Miklós Malek (musician)

This article is about the music producer, songwriter, musician, artist. For his father, Hungarian classical composer, see Miklós Malek (composer).
The native form of this personal name is Malek Miklós. This article uses the Western name order.
Miklos Malek

Miklos at Westlake Studios
Background information
Born (1975-04-15) 15 April 1975
Budapest, Hungary
Genres Pop, R&B, new-age, dance, electronic, classical-crossover
Occupation(s) Music producer, songwriter, mixing & mastering engineer
Years active 1990–present
Website www.miklosmalek.com

Miklos Malek (in Hungarian Ifj. Malek Miklós) (born in Budapest, Hungary on 15 April 1975) is a Hungarian songwriter, music producer and artist and television personality,[1] who is a resident of Los Angeles. He has produced for a number of renowned artists. He is also a judge and mentor in the Hungarian version of X-Faktor.

Musical career

Los Angeles-based music producer, songwriter and mixing engineer Miklos Malek grew up in a family of renowned musicians in Budapest. After receiving a master's degree in classical piano at the Franz Liszt Academy of Music, he moved to the U.S. to study at Berklee College of Music. In the early 2000s, he moved to New York where he was signed as a songwriter to Notation Music Publishing which led to his breakthrough as a co-writer and arranger of Anastacia's “I Thought I Told You That” (featuring Faith Evans) and the opportunity to work on Jennifer Lopez' hit song "Love Don't Cost a Thing". During the following years, he also established himself as a music producer and mixing engineer working on projects such as Jessica Andrews, M2M, Dream, Sylvia Tosun, David Phelps, Marion Raven, Hiromi Go (Japan), Coco Lee, Plus One.

In 2006, Miklos moved to Los Angeles and launched his first studio in Hollywood called "Orange Room". Since then he has been working with a wide variety of US and international artists, including Pixie Lott (UK), Ayaka Hirahara (Japan), Sylwia Grzeszczak (Poland), Kat Graham, Justyna Steczkowska (Poland), Janice Dickinson, Tata Vega and Yanni, with whom Miklos has collaborated on 3 albums: Voices, Truth of Touch, and Yanni Live at El Morro, Puerto Rico.[2]

In 2010, he became a judge in the Hungarian X-Faktor talent show[3] and a mentor for the groups. In 2011, he returned to the show mentoring the "Over 25s" and Tibor Kocsis of his team won the second series. In 2012, his contestants took the 2nd (Tímea Antal) and 3rd (Adél Csobot) place. After, the third season of X-Faktor, Miklos decided to end his journey with the show and return to his studio in Los Angeles.[4] Since then, he has been developing new artists in the U.S. and internationally. More recently he is working with new artist, Anika Wilmore.[2] Miklos' work has been featured on over 15 million records.

Personal life

Born in Budapest in 1975, he is the son of the famous classical composer Miklós Malek and pop singer and music teacher Mária Toldy. His sister Andrea Malek is also a singer and actress.

Selected Discography

Filmography

References

  1. Dobos Péter (27 September 2013). "Mezítlábas álomesküvője volt Malek Miklósnak" (in Hungarian). Blikk. Retrieved 1 June 2014.
  2. 1 2 Jonathan Widran (1 February 2014). "Closeup of Miklós Malek". Music Connection Magazine. Retrieved 1 June 2014.
  3. RTL Hungary Klub - X Faktor Miklós Malek page (Hungarian)
  4. Marvin Vasquez (12 December 2013). "QA with producer, songwriter and artist Miklós Malek". Ling Out Loud. Retrieved 1 June 2014.
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