to work again for Puente on his El Mambo de Tito Puente television program, and he also found a second career as a historian and teacher of Latin music and history at various New York colleges in the 1970s. Palmieri moved briefly to Puerto Rico from 1980 to 1983, and after suffering a severe heart attack and stroke upon his return to New York, he recovered to lead various Latin combos, including Combo Gigante. One of his last recordings was a galvanizing cameo appearance on Mongo Santamaria's "Mayeya" in 1987 (now on Mongo's Afro Blue: The Picante Collection for Concord Picante), and he appeared in England for the first time in 1988 shortly before his death. Almost all of Palmieri's work is hard to find through domestic channels, but Messidor's A Giant Step is available on CD. ~ Richard S. Ginell, Rovi