Though older,
Charlie Palmieri's recognition as one of the greatest purveyors of Afro-Caribbean music has been overshadowed by his more flamboyant --and equally talented -- brother
Eddie.
Charlie died in 1988, and his music has been almost criminally under-anthologized. The
Heritage series on
Fania attempts to correct this with a single-disc collection of 16 tracks from throughout
Palmieri's career with Alegre and
Fania, and does a very good job overall. The first four cuts are culled from three albums he cut for Alegre with his traditional charanga orchestra the Duboney -- a band he founded with
Johnny Pacheco. Amid the strings and flutes that are the music's signature on record, one can hear in "Amor for Two," from 1963, his first experiment with bossa nova. His first set of fills quotes humorously from "Yankee Doodle," and brings irony into the rhythm, but his solo is pure bossa jazz invention. Speaking of jazz, "Estoy Buscando a Kako," a cut from his tenure as bandleader of
the Alegre All-Stars, is buoyed by
Palmieri's fantastic swinging saxophone and trombone chart, before a charanga-style flute solo and the rhythm section pop it all into a jazz groove. His piano is all percussive finger-popping flash. His brief flirtation with boogaloo is present in "Fat Papa," from Either You Have It or You Don't, where the lyrics are in English and one can hear the humor in his presentation. Cuts from the '70s, such as the party anthem "Despierta Julien" (with
Palmieri's killer organ solo), the hilarious "El Susto," and "Melodica in 'F'" (with
Palmieri making one of his signature appearances on the small instrument), add depth and dimension to this portrait of the musician as an innovator who nonetheless loved to keep a bit of the elegant and graceful in everything he recorded; from track to track, the rhythmic invention of his own piano playing is simply stellar, as are his arrangements. Certainly there is a lot missing from a single-disc compilation, but what is here is a terrific start, one that provides an excellent introduction to both the artist and his legacy. ~ Thom Jurek