SINGER

Paradise Oskar

1990 - Today

Photo of Paradise Oskar

Icon of person Paradise Oskar

Axel Ehnström is a Finnish songwriter and musician. He is known for writing songs for artists such as Phoebe Ryan, Lost Frequencies and Alle Farben. He participated as Paradise Oskar in the Eurovision Song Contest 2011. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in 26 different languages on Wikipedia. Paradise Oskar is the 3,896th most popular singer (down from 3,660th in 2024), the 665th most popular biography from Finland (down from 630th in 2019) and the 36th most popular Finnish Singer.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Paradise Oskar by language

Loading...

Among SINGERS

Among singers, Paradise Oskar ranks 3,896 out of 4,381Before him are Kool Moe Dee, Aitana, Darlene Zschech, Kanon Wakeshima, Miwa, and Eduard Romanyuta. After him are David Archuleta, Petra Frey, Katherine Jenkins, Vinnie Paz, Laura Tesoro, and Desi Slava.

Most Popular Singers in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1990, Paradise Oskar ranks 693Before him are Roman Bezus, Jonathan Schmid, Sebastian Jung, Christian Gytkjær, Miwa, and Alessandro Pittin. After him are David Archuleta, Anthony Moris, Natalia de Molina, Andrew Albicy, Dominique Aegerter, and Aishwarya Rajesh.

Others Born in 1990

Go to all Rankings

In Finland

Among people born in Finland, Paradise Oskar ranks 665 out of 751Before him are Jere Uronen (1994), Erik Hämäläinen (1965), Mari Rantanen (1976), Marko Asell (1970), Antti Törmänen (1970), and Patrik Antonius (1980). After him are Tuukka Rask (1987), Petri Kontiola (1984), Eero Markkanen (1991), Toni Lydman (1977), Jari Mantila (1971), and Kai Mykkänen (1979).

Among SINGERS In Finland

Among singers born in Finland, Paradise Oskar ranks 36Before him are Krista Siegfrids (1985), Saara Aalto (1987), Erna Siikavirta (1977), Vicky Rosti (1958), Hanna Pakarinen (1981), and Sebastian Rejman (1978). After him are Laura Voutilainen (1975), Jenni Vartiainen (1983), Antti Tuisku (1984), Alma (1996), Anna Abreu (1990), and Sandhja (1991).