[lbo-talk] Psychic TV -- worth seeing?

Michael Pugliese michael.098762001 at gmail.com
Tue Oct 3 11:36:38 PDT 2006


Michael Moynihan (who does have explicit neo-Nazi politics) who has written on Nordic death metal and a grisly murder by a Neo-Nazi metal band might have data on Boyd Rice. Kevin Coogan, anti-fascist researcher who knows tons about punk and metal might as well. <kevin952 at yahoo.com>

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Michael_Moynihan_(journalist)

In 1992, Moynihan published a collection of writings by pro-Manson National Socialist Revolutionary James N. Mason. Moynihan edited Mason's newsletter SIEGE (published from 1980-1986) into a book, Siege: The Collected Writings of James Mason (review), for which he wrote the introduction. In Portland, Oregon Moynihan headed Storm Productions. Moynihan co-authored Lords of Chaos: The Bloody Rise of the Satanic Metal Underground. He has edited two Julius Evola books, and a collection of writings by Karl Maria Wiligut. He has contributed to Seconds Magazine, The Scorpion (book review), Vor Tru, and Filosophem. He is one of the editors of TYR: Myth - Culture - Tradition, and the North American editor of Runa.

* Black Sun: Aryan Cults, Esoteric Nazism and the Politics of Identity by Nicholas Goodrick-Clarke, 2001, ISBN 0-8147-3155-4

* Dreamer of the Day: Francis Parker Yockey and the postwar fascist international (Appendix I: The Devil and Francis Parker Yockey) by Kevin Coogan, (Autonomedia, Brooklyn, NY, 1998, ISBN 1-57027-039-2)

* Lucifer Rising : A Book of Sin, Devil Worship and Rock 'n' Roll by Gavin Baddeley, Paul Woods. (Plexus Publishing, UK, 1999, ISBN 0-85965-280-7)

http://oraclesyndicate.twoday.net/stories/605560/ How Black is Black Metal? uk Kevin Coogan - Lords of Chaos (LOC), a recent book-length examination of the "Satanic" black metal music scene, is less concerned with sound than fury. Authors Michael Moynihan and Didrik Sederlind zero in on Norway, where a tiny clique of black metal musicians torched some churches in 1992. The church burners' own place of worship was a small Oslo record store called Helvete (Hell). Helvete was run by the godfather of Norwegian black metal, 0ystein Aarseth ("Euronymous", or "Prince of Death"), who first brought black metal to Norway with his group Mayhem and his Deathlike Silence record label.



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