Zillertal Turk Hunters

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The Zillertaler Türkenjäger was a neo-Nazi music project that was launched in the mid-1990s. The name alludes to the Austrian hit group Zillertaler Schürzenjäger . The success in the German neo-Nazi scene also attracted some imitators.

12 Doitsche mood hits

In May 1997 the CD 12 Doitsche mood hits caused a sensation. The cover of the CD was designed with photo montages. On a historical recording from the German-Soviet war , which was executed by German occupation troops Soviet partisans shows the heads of the former were VIVA -Moderators Mola Adebisi , Farin Urlaub from the band The doctors and Campino from the band Die Toten Hosen mounted. On the CD are karaoke versions of well-known German hits such. B. France, France , Da Da Da , Kreuzberger Nights or the special train to Pankow provided with new texts that are highly anti-Semitic , xenophobic and obviously Nazi -oriented. It was the first album that tried to spread racist and anti-Semitic content based on well-known hit melodies . In its 1997 report, the Brandenburg report for the protection of the constitution cited this album as an example of the increasing spread of right-wing extremist music and cited texts by the band as examples of neo-Nazi song lyrics in the report for 1998.

The sound carrier was published and distributed by the Danish label NS-Records , which at that time was one of the most important contact points for European, especially German, neo-Nazi bands. Live performances of the project are not known.

The producers and musicians of the Zillertaler Türkenjäger could never be found. The public prosecutor tried to prove that Daniel “Gigi” Giese , the singer of the Stahlgewitter group , was involved in the project. Voice analyzes could not substantiate this suspicion, however.

The CD 12 doitsche Stimmungshits the Zillertal Turkish fighter was due to hate speech in accordance with § 130 of the Criminal Code nationwide seized , by orders

and nationwide confiscated by order of the local court of Ulm of 13 January 1998 (ref. 11 Ls 11 Js 10227/97).

The distribution and advertising of the audio carrier is punishable under Section 130 of the German Criminal Code and can be punished with a prison sentence of up to three years or a fine.

reception

The album is one of the "most widespread sound carriers [s] in German right-wing rock history". Groups like Kommando Freisler , Die Faschistische Vier, Die Härt and Gigi & Die Braunen Stadtmusikanten with Daniel Giese took over the concept of the group and covered similar songs.

The funny Zillertal

In 2009 another CD with right-wing extremist lyrics was released under the band name Die lustigen Zillertaler with the album title We don't let singing be forbidden! Thereupon, among other things, the songs Schrei nach Liebe , Alles nur stolen , Above the clouds , Ein Stern , Here comes Alex and '54, '74, '90, 2006 were given different lyrics. As with the first CD, the singers are not identified. The album was indexed on August 31, 2011.

Discography

  • 1997: 12 Doitsche mood hits (as Die Zillertaler Türkenjäger ) - confiscated in 1997, confiscated in 1998
  • 2009: We won't let ourselves be banned from singing! (as Die lustigen Zillertaler ) - indexed in 2011

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Skinhead Music. Constitutional Protection of Lower Saxony , archived from the original on October 18, 2009 ; accessed on October 17, 2015 .
  2. ^ Constitutional Protection Report 1997 Land Brandenburg . (PDF; 22.8 MB) Protection of the Constitution Brandenburg , June 1998, p. 16
  3. ^ Constitutional Protection Report 1998 Land Brandenburg . (PDF; 8.4 MB) Protection of the Constitution Brandenburg , June 1999, p. 23, 34.
  4. Ingo Heiko Steimel: Music and the right-wing extremist subculture . Dissertation. RWTH Aachen 2007, p. 174 ( rwth-aachen.de [PDF; 1.4 MB ]).
  5. Zillertal Turk Hunters . Network against Nazis ; Retrieved January 5, 2015.
  6. Andreas Speit : Right-wing music: neo-Nazis make hits-baiting . In: The daily newspaper . June 8, 2009.
  7. We don't let ourselves be banned from singing! discogs.com
  8. Federal Gazette . No. 131, August 31, 2011