... Zyklon B Zombie”, which also appears on the re-issue of The Second Annual Report (1991); see particularly the cover of the 7-inch single “United/Zyklon B Zombie” (1978). As well as guitar, bass and vocals, Einstürzende Neubauten created ...
... Zyklon B, which was used in the Nazi extermination camps during the Second World War). If ingested, tetrodotoxin blocks the sodium channels in nerve cells, which prevents these cells from transmitting electrical impulses. In minuscule ...
... Zyklon B Zombie, released on the band's own Industrial Records in May 1978. Not only is the single title a statement, as Zyklon B was a gas used by Nazi Germany during the Holocaust, but the artwork is just as controversial; the front ...
... Zyklon B gas, the stuff that killed millions of people in the camps. Bayer was once part of a large conglomerate, IG Farben, that churned out thousands of killer Zyklon B canisters. The gas was originally invented by Fritz Haber, a man ...
... Zyklon B Zombie " , a song named after the Zyklon B extermination gas used by the Nazis . Despite the darker tones that were starting to spew out of my record player , the summer of 1978 still retained an air of inno- cence . I had ...
... Zyklon B Zombie ' , was a fantastically bizarre release that jolted the listener into another sonic dimension . The flip - side was the deliberately provocative reference to the Zyklon B poison gas used at Auschwitz extermination camp ...
... b/w “I Heard It through the Grapevine.” Island WIP 6505, 1979. Smith, Patti. Easter. Arista AB 4171, 1978. Smith ... Zyklon B Zombie.” Industrial IR0003, 1978. United States of America. The United States of America. Columbia CS 9614 ...
... Zyklon B Zombie " and " United " is a new release on Industrial Records . This could be the most " musical ” Throbbing Gristle release yet . For those who don't know , Zyklon was the poison gas used in the Nazi death camps in the faux ...
... Zyklon B Zombie Some of the earlier COUM Transmissions shows had made audiences literally vomit at the sight of bloodletting and torture (Ford, 5.19–20). The aim of Throbbing Gristle was to achieve a similar effect of turning the body ...