Andi Mengler

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Andi Mengler (born May 9, 1965 in Offenbach am Main ) is a German musician .

Bands

From 1990 to September 1999 Andi Mengler was the singer and guitarist of the Frankfurt punk band Strassenjungs . At the beginning of the 2000s, Mengler founded the Radauband Schmutzhanzz together with the two former street boys Torsten Dechert and Michael Liebert , which, however, did not get beyond a maxi CD. In 2003 Andi Mengler had an appearance with the street boys in the Rockpalast of the WDR . In November 2005 he founded the band The Heilig under the pseudonym Rocco Ernstfall , which won the Hessian Rock Prize in 2008.

Club anthems

In the early 1990s, Andi Mengler wrote the lyrics for the anthem of Eintracht Frankfurt ( Eintracht ) together with Nils Selzer (Tritt Records) , which was produced together with Dragoslav Stepanović , the then trainer of Eintracht Frankfurt. The Eintracht song became a hit in Hesse and was number 1 in the charts on Hit Radio FFH and hr3 in the summer of 1992 .

In 1997 Andi Mengler wrote and sang the club anthem of Kickers Offenbach Forever OFC, which is still current today . In 2013 he released another stadium song Wir sind Offenbach (maxi CD) for Kickers Offenbach. The producer is Oliver Rüger who works for Sasha and Max Mutzke .

Others

In his main occupation, Mengler is marketing manager at the Offenbach-Post media group .

Discography (incomplete)

  • CD, Strassenjungs, Duell, (Tritt-Records), 1991
  • Maxi-CD, Stepi and the street boys, "Eintracht", (Tritt-Records), 1992
  • CD, Strassenjungs, "Tut Gut", (Tritt-Records), 1997
  • Maxi-CD, "Forever OFC", stadium anthem Kickers Offenbach, 1997
  • Maxi-CD, Schmutzhantzz, "Menschenwerk", Ballraum, 2000
  • Maxi-CD, The Heilig, “Drawn from Life”, 2007
  • Maxi-CD, "We are Offenbach", football song Kickers Offenbach, 2013

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. The Heilig - Hessian Rock and Pop Prize 2008. In: acousticshock.de. November 7, 2008, archived from the original on November 11, 2013 ; accessed on September 16, 2019 .
  2. a b Christian Düncher: “Forever OFC” follows “We are Offenbach” . In: op-online.de. September 7, 2013, accessed June 26, 2016 .