Soylent Green
There are multiple artists/bands named Soylent Green.
1. a German indie/alternative rock band
2. a moniker used by electro artist, Roman Flügel
3. a short-lived mid-1990s electronic hard rock band from The Netherlands
4. a progressive rock/metal band from Tellingstedt, Germany
5. a hardcore punk band from Phoenix, AZ, United States
1. The German Soylent Green was founded in 1995 in Lower Bavaria by four friends who knew each other from high school. Read Full BioThere are multiple artists/bands named Soylent Green.
1. a German indie/alternative rock band
2. a moniker used by electro artist, Roman Flügel
3. a short-lived mid-1990s electronic hard rock band from The Netherlands
4. a progressive rock/metal band from Tellingstedt, Germany
5. a hardcore punk band from Phoenix, AZ, United States
1. The German Soylent Green was founded in 1995 in Lower Bavaria by four friends who knew each other from high school. They started writing songs heavily influenced by the grunge and crossover, releasing their first demo, 'Emotional Mind Burst' and a full-length album called 'Temple of the sun'. The year 1998 marked a turning point in Soylent Green’s sound. On their third and fourth albums they shifted towards intensely emotional indie pop/college rock, a sound that matured further on the 2002 album, 'Signals & Sentiments'. Around this time, Soylent Green the band members moved to Munich. Since then, lots of new songs were written and are in the process of being written, some were already recorded as demo versions, some of which are available here on last.fm, where you can also download many of Soylent Green’s other releases. Personnel:
Robert Pietsch (vox, guitar), Arno Reichenauer (guitar), Thomas Matzies (bass), Sebastian Frenzel (drums).
2. Roman Flügel is a well-known name in the German electronic music scene. Active since the early 1990s, Flügel is a chameleon visiting many styles from ambient/IDM to house, techno, electro and sounds further leftfield. Works under the moniker Soylent Green, but also as Alter Ego or with long time partner Jorn Elling Wuttke. Flügel was a co-founder of the Ongaku, Klang and Playhouse record labels.
3. Soylent Green was a short-lived (1995-1997) hardrock band from The Netherlands. Their only studio album, 1996's Nutrient, was released to some acclaim in the Dutch music press for its exciting combination of hardrock power riffs and electronic music. The band toured The Netherlands and Germany, but then split up due to internal friction. The band was based in Amsterdam, but the band members were originally from around The Netherlands: guitarist Jack Pisters from the southern province of Limburg and frontman Marco van der Aar from the eastern Netherlands, for example.
4. Soylent Green was also a band from Tellingstedt, Germany, that played progressive rock/metal. Line-up: Uli Seidenpfennig (bass), Philip Herberger (keyboards), Sven Nuppnau (drums), Dit (vocals), Artschi (guitar) and Marco (guitar).
5. Soylent Green was a hardcore punk from Phoenix,AZ, United States, in the 1980s, featured on the 'This Is Phoenix, Not The Circle Jerks' compilitation.
1. a German indie/alternative rock band
2. a moniker used by electro artist, Roman Flügel
3. a short-lived mid-1990s electronic hard rock band from The Netherlands
4. a progressive rock/metal band from Tellingstedt, Germany
5. a hardcore punk band from Phoenix, AZ, United States
1. The German Soylent Green was founded in 1995 in Lower Bavaria by four friends who knew each other from high school. Read Full BioThere are multiple artists/bands named Soylent Green.
1. a German indie/alternative rock band
2. a moniker used by electro artist, Roman Flügel
3. a short-lived mid-1990s electronic hard rock band from The Netherlands
4. a progressive rock/metal band from Tellingstedt, Germany
5. a hardcore punk band from Phoenix, AZ, United States
1. The German Soylent Green was founded in 1995 in Lower Bavaria by four friends who knew each other from high school. They started writing songs heavily influenced by the grunge and crossover, releasing their first demo, 'Emotional Mind Burst' and a full-length album called 'Temple of the sun'. The year 1998 marked a turning point in Soylent Green’s sound. On their third and fourth albums they shifted towards intensely emotional indie pop/college rock, a sound that matured further on the 2002 album, 'Signals & Sentiments'. Around this time, Soylent Green the band members moved to Munich. Since then, lots of new songs were written and are in the process of being written, some were already recorded as demo versions, some of which are available here on last.fm, where you can also download many of Soylent Green’s other releases. Personnel:
Robert Pietsch (vox, guitar), Arno Reichenauer (guitar), Thomas Matzies (bass), Sebastian Frenzel (drums).
2. Roman Flügel is a well-known name in the German electronic music scene. Active since the early 1990s, Flügel is a chameleon visiting many styles from ambient/IDM to house, techno, electro and sounds further leftfield. Works under the moniker Soylent Green, but also as Alter Ego or with long time partner Jorn Elling Wuttke. Flügel was a co-founder of the Ongaku, Klang and Playhouse record labels.
3. Soylent Green was a short-lived (1995-1997) hardrock band from The Netherlands. Their only studio album, 1996's Nutrient, was released to some acclaim in the Dutch music press for its exciting combination of hardrock power riffs and electronic music. The band toured The Netherlands and Germany, but then split up due to internal friction. The band was based in Amsterdam, but the band members were originally from around The Netherlands: guitarist Jack Pisters from the southern province of Limburg and frontman Marco van der Aar from the eastern Netherlands, for example.
4. Soylent Green was also a band from Tellingstedt, Germany, that played progressive rock/metal. Line-up: Uli Seidenpfennig (bass), Philip Herberger (keyboards), Sven Nuppnau (drums), Dit (vocals), Artschi (guitar) and Marco (guitar).
5. Soylent Green was a hardcore punk from Phoenix,AZ, United States, in the 1980s, featured on the 'This Is Phoenix, Not The Circle Jerks' compilitation.
More Genres
More Albums
Load All
No Artists Found
More Artists
Load All
No Albums Found
No Tracks Found
Genre not found
Artist not found
Album not found
Search results not found
Song not found
can't forsay
Soylent Green Lyrics
No lyrics text found for this track.
The lyrics can frequently be found in the comments below or by filtering for lyric videos.
Game-Freak67
Good discussion!
Frank Conway
Thanks dude
ralph roadster
I would like to make it fiction again.
Matthew David Bowron
I wonder what you guys think of Cloud Atlas which have this idea of predacity in 1840s slavery racism, 1930s classicism homopobia and anti-semitism, 1970s sexism and corporate, 2010s ageism, 2140s genoism and slavery, and 2340s tribalism
Matthew David Bowron
what about vertical farming, which is already in existence in a few places? urban farming?
Martin LRE
We don't have to wonder if soylent green might be possible. Recently (09-08-2019) a Swedish behavioral scientist and marketing strategist, Magnus Söderlund has suggested using humans as a food source. He is quoted as saying: "we must 'awake the idea' that eating human flesh should be discussed as an option in the future." This movie is not too far off.
Edward Louis BernayS
@patty hanks Yeah, Proud Bays Mike Cernovich
American media personality “I went from libertarian to alt-right after realizing tolerance only went one way and diversity is code for white genocide.”