Early years Farren was born in the suburbs of
Boston, Massachusetts to a family that regularly performed music around the home and in public. His eldest sister performed in a professional Gaelic and Jewish music band. His father played guitar, inspiring him to "dabble" with the instrument as a teenager.
Balloon and The Joe Perry Project After performing in several
cover and cover-plus-originals band incarnations in high school, Farren's first all-originals band Balloon formed in 1980. Just as Balloon was becoming popular and being pursued by
Atlantic Records founder
Ahmet Ertegun, thanks to local airplay of two of the band's songs, Farren was recruited to replace Ralph Morman as the frontman for
Aerosmith lead guitarist
Joe Perry's band The Joe Perry Project. The band recorded and toured for their second album ''
I've Got the Rock'n'Rolls Again'', which features a combination of Balloon songs and new tracks Farren and Perry wrote together.
The Enemy and Farrenheit Farren's next band was The Enemy, a virtual rebirth of Balloon. After releasing a single and song for a compilation album, Ahmet Ertegun signed Farren. However, when
Warner Bros. Records approached him, Farren and bassist
David Hull (from The Joe Perry Project) signed to Warner's roster instead. Hull changed his last name to Heit and in 1986 the band took on the name Farrenheit (also written as Farren/Heit). The band had worldwide success including rotation on
MTV and an opening slot on
Boston's 75-stop sold-out American tour. The band's eponymous album was released in 1987 and spent 7 weeks on the
Billboard 200, peaking at #179. During this time, Farren was a guest artist on
Nona Hendryx's
The Heat and
Bad Company's
Fame and Fortune. He also performed alongside his sister, Robin Farren, in a band they named Farren, though Farrenheit fans referred to the band as The Charlie Farren Group to avoid confusion with female singer
Ferron.
Hiatus from music Farren took a hiatus from the music business in 1989 with the birth of his first child. He worked for over 22 years in a global business development role at various information technology corporations including
Digital Equipment Corporation,
Compaq and
Hewlett-Packard.
Return to music 1995 saw the return of Farren to the music business when he founded an independent music management company to manage the career of hand-picked artists such as
Jon Butcher. Over the next few years, he provided background vocals for
Peter Wolf's album
Long Line and
Joey McIntyre's album
Stay The Same. Farren returned to performing and releasing music in 1999 and has since shared stages with
The Kinks,
Huey Lewis,
Jethro Tull,
Sammy Hagar,
Eddie Money,
Warren Zevon among others. He also continues to release both new and old recordings. His most recent release includes his completed version of an unfinished song originally written by deceased friend
Brad Delp of the band Boston. As “America’s Special Guest,” Farren has opened shows as an acoustic performer for Pat Benatar and Neil Giraldo, Three Dog Night, REO Speedwagon, Jay Leno, Foghat, The Fools!, as well as many others. ==Other projects==