Angelina Mack

Genre: Pop
Hometown: Bed-Stuy, Brooklyn, NY

Angelina Mack’s connection to music began naturally and at a young age, as if it chose her as much as she gravitated toward it. Her mother Cristiana is an Italian journalist, and her father, Almack, is an artist-producer with more than forty house-music releases across major and independent labels--both activists with a natural passion for social justice. In this inspired setting, Angelina studied classical music with renowned pianist Edith Hirshtal and adopted the musical influence the likes of Wonder, Miles, and her borough-kindred spirit, Brooklyn's own Carole King. Throughout her childhood home there frequently flowed sounds of House, Jazz, Rock, Hip-Hop, with late night jam sessions being the norm.

She first made waves in middle school with "Free," a musical response to the all-too-common scourge of childhood bullying. Writing skillfully and from the heart, she penned "Stop A Fight" amidst the wave of social injustice on the heels of George Floyd's murder during the pandemic. The track went viral, gaining views, streams, and attracting cameras from multiple major television networks. Mack's voice and writing had become a vessel for change, channeling the musicality and passion she was raised on.

The BMI Foundation recognized Angelina's brilliance with the Chris Trousdale Dream Award, providing both a platform and monetary award with which she was able to springboard to the next stage of her career. She continues to learn and grow as part of the Modern Artist Development and Entrepreneurship (MADE) program at the University of Miami’s Frost School of Music. And in October of 2025 Angelina released her debut single "Lonely Fool" — an electrifying Gen Z heartbreak anthem channeling the energy of Hayley Williams and vocal prowess of Amy Lee, with compelling melodic infusions forged during her childhood exposure to the sounds of Joni Mitchell.

Angelina is truly the sum of all her parts. She exudes her paternal Black/Asian heritage right alongside her mother's Italian roots; she revels in both the academic study of music and the visceral expression it allows. From her days in the Brooklyn Youth Chorus to fighting for equality through her early songwriting, today Angelina finds herself poised to come into her own as a formidable, compassionate musical talent.

Posted on 11/7/25