Steve Angello Albums Ranked
Steven Patrik Josefsson Fragogiannis (born 22 November 1982), better known by his stage name Steve Angello, is a Greek-Swedish DJ, record producer, remixer, and record label owner. He is a member of the Swedish House Mafia, together with Axwell and Sebastian Ingrosso. Steve Angello began producing under the alias Who’s Who and released tracks called “Not So Dirty” and “Sexy F*ck”. He often worked with fellow Swedish DJ Sebastian Ingrosso on DJing, producing under the names Buy Now, Fireflies, General Moders, Mode Hookers, Outfunk, and The Sinners. Angello released his early records through Subliminal, Records, Cr2, and Refune, as well as producing for Interscope Records, however, he is the owner and founder of Size Records based in Stockholm, Sweden which was established in 2003. Through Size, he has released singles such as “Gypsy”, “Isabel” and “Flonko”. In 2004 Angello released his remix of Eurythmics’ “Sweet Dreams (Are Made of This)”, and also has produced with Eric Prydz under the name A&P Project. In 2006, Angello has created an alias with Axwell under the name Supermongo, later renamed Supermode, in which they released the hit single “Tell Me Why, a cover version of an old Bronski Beat track, Ministry of Sound’s Data Records. Here are all of Steve Angello’s albums ranked.
Click below and enjoy the music of Steve Angello. Reminisce his most beloved house dance songs.
2. Human, 2018
“First track in here pretty much showcases everything that’s wrong with this album: it’s overblown, pretentious, unoriginal, dull and uninspired. The album pretty much brings nothing new or interesting to the table, and resorts to imitate the style of better artists, which I would’ve been fine with, if it actually were good.”
1. Wild Youth, 2016
“I was thoroughly impressed by the first six songs as I felt they differed just enough from one another to remain interesting while being a concise and poignant work of art. Now Steve Angello, of Swedish House Mafia fame, is compiling the songs from the first chapter and releasing the full album. The fear here is that extending it might make it lose some of its magic if he didn’t bring a sufficient amount of new ideas to the table.”