Biography
Harlem River Drive
Effective period / Period of releases: 1971 - 1975
Members: Eddie Palmieri, Bernard Purdie, Burt Collins, Charlie Palmieri, Cornell Dupree, Randy Brecker, Nicky Marrero, Barry Rogers, Andy Gonzalez, Jerry Jemmott, Victor Venegas, Reggie Ferguson, Bob Mann, Eladio Perez, Manny Oquendo, Dick Meza, Lorene Hanchard, Jimmy Norman, Dean Robert Pratt, Marilyn Herscher, Bruce Fowler (3), Allan Taylor (5)
Leader: Eddie PalmieriThe pinnacle of Palmieri’s career as a socially conscious artist was the revolutionary group he co-led with his brother Charlie, called Harlem River Drive. The band was named after a highway that cuts through Harlem, allowing cars to bypass the local streets of the neighborhood entirely, where the rich zipped past to avoid the harsh social realities of the ghetto. For Palmieri, this highway was a symbol of the inequalities of modern society. It was no accident that his group combined Latin, soul and free jazz in a way that sought to unify all of Harlem in the face of adversity. Palmieri’s Harlem River Drive group employed members of Aretha Franklin’s band, alongside some of the most important Latin musicians and jazz soloists of the day, such as Ronnie Cuber, Barry Rogers and Bernard Purdie.