Krátky proces

Krátky proces is a Slovak skinhead and neo-Nazi rock band. The band significantly influenced formation of the skinhead movement in Slovakia and belonged to the most popular bands in this category.[1]

Krátky Proces
Origin Czechoslovakia (now Slovakia)
GenresHard rock, oi!
Years active1990–1998, 2016-so far

History

The core of the band was formed during the last years of communism in Czechoslovakia (1987–1988). In January 1990 (shortly after the Velvet Revolution), Krátky proces performed its first concert in Bratislava. Thereafter, amateur recording of the concert was distributed by the fans, but the members of Public Against Violence considered the official prohibition of the band. In this period, the first skinheads began to visit common concerts of alternative music bands. In 1993, the band recorded its first official album Na prach! (To dust!) in the studio of the Slovak state radio.[1] Their songs espouse an aggressively nationalist perspective, the band sang about Slovakia without national minorities, verbally attacked the Jews, Romani and foreign students, covered popular song of pro-fascist Hlinka Guard and demanded the physical elimination of the enemy. In the song Poďme na to spolu (Let's make it together) the band called for "cleaning" of the country and burning of dirt in ovens, indirectly referencing to Nazi concentration camps.

After the break-up of Krátky proces, the former members founded a new neo-Nazi band Juden Mord. The radicalism of Juden Mord exceed also ideas presented by Krátky proces and the band openly propagated Nazism.[2] The cover of their first and the only one album Arbeit Macht Frei! used a photo of the Auschwitz concentration camp.[2]

Discography

  • Skin´song vol. 1 (1992, compilation)
  • Na Prach! (1993)
  • Skin´song vol. 2 (1993, compilation)
  • Krátký Proces 1988-1996 (1998, compilation)
  • Slovanská jednota (2016)
gollark: I would recommend against #1, because weirdly enough people like being able to write, download and run programs.
gollark: In potatOS I do #2. Unfortunately the sandboxing implementation is about 500 lines of code, very version-specific because it runs half the BIOS for weird internal reasons, and has several known holes.
gollark: There are two ways around this:- make your "OS" unable to run arbitrary code and instead use a highly limited shell/GUI- sane sandboxing via providing no/a limited FS API to environments where you can run arbitrary code
gollark: The crux of the issue is that people can via a variety of methods write and run code which can edit your thing even if you pointlessly meddle with the shell.
gollark: No.

See also

References

  1. Milo 2005, p. 25.
  2. Milo 2005, p. 26.

Bibliography

  • Milo, Daniel (2005). Rasistický extrémizmus v Slovenskej republike [Racist extremism in Slovak republic] (PDF) (in Slovak). Ľudia proti rasizmu. ISBN 80-89149-03-0.
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