Héctor el Father
Héctor el Father | |
|---|---|
| Héctor el Father on MTV Héctor el Father on MTV | |
| Background information | |
| Also known as | Héctor el Bambino |
| Born | Héctor Luis Delgado Román September 12, 1978 |
| Genres | |
| Occupations |
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| Years active | 1993–2008 |
| Labels |
|
Spouse |
Jennifer Carrasquillo
(m. 2008) |
Héctor Luis Delgado Román (born September 12, 1978), also known by his stage name Héctor el Father, is a Puerto Rican rapper, singer, songwriter, record producer and pastor. He rose to fame as a member of the duo Héctor & Tito Los Bambinos. As a producer, he is credited with discovering several major artists such as Tempo, Don Omar and Wisin & Yandel.[2]
After becoming a born-again christian, he announced his retirement from music on September 3, 2008, with the album Juicio Final,[3] but his series of Farewell Concerts went on until May 2010.[4] After retirement, he obtained a degree in Theology at Southern Methodist University and has dedicated his life to Christianity.[5]
In 2015, he founded Maranatha Radio Ministries in Río Grande, Puerto Rico.[6] In his recent work as a preacher, he has touched many lives, moving many rappers to follow in his footsteps including Tito el Bambino and Almighty. He has also been prolific in the field of linguistics, coining several terms which have remained in Puerto Rican slang for decades such as calenturri, as well as phrases including sácala, dale úsala (which was used in get-out-the-vote campaigns in 2020).[7]
In 2018, he wrote and starred in the autobiographic movie Héctor el Father: Conocerás la Verdad, which chronicled his conversion to Christianity.[8][9] In 2021, he released his third studio album La Hora Cero, which is the first one released under his real name and only contains religious music.[10][11]
Biography
[edit | edit source]He was born on September 12, 1978, in Carolina, Puerto Rico, under the name Héctor Luis Delgado Román.[12]
In 2008, he married Jennifer Carrasquillo. The couple has two children together. He also has a daughter from a previous relationship.[2]
Career
[edit | edit source]Los Bambinos
[edit | edit source]Héctor joined Efraín Fines Nevares (later known as Tito El Bambino) and formed the duo Héctor & Tito ("Los Bambinos"). Héctor & Tito released their first album in 1998. Together they became reggaeton stars releasing several successful albums and making appearances in several compilations, becoming one of the most sought-out duos in the genre. Both became the first reggaeton artists to sell out a massive concert in Puerto Rico, opening the path to other artists such as Tego Calderón, Daddy Yankee, Don Omar, and Wisin & Yandel. As a duet both captured the world's attention and made reggaeton a popular genre, winning awards such as the Billboard Latin Music Award for Latin Rap Album of the Year for their album A la Reconquista.[13]
In 2004, the duo announced their breakup, and each of them has continued with their separate careers.
Gold Star Music
[edit | edit source]Delgado followed the success of Trébol Clan with his compilation album titled Los Anormales which went on to break all record sales in Puerto Rico with 130,000 copies sold in just two days. Los Anormales featured reggaeton artists such as Daddy Yankee, Don Omar, Trébol Clan, Divino, Zion, and the duo Alexis & Fido.
In February, Delgado performed in the Canary Islands during their big Carnival festivities. His performance was a sold-out success. His song "Baila Morena", which Delgado produced for Héctor & Tito, was one of the songs with the most airplay in Puerto Rico.
Roc-A-Fella Records
[edit | edit source]In mid-2005, Delgado signed an agreement with Roc-A-Fella Records owner Jay-Z to promote him in the United States through the newly founded Roc-A-Fella sub-label Roc-La-Familia. The label, created to house international artists, would have Jay-Z and Héctor both produce and perform on a compilation album. The album titled Los Rompe Discotekas featured top-of-the-line artists both from the United States hip-hop and Spanish reggaeton music industries.[14]
Additionally, Delgado became the Hispanic image for, what was at that time, the Roc-A-Fella-owned clothing line Rocawear. The advertising campaign including his image was featured in TV spots, print, and billboards. The agreement included a deal for Rocawear to sponsor Delgado's clothing designs under the label Bambino. The clothing deal included Héctor designing tennis shoes to be released as part of Jay-Z's "S. Carter Collection" under Reebok.[14]
Solo career
[edit | edit source]On September 16, 2005, he presented two sold-out concerts titled The Bad Boy in Puerto Rico with artists like Wisin & Yandel, Alexis & Fido, Trébol Clan, Fat Joe, Polaco, and others.
Delgado has become one of the most successful producers, not only in the reggaeton genre but in the Latin American music business, even working with renowned Cuban producer Emilio Estefan.[2]
In January 2008, Delgado decided to lose weight and contracted José Bonilla, a personal trainer to help him. He also began practicing the Atkins diet. At the beginning of this weight program he weighed 221 pounds and by the end had lost 31 pounds.[15]
In 2009 he became an evangelical Christian member of the Iglesia Cristo Misionero in Canóvanas.[16]
After leaving the music scene in 2008, he studied theology at Southern Methodist University and obtained a Bachelor of Divinity.[5]
"Harlem Shake" controversy
[edit | edit source]It was confirmed by Delgado that an audio clip from a remix called "Los terroristas" with the line con los terroristas was used uncredited[17] in the opening of Baauer's "Harlem Shake", which became a viral internet sensation in February 2013. Baauer had referred to the voice in the opening of his song, as "The dude in the beginning I got somewhere off the Internet, I don't even know where"[18] in an earlier interview. Delgado told WAPA-TV's Lo Sé Todo that he was working with his lawyers and that he planned to meet with them the next week to discuss his next steps.[17]
Diplo, head of Mad Decent and frontman of dancehall group Major Lazer helped settle the legal dispute in April 2013.[19]
Ministry
[edit | edit source]In 2015 he founded Maranatha Radio Ministries in Río Grande, Puerto Rico.[6]
In 2018, he became pastor of the evangelical church Iglesia Maranatha in Río Grande.[20]
Remixes
[edit | edit source]In 2012 American music producer Baauer sampled his 2006 song “Maldades” as part of Harlem Shake which became an internet sensation and earned a double-platinum certification.
In 2018, Bad Bunny did a remix of Héctor el Father's "Vamos pa' la Calle" in song “Tu no Metes Cabras” which became a triple-platinum hit and peaked at number 31 at the Billboards Hot 50 charts. [21]
Discography
[edit | edit source]With Tito el Bambino
[edit | edit source]Studio albums
[edit | edit source]- Violencia Musical (1998)
- Nuevo Milenio (2000)
- A la Reconquista (2002)
Compilation albums
[edit | edit source]- Lo De Antes (2002)
- Season Finale 1998-2003 (2005)
- The Ultimate Urban Collection (2007)
Live albums
[edit | edit source]- La Historia Live (2003)
As a Solo Artist
[edit | edit source]Studio albums
[edit | edit source]- 2006: The Bad Boy
- 2008: Juicio Final
- 2021: La Hora Cero (as Héctor Delgado)
Live albums
[edit | edit source]- 2007: Bad Boy: The Concert
Compilation albums
[edit | edit source]- 2002: The Godfather
- 2004: Los Anormales
- 2005: Sangre Nueva
- 2005: Gold Star Music: Reggaeton Hits
- 2006: Los Rompe Discotekas
- 2007: El Rompe Discoteka: The Mix Album
- 2007: The Bad Boy: The Most Wanted Edition
- 2008: Mi Trayectoria
Filmography
[edit | edit source]| Year | Title | Role |
|---|---|---|
| 2018 | Hector el Father: Conocerás la Verdad | Himself |
References
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- ^ Héctor Delgado, [1], Instagram, USA, September 15, 2023
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External links
[edit | edit source]- Héctor el Father discography at Discogs
- Héctor el FatherLua error in Module:WikidataCheck at line 29: attempt to index field 'wikibase' (a nil value). discography at MusicBrainzLua error in Module:EditAtWikidata at line 29: attempt to index field 'wikibase' (a nil value).
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- Héctor el Father
- Living people
- Musicians from Carolina, Puerto Rico
- Puerto Rican reggaeton musicians
- Puerto Rican rappers
- Puerto Rican musicians
- Puerto Rican Christians
- Converts to Christianity
- Reggaeton record producers
- Universal Music Latino artists
- Machete Music artists
- Roc-A-Fella Records artists
- 21st-century American rappers
- 1978 births