Sylvan (band)

Sylvan
Origin Hamburg, Germany
Genres Progressive rock, symphonic rock, progressive metal, neo-prog
Years active 1998–present
Labels Sylvan Music
Associated acts Temporal Temptation, Chameleon
Website www.sylvan.de
Members Volker Söhl
Matthias Harder
Marco Glühmann
Sebastian Harnack
Past members Kay Söhl
Marko Heisig
Matthias Koops
Jan Petersen

Sylvan is a German progressive rock band, with some hard rock moments, and some melodic pop-rock elements, showing influences of psychedelic rock, Pink Floyd, Marillion, and Genesis.

History

Kay Söhl and keyboardists Volker Söhl and Matthias Harder founded the band Temporal Temptation in 1990. That summer, the eventual founders of Sylvan first played live — mostly hard rock sung in German, with only a little progressive rock.

In Autumn 1990, the band changed its name to Chameleon as a symbol of changeability. Album artwork resembled early Marillion covers and was never issued. In summer 1991, Marko Heisig joined Chameleon as the lead singer and bassist. Between 1992 and 1994, their music turned gloomy and aggressive. In 1992, the first official demo tape of Chameleon was released. With Matthias Koops as lead singer, the second official demo tape was recorded. The title was Slaves and its tracklist was Time, Slaves, Mirror of a Lifetime, and Childhood Dreams.

In 1995, guest musician Marco Glühmann joined the band, and a third and final demo tape was recorded. The tracklist was Beren and Luthien, Golden Cage, and Outro. All of these songs went into the Deliverance album in some way.

In 1997 the last live concert took place under the name Chameleon. The band changed its name to Sylvan. Deliverance was recorded in 1998 and a second CD, Encounters, was released in 2000.

Sylvan had used several bassists but, in spring 2000, Sebastian Harnack filled the role permanently. After releasing Encounters, the band toured in Germany and at several festivals in Europe and even in Mexico. Another highlight was the performance of Encounters / Das Rockballet together with the "New Dance Project". In October 2002, Sylvan released a third album, Artificial Paradise.

Sylvan's fourth album, X-Rayed, sounds rougher and darker, another concept album, each of whose songs tells a story about people coping with an emotional situation. The 2004 tour throughout Germany and Europe featured an appearance at the Rites of Spring Festival in Pennsylvania, USA, and the support of Marillion in Cologne.

Sylvan then produced two albums, both released in April 2006. Posthumous Silence describes in complex music a father who reads the diary of his apparently dead daughter and learns of her desperation. Presets had shorter and catchier songs to make Sylvan's music known to a wider range of rock fans.

Shortly after finishing this work, founder and guitarist Kay Söhl left the band. He was replaced at the end of 2007 by Jan Petersen, who had been a guest guitarist during the Posthumous Silence live show.

Band members

Current members
Former members

Discography

Albums
Live

External links

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