Background
Romero was born in Granada, Andalusia, Spain into a family of nine children and shared a room in their family"s apartment with her four sisters.
Romero was born in Granada, Andalusia, Spain into a family of nine children and shared a room in their family"s apartment with her four sisters.
She attended Catholic school, but by age 13 had grown bored and begun to challenge authority.
She moved to Madrid and found that she was still unhappy with life in Spain. In 1972 Romero moved to London, England. In West London she lived in squats with different groups of hippies.
While living in London, Romero moved into a flat with her boyfriend John Graham Mellor (then nicknamed "Woody") whom she dated for two years.
At this time punk was exploding in London, Mellor had just joined The Clash and changed his name to Joe Strummer. When Romero met Clash bassist Paul Simonon, he asked what her name was.
Unable to easily pronounce "Paloma", Simonon wise-cracked, "Palmolive?" Finding this amusing, Romero decided to adopt Palmolive as her stage name. Strummer introduced Palmolive to future Sex Pistols bassist Sid Vicious with whom she played in the band The Flowers of Romance alongside future Slits guitarist Viv Albertine.
After attending a Patti Smith concert, Palmolive met 14-year-old Ari Up and invited her to form an all-female punk band, which they dubbed The Slits.
Early on The Slits gained attention through their brash, raw and wild antics, often playing gigs with The Clash, the Sex Pistols, the Buzzcocks, Subway Section(s) and other groups from London"s early punk scene. During her time in the band, Palmolive wrote several of The Slits" songs, including "Shoplifting", "Number One Enemy", "New Town", "FM" and "Adventures Close to Home", some of which were recorded for The Slits" 1977 Peel Sessions with Palmolive playing drums. By 1978, tensions with other band members and their manager, Malcolm McLaren, led to Palmolive"s departure, and though many of her songs appear on the group"s 1979 debut LP, Palmolive had already moved on.
After filling in on drums for the pre-Spizzenergi duo Spizzoil, Palmolive joined another female punk band, The Raincoats, in 1979, with whom she recorded one single and an album for Rough Trade Records.
The band toured the United Kingdom with Swiss label-mates Kleenex before Palmolive left the Raincoats, six months after joining. After leaving The Raincoats, Romero looked at changing her life around and spent the next six months on a spiritual pilgrimage in India.
Returning to England and feeling unhappy with life in general, Romero became a born-again Christian. Included in their repertoire is The Slits" song "FM", with the chorus" lyrics changed from "Frequent Mutilation / Transmits over the air" to "Jesus is the answer / Why don"t you let him in?".
On 13 December 2011, Palmolive appeared on the RTVE"s television programme Españoles en el mundo in an episode focused on Spaniards living in Boston, Massachusetts.