Steel Banglez

Music Producer

Steel Banglez was born in Forest Gate, England, United Kingdom on February 5th, 1987 and is the Music Producer. At the age of 37, Steel Banglez biography, profession, age, height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, measurements, education, career, dating/affair, family, news updates, and networth are available.

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Date of Birth
February 5, 1987
Nationality
England
Place of Birth
Forest Gate, England, United Kingdom
Age
37 years old
Zodiac Sign
Aquarius
Profession
Record Producer
Steel Banglez Height, Weight, Eye Color and Hair Color

At 37 years old, Steel Banglez physical status not available right now. We will update Steel Banglez's height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, and measurements.

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Steel Banglez Religion, Education, and Hobbies
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Steel Banglez Spouse(s), Children, Affair, Parents, and Family
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Steel Banglez Life

Pahuldip Singh Sandhu (born 5 February 1987), better known by his stage name Steel Banglez, is a British actor who has signed to Warner Bros.

Records:

Steel Banglez, who is best known for his recording work with artists including Mist, MoStack, J Hus, and Wiley, made his first chart appearance as a lead artist when his album "Bad" debuted on the UK Singles Chart in February 2018.

Early life

Sandhu grew up in Newham, east London, and he grew up in Forest Gate. He was raised in a Sikh family and was surrounded by traditional Indian instruments like harmoniums and tablas as his mother, a music teacher, was surrounded by them. Sandhu has also stated that he has Pakistani, Bangladeshi, and Sri Lankan roots, in addition to being of Indian Punjabi descent.

He began DJing jungle music with his brothers and then hosted a show on the pirate radio station Mystic FM. He began recording music in his early teens after a mentor introduced him to Fruity Loops and soon released his first track, "Dreams" for his neighbor, the influential grime artist D Double E, who gained even more fame when he released the Big H freestyle from the Practise Hours 2 DVD.

When he was arrested at the age of 17, Steel Banglez's career was suspended, he was convicted of three years in jail for the carrying of a pistol with the intention of ending a life.

Personal life

Steel Banglez's success has enabled him to assist his families by paying for his mother's burial and his sister's college tuition. By a Jamaican friend, he was given the name Steel Banglez in reference to the karas (steel bracelets) he wears as a Sikh.

Steel Banglez is a fan of West Ham United F.C.

Source

Steel Banglez Career

Music career

While in prison, Steel Banglez befriended the rappers Fix Dot’M, Yung Meth and Colours Miyagi, and would produce beats for them on a keyboard. This resulted in his musical direction becoming focused upon rap, and he also gained attention in south London where the centre of the capital's rap scene was based. His earliest production credits came in the mid-2000s. He produced “Colours” by D Double E and Big H’s Practice Hours 2 Freestyle.

After being released, Steel Banglez contributed production to Fix Dot'M and Yung Meth's mixtape A Fix of Meth, and he teamed up again with Yung Meth, this time with Ghetts, on "Tidal Wave" which was released on SB.TV. He soon started working on tracks with a wider range of artists, such as "Breakdown" (with Big H, P Money, Wiley and Ghetts) and "Go Down South" (with Krept, Konan, Chip and Yungen, Not3s and James Lukezo of zua visa).

Eager to establish his credentials as a producer, Steel Banglez ran a home studio from his manager's house which offered free studio time to artists, with Wiley and Roll Deep two of the highest profile names to put their vocals to his beats. Steel Banglez later moved to a professional studio in what is now the Link Up TV office where he worked with Cashtastic, Yungen and Krept and Konan. In 2014, Steel Banglez focused on producing Cashtastic's debut album which was due to be released by Universal Music. However, that project ended when Cashtastic was deported to Jamaica as part of the Hostile Environment policy. As a result, new production work dried up and Steel Banglez lost direction in what he calls a “mad depressed stage” in his life.

Steel Banglez was newly inspired when he heard the track "No Buddy" by MoStack in the summer of 2015. They connected via Twitter, and Steel Banglez produced his debut mixtape Gangster with Banter. On New Year's Eve of 2015, he first heard MIST and realised that the Birmingham-based rapper's use of phrases from the Punjabi language would help him connect with a large audience.

After making contact via Instagram, Steel Banglez drove MIST to his studio in London where he played him the beat of what would become the track "Karlas Back". He produced MIST's breakthrough EP M I S T to the T in 2016 and then acted as executive producer on his Warner Bros. Records debut Diamond in the Dirt in 2018, which featured artists including MoStack, Jessie Ware and Haile from WSTRN. Another high-profile production came when he collaborated with Jae5 on "Fisherman", a track from J Hus' debut album Common Sense.

Steel Banglez's career as a lead artist was also gaining momentum. He signed a publishing deal with Warner/Chappell Music in April 2017 before signing to Warner Bros. Records, together with his imprint Spiritual Records, later renamed Gifted Music, in April 2017.

He released "Money" in March 2017, which featured several of his friends and collaborators such as MoStack, MIST, Haile and Abra Cadabra. MoStack also appeared on the follow-up single "Bad" alongside Yungen, Mr Eazi and Not3s. Released in November, "Bad" climbed the UK Singles Chart for several weeks before peaking at number 29 in February. In March, the track was certified Silver by the BPI in recognition of 200,000 sales.

Steel Banglez won Producer of the Year at GRM Daily's Rated Awards 2017.

In 2018 he won Best Non-Traditional Asian Act at Brit Asia TV Music Awards (BAMA), an award which he won again at BAMA 2019.

Source

The rise of Albanian rappers mocking their luxury lifestyle in the United Kingdom has resulted in weapons, heroin, and girls

www.dailymail.co.uk, April 15, 2023
Hundreds of drill artists have gained thousands of Spotify and YouTube followers thanks to their songs, which often promote gun violence and heroin use when trying to take a shot at Britain's schools, including OG Merks, MGee, and Lucii. It comes as their countrymen continue to dominate the international cocaine market, flooding Britain's streets with the Class A drug and using extreme brutality, including executions, to confront anyone who stands in their way. Some rap celebrities, who they brand 'pigs,' mock British police, while boasting of owning Skorpion machine guns and giving tips on how to break into car windows, many of whom appear to endorse this criminal lifestyle in social media posts and music videos. Although some rappers maintain they have no ties to the underground, for others, the lines are blurred. For example, the Hellbanianz group is highly feared on London's streets, has many rappers in its ranks, and several members of prison.