Juan Belmonte

Since he was a little boy in his hometown, Juan's dream was always the same: playing piano to get into the music world. Juan recorded his first records in 1994 focused on Valencia's wild techno scene. Little by little, Juan's name begun to be listened in the record companies as a fantastic arranger and producer. His first great success comes with the album "Palabra de Mujer" for Mónica Naranjo, for whom he produces and arranges four songs, among them the spanish dance classic "Desátame".

He combines the production of house music with productions for latin artists such as Magneto or Ricky Martin until 1997, when along with marketing specialist Abel Arana, he creates Pumpin' Dolls to remix the hit song "Desátame". In those years they developed a succesfull career not only in Spain, but worldwide, achieving three times the #1 position on Billboard USA with the hit singles "Strong Enough" for Cher, "Maria Maria" for Santana, and "Unpretty" for TLC, awarded each one with Grammy for best single.

Rashaan Patterson, Mike Oldfield, Christopher Cross, Whitney Houston, Kylie Minogue, Matt Bianco, Amanda Lear, A-Ha or Blue are some of the artists that called Pumpin' Dolls to give a new meaning to their songs.

The list of latin artists remixed by Pumpin' Dolls is not less impressive: Miguel Bose, Shakira, Ana Torroja, Marta Sanchez, Christian Castro, Jose el Francés, Marcela Morelo, OBK, La Union, Malú, Shalim, Miami Sound Machine, etc. After 7 years of febrile work, more than 30 #1 in the charts, and 4 albums produced, Pumpin' Dolls decides to end their professional relation in the summer of 2005.

Juan Belmonte then decides to restart his career as a producer and Dj, beginning with the electro underground album FABULOSA FAB-01. The second album by Juan it's released on august 2007 by the spanish label Blanco Y Negro.

"Olivia Valere's Night & Chill" features international guests such as Mr. Shy and his first japanese song, "Tanabata", sung by Naruchan. Juan Belmonte also directs the videoclip of the song.

After three years and another two big hits produced for spanish diva Mónica Naranjo, Juan decides to take a three year hiatus to work on his first novel. In 2012 he has come back to music with a new record label, Juan Belmonte Music, and many songs to come.