No Colours Records

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No Colours Records is a German mail order and record label from Mügeln specialised in black metal and connected to the National Socialist black metal scene.[citation needed]

Contents

[edit] Background

No Colours Records mostly releases black metal records, but has also released records related to other extreme metal genres such as thrash and death metal. Most releases appear both on CDs and as limited vinyl editions. Furthermore, the label sells merchandising articles such as T-shirts and embroidered patches.

The label's most well-known bands are Graveland and Nargaroth.[citation needed] No Colours has also released many of Rob Darken's side projects such as Lord Wind and Infernum. Besides neo-nazi bands such as Thor's Hammer from Poland, the label has also signed many apolitical bands like Wigrid and Suicidal Winds, so some are against an association to the far right.[citation needed]

[edit] History

Steffen Zopf founded No Colours Records in 1993 as a label and mail order for black metal records and merchandise.[citation needed] Among his first releases are Dimmu Borgir's first album For All Tid and the first releases by Graveland after their departure from Lethal Records. In 1996 the label released both Absurd's and Falkenbach's debut albums. Absurd's "Asgardsrei" EP was also financed by Zopf but released under the name "IG Farben Production".[1]

In 1999, Nargaroth, another controversial black metal band,[citation needed] was signed. On October 6, 1999, there was a raid by the German police.[citation needed] Besides No Colours label, Christhunt Productions, and Darker Than Black—the former label of Absurd members Hendrik and Ronald Möbus—were also raided.[citation needed]

Since 2003, Finnish black metal band Satanic Warmaster, which is often said to be nazi-related,[citation needed] is signed on No Colours Records. Ukrainian pagan band Nokturnal Mortum was signed in 2005.

[edit] Reception

Rock Hard magazine sees No Colours as a company serving the NSBM scene. [2]

German media also reported about the label while reporting about the mob attacks that occurred on August 19, 2007.[3] German newspaper TAZ reported the label was recommended as a "national mail order" in a nazi internet forum[4]. Nevertheless, the saxonian Verfassungsschutz does not agree with that classification and denies observation.[citation needed]

[edit] Sources

  1. ^ Christian Dornbusch/Hans-Peter Killguss: Unheilige Allianzen. Black Metal zwischen Satanismus, Heidentum und Neonazismus, rat (reihe antifaschistischer texte), Unrast Verlag, Hamburg/Münster 2005, p. 150
  2. ^ Mühlmann, Wolf-Rüdiger: "Der rechte Rand im Black Metal", Rock Hard Nr. 241, Juni 2007
  3. ^ Matthias Hasberg. Grauzone zu Neonazis - Der Mügelner Plattenversand «no colours records» vertreibt CDs im Genre zwischen Nazi-Rock und Black Metal. Deutscher Kulturrat. Retrieved on 2007-10-31.
  4. ^ Keine Nazis, nur Ausländerfeinde. die tageszeitung (August 22, 2007). Retrieved on 2007-10-31.

[edit] External links

This article is based on a translation of an article from the German Wikipedia.

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