This page will contain additional articles about Robert Palmer, as they become available.

Robert Palmer (British singer)

For the American author and blues producer by the same name, see Robert Palmer (author/producer).
The Riptide album was Palmer's best selling work.

Robert Allen Palmer (January 19, 1949 - September 26, 2003), born in Batley, Yorkshire, England, was a British singer. He was known for his soulful voice and the eclectic mix of musical styles on his albums, combining soul, jazz, rock, blues, and even yodeling.

1964-1973: Early bands

The son of a British serviceman stationed in Malta, Palmer moved with his family to Scarborough, Yorkshire in 1959. Influenced as a child by blues, soul, and jazz music on American Forces Radio, Robert Palmer joined his first band, Mandrake Paddle Steamer, at the age of 15 while still an art student at Scarborough Technical College. His first major break came with the departure of singer Jess Roden from the band The Alan Bown Set in 1969, after which Palmer was invited to London to sing on their single "Gypsy Girl". The vocals for the album The Alan Bown!, originally recorded by Roden (and released in the US that way), were re-recorded by Palmer after the success of the single.

In 1970, Palmer joined the 12-piece jazz-rock fusion band Dada, which featured singer Elkie Brooks. The band lasted a year, after which Brooks and Palmer formed the critically acclaimed but commercially unsuccessful rhythm and blues group, Vinegar Joe; Palmer sang and played rhythm guitar. Signed to the Island Records label, they released three albums: Vinegar Joe (1972), Rock 'n' Roll Gypsies (1972), and Six Star General (1973).

1974-1984: Early solo career

On the basis of his youthful looks, strong stage presence, and soulful voice, Island Records signed Palmer to a solo deal. His first solo album Sneakin' Sally Through the Alley recorded in New Orleans, Louisiana in 1974, was heavily influenced by the music of Little Feat and the funk fusion of The Meters who acted as backing band along with producer/guitarist Lowell George of Little Feat. His first single was a cover of Little Feat's "Sailin' Shoes". Although moderately successful in the UK, both the album and single reached the Top 100 in the US.

Subsequently relocating from London to New York City with his wife, Palmer released Pressure Drop in 1976 (featuring famed Motown bassist James Jamerson). An album infused with his interests in reggae and rock music, it was noted for its cover art of a nude girl on a balcony rather than any commercially successful songs. He toured with Little Feat to promote that album. However, with the failure of the follow-up Some People Can Do What They Like, Palmer decided to move to the Bahamas; after that, his "expatriate lifestyle" was likely to receive more coverage than his music in British newspapers. In 1978, he released Double Fun, a collection of Caribbean-influenced rock, which reached the Top 50 on the US Billboard magazine charts and scored a Top 20 single with the Andy Fraser-penned "Every Kinda People".

Palmer's next album was an artistic departure, concentrating on a rockier direction. Secrets produced his second Top 20 single with Moon Martin's "Bad Case of Loving You (Doctor, Doctor)". The 1980s saw Palmer reach the peak of his commercial success. The album Clues, produced by Gary Numan, generated hits on both sides of the Atlantic, first with the radio-friendly single "Johnny and Mary" and then "Looking for Clues". Catchy videos matching the synth pop stylings of New Wave gave him much needed exposure to a younger audience. The success was repeated with the 1982 EP release of Some Guys Have All the Luck.

The "Johnny and Mary" single would achieve immortality when its classic synth hook was used in a series of Renault TV commercials through the 1990s. Palmer was reputed to have a lucrative deal with the French car manufacturer to use the song's melody in its advertising, Renault having to authorise each new interpretation of the melody with Palmer in every new commercial it released.

1985-1995: Power Station and MTV success

In 1985, Palmer joined drummer Tony Thompson and Duran Duran guitarist Andy Taylor and bass player John Taylor to form the band Power Station. Their eponymous album reached the Top 20 in the UK and the US and spawned two hit singles with "Some Like It Hot" and the T. Rex cover "Get It On". Palmer performed live with the band only once that year, on Saturday Night Live; the band toured with singer Michael Des Barres when Palmer bowed out at the last moment to go back into the studio to further his newly revitalized solo career.

The solemn and lovely ladies "play" their instruments in the often-parodied "Addicted to Love" video.

Palmer recorded the album Riptide (1985), which featured the Number 1 single "Addicted to Love". The single was accompanied by a memorable and much parodied music video, directed by Terence Donovan, in which Palmer is surrounded by a bevy of near-identically clad, heavily made-up female "musicians". The singles "Hyperactive" and "I Didn't Mean to Turn You On" also performed well. Another song, "Trick Bag" was written by one of his major influences, New Orleans jazz artist Earl King. In 1987, he won the Grammy Award for Best Male Rock Vocal Performance for his song "Addicted to Love".

Palmer was approached by Little Feat to replace Lowell George as they prepared their 1987 reunion, but had to decline for contractual reasons.

In 1987, Palmer moved to Lugano, Switzerland and set up his own recording studio. Producing Heavy Nova in 1988, Palmer again returned to experimenting, this time with bossa nova rhythms, heavy rock, and white soul balladeering. He repeated his previous success with "Addicted to Love" with the video of "Simply Irresistible", again Palmer with a troupe of female "musicians". The ballad "She Makes My Day" also proved to be a hit. In 1989, he won a second Grammy for "Simply Irresistible". Rolling Stone magazine voted Palmer the best-dressed rock star for 1990.

Palmer collaborated with UB40 for his next album, Don't Explain. Released in 1990, it featured the Bob Dylan-penned Top 10 single "I'll Be Your Baby Tonight" and the Top 20 Marvin Gaye cover "Mercy Mercy Me". Throughout the 1990s, Palmer ventured further into diverse material. The 1992 album Ridin' High was a tribute to the Tin Pan Alley era.

In 1995, Palmer reunited with other members of The Power Station to record a second album. Bassist John Taylor eventually backed out of the project (due to personal problems), to be replaced by Chic member Bernard Edwards. Palmer and the rest of the band completed the album Living In Fear (released in 1996), and had just begun touring when Edwards died of pneumonia.

1996-2003: Late solo work and the blues

The next few years saw more touring and more compilations; the next release of new material, Rhythm and Blues (1999) contained a mixture of Little Feat influenced songs, rock, and pop.

His final release, Drive (2003), was critically hailed as his grittiest and most heartfelt album of his career. Inspired by a previous collaboration with Carl Carlton on a Robert Johnson tribute album, Drive featured covers of fifteen blues standards, plus the original track "Lucky".

Palmer, who made his home in Lugano, Switzerland for the past 15 years, died in Paris, France of a heart attack at the age of only 54. He is interred at the cemetery in Lugano.

Discography

Album Name, Year of Release

  • Sneakin' Sally Through the Alley (1974)
  • Pressure Drop (1975)
  • Some People Can Do What They Like (1976)
  • Double Fun (1978)
  • Secrets (1979)
  • Clues (1980)
  • Maybe It's Live (1980) (live)
  • Pride (1983)
  • Riptide (1985)
  • Sweet Lies (1987) (single)
  • Heavy Nova (1988)
  • Addictions Volume I (1989) (compilation)
  • Don't Explain (1990)
  • Addictions Volume II (1992) (compilation)
  • Ridin' High (1992)
  • Honey (1994)
  • Very Best Of Robert Palmer (1997) (compilation)
  • Woke Up Laughing (1998) (compilation)
  • Rhythm & Blues (1999)
  • Best Of Both Worlds: The Robert Palmer Anthology (1974-2001) (2002) (compilation)
  • TV Dinners (2003)
  • Drive (2003)

Albums by the group Power Station:

  • Power Station (1985)
  • Living in Fear (1997)

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Albums by the group Power Station:. Quentin Mark Mysterian almost certainly named himself after the band. Album Name, Year of Release. Syndicated prognosticator Dr. He is interred at the cemetery in Lugano. The name of the group provided inspiration for naming an important new branch of the philosophy of mind (New Mysterianism). Palmer, who made his home in Lugano, Switzerland for the past 15 years, died in Paris, France of a heart attack at the age of only 54. The group named itself after the 1959 Japanese science-fiction film "The Mysterians", in which aliens from the ravaged planet Mysteriod come to take over Earth.

Inspired by a previous collaboration with Carl Carlton on a Robert Johnson tribute album, Drive featured covers of fifteen blues standards, plus the original track "Lucky". Do You Feel It Baby?, a live album, was released in 1998 with moderate success. His final release, Drive (2003), was critically hailed as his grittiest and most heartfelt album of his career. Unable to secure the rights to their own recordings, the Mysterians re-recorded their original album and released it again. The next few years saw more touring and more compilations; the next release of new material, Rhythm and Blues (1999) contained a mixture of Little Feat influenced songs, rock, and pop. Still unable to attract much attention, the group disbanded again until the voices from the future told ? to reform the band in 1997. Palmer and the rest of the band completed the album Living In Fear (released in 1996), and had just begun touring when Edwards died of pneumonia.  ? became a dog breeder until the band reconvened in 1978, playing a reunion concert in Dallas, Texas.

Bassist John Taylor eventually backed out of the project (due to personal problems), to be replaced by Chic member Bernard Edwards. In the early 1970s, ? & the Mysterians reformed but once again was unable to attract much attention. In 1995, Palmer reunited with other members of The Power Station to record a second album. In the meantime, "96 Tears" became part of the standard rock band repetory. The 1992 album Ridin' High was a tribute to the Tin Pan Alley era. (According to ?, Rodriquez did not play the Farfisa organ as was widely reported.) "Action", the group's follow-up, was not as successful and the band signed with Capitol Records, followed by Tangerine Records and Super K, all to little avail. Throughout the 1990s, Palmer ventured further into diverse material. The song was quickly a huge hit, as was their debut album, 96 Tears.

Released in 1990, it featured the Bob Dylan-penned Top 10 single "I'll Be Your Baby Tonight" and the Top 20 Marvin Gaye cover "Mercy Mercy Me".  ? licensed the record to Cameo-Parkway Records because their label was his favorite color, orange. Palmer collaborated with UB40 for his next album, Don't Explain. The song became a regional hit in the Flint and Detroit area. Rolling Stone magazine voted Palmer the best-dressed rock star for 1990. With Rodriquez's Vox organ introduction and its plaintive chorus, "96 Tears" broke out rapidly and strained the limited facilites of local Pa-Go-Go Records which had originally pressed only 750 copies. In 1989, he won a second Grammy for "Simply Irresistible". Borjas and Martinez were soon drafted, and Frank Lugo (bass) and Eddie Serrato (drums) replaced them. ? soon wrote the song that would become their first and only hit.

The ballad "She Makes My Day" also proved to be a hit. Robert Balderrama (guitar) and Robert Martinez (drums) formed the band in 1962, soon adding Frank Rodriguez (organ) and ? (vocals), who was Robert's brother, Rudy. The Mexican musicians were born in Texas but grew up in Michigan and began playing in 1964. He repeated his previous success with "Addicted to Love" with the video of "Simply Irresistible", again Palmer with a troupe of female "musicians". Musically, the group was notable for its innovative use of organs, as well as being one of the first major Latino rock groups. Producing Heavy Nova in 1988, Palmer again returned to experimenting, this time with bossa nova rhythms, heavy rock, and white soul balladeering. He also claims that voices told him he would still be performing "96 Tears" in 10,000. In 1987, Palmer moved to Lugano, Switzerland and set up his own recording studio. He claims to be a Martian who lived with dinosaurs in a past life, and never appears in public without his sunglasses.

Palmer was approached by Little Feat to replace Lowell George as they prepared their 1987 reunion, but had to decline for contractual reasons. ?'s eccentric behavior helped establish the group in the national consciousness for a period. In 1987, he won the Grammy Award for Best Male Rock Vocal Performance for his song "Addicted to Love". The leader of the group was Question Mark (real name Rudy Martinez), who later legally changed his name to ?. Another song, "Trick Bag" was written by one of his major influences, New Orleans jazz artist Earl King. ? & the Mysterians were an American garage rock band from the mid 1960s, best known for their #1 hit "96 Tears". The singles "Hyperactive" and "I Didn't Mean to Turn You On" also performed well.

The single was accompanied by a memorable and much parodied music video, directed by Terence Donovan, in which Palmer is surrounded by a bevy of near-identically clad, heavily made-up female "musicians". Palmer recorded the album Riptide (1985), which featured the Number 1 single "Addicted to Love". Palmer performed live with the band only once that year, on Saturday Night Live; the band toured with singer Michael Des Barres when Palmer bowed out at the last moment to go back into the studio to further his newly revitalized solo career. Rex cover "Get It On".

Their eponymous album reached the Top 20 in the UK and the US and spawned two hit singles with "Some Like It Hot" and the T. In 1985, Palmer joined drummer Tony Thompson and Duran Duran guitarist Andy Taylor and bass player John Taylor to form the band Power Station. Palmer was reputed to have a lucrative deal with the French car manufacturer to use the song's melody in its advertising, Renault having to authorise each new interpretation of the melody with Palmer in every new commercial it released. The "Johnny and Mary" single would achieve immortality when its classic synth hook was used in a series of Renault TV commercials through the 1990s.

The success was repeated with the 1982 EP release of Some Guys Have All the Luck. Catchy videos matching the synth pop stylings of New Wave gave him much needed exposure to a younger audience. The album Clues, produced by Gary Numan, generated hits on both sides of the Atlantic, first with the radio-friendly single "Johnny and Mary" and then "Looking for Clues". The 1980s saw Palmer reach the peak of his commercial success.

Secrets produced his second Top 20 single with Moon Martin's "Bad Case of Loving You (Doctor, Doctor)". Palmer's next album was an artistic departure, concentrating on a rockier direction. In 1978, he released Double Fun, a collection of Caribbean-influenced rock, which reached the Top 50 on the US Billboard magazine charts and scored a Top 20 single with the Andy Fraser-penned "Every Kinda People". However, with the failure of the follow-up Some People Can Do What They Like, Palmer decided to move to the Bahamas; after that, his "expatriate lifestyle" was likely to receive more coverage than his music in British newspapers.

He toured with Little Feat to promote that album. An album infused with his interests in reggae and rock music, it was noted for its cover art of a nude girl on a balcony rather than any commercially successful songs. Subsequently relocating from London to New York City with his wife, Palmer released Pressure Drop in 1976 (featuring famed Motown bassist James Jamerson). Although moderately successful in the UK, both the album and single reached the Top 100 in the US.

His first single was a cover of Little Feat's "Sailin' Shoes". His first solo album Sneakin' Sally Through the Alley recorded in New Orleans, Louisiana in 1974, was heavily influenced by the music of Little Feat and the funk fusion of The Meters who acted as backing band along with producer/guitarist Lowell George of Little Feat. On the basis of his youthful looks, strong stage presence, and soulful voice, Island Records signed Palmer to a solo deal. Signed to the Island Records label, they released three albums: Vinegar Joe (1972), Rock 'n' Roll Gypsies (1972), and Six Star General (1973).

The band lasted a year, after which Brooks and Palmer formed the critically acclaimed but commercially unsuccessful rhythm and blues group, Vinegar Joe; Palmer sang and played rhythm guitar. In 1970, Palmer joined the 12-piece jazz-rock fusion band Dada, which featured singer Elkie Brooks. The vocals for the album The Alan Bown!, originally recorded by Roden (and released in the US that way), were re-recorded by Palmer after the success of the single. His first major break came with the departure of singer Jess Roden from the band The Alan Bown Set in 1969, after which Palmer was invited to London to sing on their single "Gypsy Girl".

Influenced as a child by blues, soul, and jazz music on American Forces Radio, Robert Palmer joined his first band, Mandrake Paddle Steamer, at the age of 15 while still an art student at Scarborough Technical College. The son of a British serviceman stationed in Malta, Palmer moved with his family to Scarborough, Yorkshire in 1959. He was known for his soulful voice and the eclectic mix of musical styles on his albums, combining soul, jazz, rock, blues, and even yodeling. Robert Allen Palmer (January 19, 1949 - September 26, 2003), born in Batley, Yorkshire, England, was a British singer.

Living in Fear (1997). Power Station (1985). Drive (2003). TV Dinners (2003).

Best Of Both Worlds: The Robert Palmer Anthology (1974-2001) (2002) (compilation). Rhythm & Blues (1999). Woke Up Laughing (1998) (compilation). Very Best Of Robert Palmer (1997) (compilation).

Honey (1994). Ridin' High (1992). Addictions Volume II (1992) (compilation). Don't Explain (1990).

Addictions Volume I (1989) (compilation). Heavy Nova (1988). Sweet Lies (1987) (single). Riptide (1985).

Pride (1983). Maybe It's Live (1980) (live). Clues (1980). Secrets (1979).

Double Fun (1978). Some People Can Do What They Like (1976). Pressure Drop (1975). Sneakin' Sally Through the Alley (1974).