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NEW YORK DAWN™ > Blog > Entertainment > Eddie Palmieri, a champion of Latin jazz, dies at 88
Eddie Palmieri, a champion of Latin jazz, dies at 88
Entertainment

Eddie Palmieri, a champion of Latin jazz, dies at 88

Last updated: August 7, 2025 10:24 pm
Editorial Board Published August 7, 2025
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Eddie Palmieri, the Grammy-winning Nuyorican pianist, bandleader and composer who helped innovate Afro-Caribbean music within the States and remodel the New York salsa scene, died on Wednesday. He was 88.

In accordance with a put up on his official Instagram, Palmieri handed away in his Hackensack, N.J., house. The New York Instances confirmed by way of his youngest daughter, Gabriela Palmieri, that his dying got here after “an extended illness.”

A number of celebrities chimed in to pay their respects, together with Spike Lee, Ramon Rodriguez and representatives from Fania Information, the pioneering New York salsa label, additionally launched a press release.

“[On Wednesday], Fania Records mourns the loss of the legendary Eddie Palmieri, one of the most innovative and unique artists in music history,” the assertion mentioned. Palmieri briefly recorded music with the label but in addition launched music underneath Tico, Alegre, Harmony Picante, RMM and Coco Information.

Others took to social media to mourn the loss, together with David Sanchez, a Grammy-winning jazz tenor saxophonist from Puerto Rico, who uploaded a slideshow of images of the 2. Sanchez recounted the time when his soprano saxophone was stolen — and Palmieri helped him pay for a brand new one. “Your being and your music will continue to live on in the hearts of many,” Sanchez wrote in the Instagram caption.

Palmieri’s modern Chuchito Valdes, a Grammy-winning Cuban pianist and bandleader, additionally chimed in with an Instagram put up lamenting the loss: “A sad day for music. One of the greatest of all time is gone, an innovator. The man who revolutionized salsa and Latin jazz. My great friend.”

Born on Dec. 15, 1936, in East Harlem to Puerto Rican mother and father from Ponce, Palmieri was the youthful brother of Charlie Palmieri, the late piano legend often known as the “Giant of the Keyboards.”

The household later moved to the South Bronx, the place they opened up a luncheonette known as “Mambo”: a reputation chosen by younger Eddie, who was enthralled by the Cuban dance corridor rhythms. He usually managed the jukebox with blissful Latin jazz tunes by Tito Puente, Tito Rodriguez and Machito.

Palmieri was deeply influenced and impressed by his older brother, who was 9 years his senior and launched him to outstanding big-band acts of the Nineteen Forties, like Tommy Dorsey, Glenn Miller and Woody Herman, all of whom appeared to dissolve by the top of World Struggle II. Although Palmieri had an itch to lean into the timbales like Tito Puente, he would ultimately comply with in his brother’s footsteps and take piano classes from Margaret Bonds, some of the outstanding African American live performance pianists on the time.

Though he briefly joined his uncle’s orchestra, Chino y sus Almas Tropicales, as a timbal participant, Palmieri rose to fame as a pianist, taking part in with numerous bands together with the Eddie Forrester Orchestra, Johnny Segui and His Orchestra, and ultimately Tito Rodriguez and His Orchestra, which was a primary act on the Palladium Ballroom between 1958 to 1960.

“In the audience, you could have maybe a Marlon Brando, Kim Novak, all the Hollywood starlets because it was the height of the mambo,” mentioned Palmieri in a 2013 interview with Jo Reed. “On Saturday, you had the blue-collar, mostly Puerto Rican. And then Sunday was black, Afro-American. It was intermingled or different nationalities that had nothing to do whether you were green, purple, white, we came to dance.”

However in 1961, Palmieri went on to begin his personal band, La Perfecta, an ironic title given its not-so-perfect setup. It fashioned as an eight-piece Cuban conjunto, which ditched the normal jazzy saxophone. There have been timbales, congas, bongos, bass, piano and vocals — however with a twist of its personal variety: the inclusion of two trombones, performed by Barry Rogers and Jose Rodriguez, as an alternative of the pricey four-set trumpets. Palmieri additionally added a whistling flute, performed by George Castro, for a charanga edge (within the place of a conventional violin).

“La Perfecta changed everything in the history of our genre, in my opinion. Certainly in New York,” mentioned Palmieri. “And then influenced the world, because after that all the pawn shops got rid of their trombones.”

His group helped usher within the iconic salsa style with their first album, “Eddie Palmieri and His Conjunto ‘La Perfecta,’” dubbing him the nickname “Madman of salsa.” Nonetheless, he was not too keen on the rising time period, which appeared to cram completely different kinds like mambo, charanga, rumba, guaracha and danzón into one single class.

“Afro-Cuban is where we get the music,” defined Palmieri in a 2012 interview with the Smithsonian Oral Historical past Challenge. “The influence of the Puerto Rican is the one [that] upheld the rhythmical patterns and the genre of Cuba. So then that becomes Afro-Caribbean.”

La Perfecta went on to launch its most famed album, “Azúcar Pa’ Ti” in 1965. It included the music “Azúcar,” an eight-minute observe that was later added to the Nationwide Recording Registry in 2009.

In 1976, Palmieri turned the primary to win a Grammy for the inaugural class of finest Latin recording, for his album “Sun of Latin Music.” He holds a complete of eight Grammy awards. In 2013, the Nationwide Endowment for the Arts honored him as a Jazz Grasp and the Latin Grammys granted him a Lifetime Achievement Award.

However Eddie Palmieri’s impression spanned past his personal accomplishments. He was a mentor, a instructor and an advocate for Latin music and tradition, which incorporates advocating twice for the inclusion of the Latin jazz album class within the Grammys — first in 1995, then once more in 2012 after its elimination.

Palmieri was predeceased by his spouse of 58 years, Iraida Palmieri, who handed away in 2014 — and who he also known as “Mi Luz Mayor.” He’s survived by his 4 daughters, Renee, Eydie, Ileana and Gabriela; his son, Edward Palmieri II; and 4 grandchildren.

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