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From the Bronx to Ibiza, the Martinez Brothers Have Become Global House Music Stars

The NYC duo will curate and play their own stage at Miami's Ultra Music Festival.
Photo of the Martinez Brothers standing by a white background
Orbita, may be their most ambitious live experience yet.

Photo by Phoenix Johnson

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For nearly two decades, brothers Steve Martinez Jr. and Chris Martinez, aka the Martinez Brothers, have been fixtures on the global house music circuit. During Miami’s Ultra Music Festival on Sunday, March 29, their label, Cuttin’ Headz, will even have its own stage. But the path from Bronx teenagers to Ibiza mainstays has never felt like an arrival.

Even now, Chris and Steve Martinez talk about their career less like a victory lap and more like a long learning process. “We got into this game really young,” Steve Martinez tells New Times over Zoom. “We’re still learning all the time.”

That mentality has carried the brothers through a career that’s now pushing toward its 20th year. It’s one that includes residencies in Ibiza, collaborations with pop and reggaeton stars, and their own influential house label, Cuttin’ Headz.

But their latest project, a full-scale North American concept tour called Orbita, may be their most ambitious live experience yet.

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Inside the Martinez Brothers’ ‘Orbita’ Tour

The show centers around a floating UFO-like stage installation suspended above the crowd, part sci-fi spectacle and part club experiment. It’s the kind of theatrical production that house music historically avoided, but in today’s booming dance scene, the Martinez Brothers saw an opportunity to push things further.

And like most things in their career, the idea started casually. “It happened in stages,” Steve explains. “We were talking about doing something different for our residency. We had this alien concept at first, and then we were like, ‘Man, wouldn’t it be sick if there was a spaceship in the club?’”

The concept evolved quickly. The duo began experimenting with visual mockups using AI render tools like Midjourney, sketching out possible stage designs.

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“Before we knew it,” Steve says, laughing, “we were actually building the thing.” The result is Orbita, a touring show that combines immersive visuals with the groove-heavy house music the brothers have spent years refining.

The tour also marks a shift in how they approach the U.S. market. For years, much of the Martinez Brothers’ dominance existed overseas. They were frequent fixtures at Ibiza clubs and European festivals, where underground house music has long enjoyed mainstream cultural weight.

Dance Music is Finally Finding its Footing in the U.S.

The American dance scene has changed dramatically in recent years. House music, once relegated to underground clubs, has surged into wider popularity, fueled by festival crowds, viral DJ clips, and a new generation of producers embracing the genre’s roots.

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The Martinez Brothers have watched the resurgence from the inside. “Being in the States more has been amazing,” Chris Martinez says. “People are really receptive right now.”

Part of the shift has been generational. Younger listeners discovering house music often find themselves tracing the lineage backward and inevitably landing in the Martinez Brothers’ catalog.

Still, the duo seems almost puzzled when people talk about their influence. “When people say stuff like that, it’s humbling,” Steve says. “But honestly, I don’t really know how people see us like that. Sometimes I’m like, ‘Really?’”

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That humility is surprising considering the longevity of their career. Chris and Steve were teenagers when they began DJing in New York. They grew up surrounded by dance music culture, introduced to classic house records by their father, and immersed in the legacy of New York nightlife icons like Larry Levan and the legendary club Paradise Garage.

By their late teens, the brothers were already playing serious gigs. Within a few years, they were traveling internationally. Longevity in dance music is notoriously difficult. Scenes change quickly, trends cycle, and DJs can fade just as fast as they rise.

But the Martinez Brothers credit their survival to one simple rule: evolve constantly. “If you look at artists who last, people like Michael Jackson, they were always changing their sound,” Steve says. “They weren’t trying to stay stuck in one decade.”

The same philosophy has shaped their label, Cuttin’ Headz. Founded more than a decade ago, the imprint began as a home for the duo’s own releases before evolving into a platform for rising producers across the global house scene.

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Over the years, the label has helped launch the careers of several emerging artists, something the brothers say remains one of their proudest accomplishments. “At first it was just a vessel for our music,” Chris explains. “But then we realized there were all these talented friends making incredible stuff. So we wanted to give them a platform.”

Watching those artists grow, sometimes after just one or two releases, is deeply satisfying. “It’s cool to see someone put out a track with us and then suddenly they’re touring the world,” Steve says.

Bringing a Global Influence to Stage and Studio

That community ethos will be on full display this spring when the Martinez Brothers host their own Cuttin’ Headz stage at Ultra Music Festival in downtown Miami.

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The lineup reads like a family gathering: longtime collaborators, close friends, and newer artists connected to the label. “Everybody on that stage is someone we really mess with,” Steve says. “It’s like a reunion.”

The festival appearance comes at a moment when house music is arguably bigger than it’s been in decades, but the brothers remain careful not to overanalyze the trend. From their perspective, inspiration still comes from the same place it always has: listening widely. “We listen to everything,” Chris says.

The show centers around a floating UFO-like stage installation suspended above the crowd.

Their playlists span genres and eras, from salsa and soul to hip-hop, funk, and disco. Lately, they’ve even been diving into punk-influenced hardcore.

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Steve points to Baltimore band Turnstile as one recent obsession. “That music just makes you want to rage,” he says. “But in a positive way.”

That eclectic listening habit also fuels their studio process, which remains deliberately unpredictable. Some tracks begin with a drum groove. Others emerge from obscure samples dug up during record store trips. Sometimes the spark comes from collaborating with artists outside their usual orbit.

In recent years, that orbit has expanded significantly. The Martinez Brothers have worked with Latin artists including Rauw Alejandro and Dominican rapper Tokischa, bridging the gap between house music and the broader Latin pop world.

Those sessions have also exposed the duo to new creative workflows. “Some producers move incredibly fast,” Steve says. “They’ll build a whole track in minutes.”

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Watching those approaches has changed the way the Martinez Brothers think about production. “You take what works and bring it into your own process,” he explains. Even after nearly two decades behind the decks, that curiosity remains central to their identity.

When asked about career milestones, the Ibiza residencies, the fashion collaborations, and the global tours, the brothers acknowledge the achievements but quickly shift the conversation back to the work itself.

One moment still stands out: their Ibiza residency. “For a lot of DJs, that’s a box you want to check,” Chris says. “Being there every season, playing those rooms, that’s special.”

But the real reward, they insist, remains the same simple thing that started it all. Playing music. Sharing it with people. And finding whatever comes next.

“We just love making music,” Chris says. “And we love sharing it.”

Ultra Music Festival 2026Friday, March 27, through Sunday, March 29, at Bayfront Park, 301 Biscayne Blvd., Miami; ultramusicfestival.com. Tickets from $479 via ultramusicfestival.com.

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