Artist's albums
Wake Up (The Hex Hector Mixes)
1999 · single
Closer (The Hex Hector MIX)
2020 · single
Allura SAMPLER
2011 · album
Allura
2010 · album
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Artist
Biography
Beginning back in the late '70s when his grandmother would play him Salsoul records, Hex Hector devoted his life to New York's eternally thriving house music community and eventually rose to the top, winning himself a Grammy along with enormous industry clout. Some producers remix one another's work; others, like Hector, remix the biggest names in the business: Madonna, Jennifer Lopez, Ricky Martin, Whitney Houston, Janet Jackson, Diana Ross, and more. Yes, Hector was a go-to guy; if a record label wanted one of its pop hits to crossover to the dancefloors, they called up this man. Furthermore, beyond his big-money remixes for pop stars, Hector also thrived as a DJ, spinning at most of New York's elite clubs. Despite his industry clout, Hector never released too many of his own albums. In the early 2000s, he began releasing mix albums, but still devoted most of his time to remixing, a gift that won him a Grammy in 2001. Born to a Puerto Rican family in New York, Hector divided his time between his immediate family and his grandmother. The latter would play music at all hours of the day, all day. And she would play music of all kinds: everything from Santana and Cal Tjader to Al Green and the Rolling Stones; and anything on the Salsoul label, the definitive label for late-'70s disco. All of this musical exposure influenced Hector heavily, to the point where he began DJing at neighborhood parties beginning in 1979. It wasn't long, then, until he began frequenting the enormous New York club scene: Larry Levan at the Paradise Garage, Kenny Carpenter at Bonds, Jellybean Benitez at the Funhouse, Afrika Bambaataa at the Roxy, Mark Kamins at Danceteria, and so on. By 1986, Hector himself had become a resident DJ at the China Club, where he befriended a young, yet unknown J-Lo. In later years, he would graduate to such clubs as Palladium, Tunnel, Limelight, and Sound Factory, among others. It wasn't until the late '90s, though, that his remixing began to eclipse his DJing. He teamed up with Soul Solution in 1996 for a remix of Toni Braxton's "Un-Break My Heart," which became a huge dancefloor hit, and his remixing assignments continued from there. Within years, he'd become one of the industry's most-demanded remixers, working for such pop superstars as Madonna, Jennifer Lopez, Ricky Martin, Whitney Houston, Janet Jackson, Diana Ross, and more. ~ Jason Birchmeier, Rovi