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PC Records

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
German record label
Not to be confused with PC Music.
Record label
PC Records
Founded2000
FounderHendrik Lasch
GenreNeo-Nazi rock, RAC
Country of originGermany
LocationChemnitz

PC Records is a German Neo-Nazi music label. It is an artistic outlet for the Chemnitz Neo-Nazi scene and one of the most active of the far-right and Rock Against Communism music scene in Germany. PC Records is releasing some of the most regionally popular Neo-Nazi bands. Several of the albums released by the label have been banned in Germany for neo-fascist content. The label includes a shop and a mailorder business. The name "PC" refers to the phrase "Political Correctness, no thanks!"[1]

According to the Office for the Protection of the Constitution (Landesamt für Verfassungsschutz Sachsen), PC Records "has a high reputation in the right-wing extremist scene at home and abroad. Its turnover is estimated at several hundred thousand euros per year. The profits enable business owners not only to make a living, but also to finance and promote scene activities."[2]

The founder of PC Records, Hendrik Lasch, was well connected with National Socialist Underground (NSU) member Uwe Mundlos in the 1990s. Lasch promoted a T-shirt, made to raise money to support the three Neo-Nazi activists of NSU, who hid from the police.[3]

The album Adolf Hitler Lives by Gigi & Die Braunen Stadtmusikanten was released on PC Records in 2010. It features the song "Döner-Killer", in which Daniel Giese praises the series of murders committed by the NSU.[4] [5]

Bands

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Featuring around 200 rock album releases from 2000 to 2014, PC Records is one of the most active far-right labels in Germany. With numerous solo samplers, the label finances activities of the neo-fascist scene and its protagonists. The label has released music from the following bands:[6]

  • Aryan Brotherhood
  • Arische Jugend
  • Act of Violence
  • Blitzkrieg, Chemnitz
  • Brutal Attack, UK
  • Die Lunikoff Verschwörung (follow-up project of the Berlin band Landser)
  • Division Germania, Mönchengladbach
  • Gigi & Die Braunen Stadtmusikanten, Daniel Giese
  • Heilige Jugend
  • Kodex Frei
  • Sacha Korn
  • Sleipnir
  • Stahlgewitter
  • Sturmwehr
  • Skalinger
  • Ungebetene Gäste

References

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  1. ^ Uwe Backes et al: Rechts motivierte Mehrfach- und Intensivtäter in Sachsen (= Berichte und Studien. Nr. 69). Puplished by Hannah-Arendt-Institut für Totalitarismusforschung. V&R Unipress, Göttingen 2014, ISBN 978-3-8471-0374-5, p. 201.
  2. ^ "Verfassungsschutz – Rechtsextremismus". www.verfassungsschutz.sachsen.de. Archived from the original on 31 October 2019. Retrieved 31 October 2019.
  3. ^ Sybille Steinbacher: Rechte Gewalt in Deutschland: Zum Umgang mit dem Rechtsextremismus in Gesellschaft, Politik und Justiz
  4. ^ Music!, Don't Call it. "Nazi-Musiklabels – Agitatoren und Profiteure".
  5. ^ "PC Records & Backstreet Noise | "Rechts" sind doch die anderen!?". wachsam-in-chemnitz.de.
  6. ^ Maegerle, Anton (12 May 2014). ""Schlag ihn tot, den Jud"". Jüdische Allgemeine.
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