Dash Berlin Albums Ranked

Dash Berlin is a Dutch electronic music trio started in 2007 in The Hague by Eelke Kalberg and Sebastiaan Molijn. The frontman of the group was Jeffrey Sutorius, the seventh most popular DJ in the world according to DJ Mag in 2012; Kalberg and Molijn were record producers. Kalberg and Molijn left the group in 2019 and returned in 2021 after winning a legal dispute against Jeffrey Sutorius over the “Dash Berlin” trademark. Sutorius initially started playing drums influenced by his late father who was a drummer in a jazz band, before discovering electronic music. He worked at BPM Dance and Mid-Town Records specializing in vinyl, with both stores becoming meeting places for many established Dutch DJs. Molijn and Kalberg, who were deejaying as Pronti and Kalmani at the time, have credited Sutorius as a vital source of inspiration for some of their biggest records during that time. Here are all of Dash Berlin’s albums ranked.

Relive the music of Dash Berlin. Click below and enjoy his most memorable collaboration songs!

2. #musicislife, 2012

Dash Berlin – #musicislife (2012, CD) - Discogs

“I didn’t think Berlin could top his “The New Daylight” CD but was I wrong. The audio reproduction complements many of the tracks on this CD. If you have the capability, track 2 should be played LOUD (no earbuds) – it will dispel all demons in the room and make you dance till dawn. The sonics in the entire disc is 25% better than Daylight – one could say that Musicislife kicks the living daylights out of it. This disc is fundamentally trance music – something you can look forward to especially if you’re driving way into the night and you want cruise music. Berlin has matched his talents with top lead vocals in the genre.”

1. The New Daylight, 2009

Dash Berlin – The New Daylight (2009, File) - Discogs

“Armada Music has taken over the world of electronic music and Berlin’s CD “The New Daylight” is a superior example of this phenom. Berlin and Van Buuren are two household names for this type of sound – mostly synth with top quality vocals. Every track on this CD is refreshing, varied, and spellbinding. But don’t buy the MP3 version because (as we all should know) MP3 uses compression to reduce the music file and thereby erases the spellbinding characteristic.”