List of neo-Nazi bands

http://dbpedia.org/resource/List_of_neo-Nazi_bands

Far right bands first appeared in the late 1970s. Punk rock, and genres influenced by it, had used Nazi imagery for shock value, but those bands were usually not fascist. This changed when Oi!, a populist offshoot of punk rock, became popular with white power skinheads. The ambiguity of Nazi chic can make it difficult to identify a band's intentions, especially when the bands do not express a clear political message. Academics usually identify these bands as neo-Nazi by analyzing their worldview. Neo-Nazi bands may break with white power music in that they maintain hardline Nazi beliefs. In countries that were persecuted by the Nazis, bands may criticize Nazi war crimes while adopting a somewhat modified worldview. rdf:langString
rdf:langString List of neo-Nazi bands
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rdf:langString Far right bands first appeared in the late 1970s. Punk rock, and genres influenced by it, had used Nazi imagery for shock value, but those bands were usually not fascist. This changed when Oi!, a populist offshoot of punk rock, became popular with white power skinheads. The ambiguity of Nazi chic can make it difficult to identify a band's intentions, especially when the bands do not express a clear political message. Academics usually identify these bands as neo-Nazi by analyzing their worldview. Neo-Nazi bands may break with white power music in that they maintain hardline Nazi beliefs. In countries that were persecuted by the Nazis, bands may criticize Nazi war crimes while adopting a somewhat modified worldview. * Endstufe * Honor * Kolovrat * Landser * No Remorse * Prussian Blue * RaHoWa * Skrewdriver * Skullhead * Stahlgewitter
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