Artist's albums
Change This Pain For Ecstasy
2023 · single
Circulate - Wolfram Remix
2020 · single
Sicko - Bawrut Remix
2020 · single
Vortex - Krystal Klear Remix
2020 · single
Automatic (feat. Peaches) [Rex The Dog Vocal Remix]
2020 · single
Transmitter
2020 · EP
Atoms Forming A Molecule
2020 · single
Experimental Housing
2019 · single
Vortex
2019 · single
Crasher
2018 · single
Teufelsberg
2016 · single
You Are A Blade
2015 · single
Sicko
2015 · single
Do You Feel What I Feel (Remixes)
2013 · album
Do You Feel What I Feel (Radio Edit)
2013 · single
POW!
2011 · single
Bubblicious
2009 · single
I Can See You, Can You See Me ?
2009 · single
The Rex The Dog Show
2008 · album
Kitsuné: Circulate
2007 · single
Maximize
2006 · single
Frequency
2004 · single
Prototype
2004 · single
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Biography
Rex the Dog is responsible for some of the most infectious and exuberant '80s-inspired electro house singles in a decade chock-full of them. Before veteran producer Jake Williams (aka JX) stepped forward to officially confirm rumors of his involvement, the mystery surrounding Rex the Dog's identity garnered a fair amount of attention in electronic circles -- but it never overshadowed the music itself, with its recognizable, impressively durable template of simple, sturdy midtempo beats, buoyant burbling bass, and melodic but constantly mutating portamento synth riffs (and occasionally vocals) flanged and filtered into delirium. Williams scored multiple mainstream house hits (including several top 20 U.K. singles) throughout the '90s under the monikers JX and Mekka, and as a member of Planet Perfecto, but sometime after the turn of the millennium he struck out in a less overtly commercial direction, adopting the Rex the Dog alias. He tracked down a Korg 700S synthesizer built in 1974, after learning that it had been used on the Normal's "Warm Leatherette" and used it almost exclusively to create the tracks for the first two Rex 12"s, Prototype and Frequency, which appeared on Kompakt in 2004.