EXCLUSIVE: Shocking Reasons for Musicians’ Idolization of Nazis and Hitler Revealed — From David Bowie to Kanye West

**David Bowie’s Flirtation with Fascist Imagery and Rock’s Dark History with Nazi Iconography**

*Published Oct. 23, 2025, 7:00 p.m. ET*

David Bowie’s flirtation with fascist imagery in the 1970s remains one of rock’s darkest and most puzzling episodes – and RadarOnline.com has the inside track on why it is far from unique.

Author Daniel Rachel explores this troubling intersection in his new book, *This Ain’t Rock ‘n’ Roll: Pop Music, the Swastika and the Third Reich*, revealing how some of music’s most influential figures became entangled with Nazi iconography and ideas.

### A Dark Chapter in Rock History

Daniel Rachel, best known for his books *Walls Come Tumbling Down* and *Too Much Too Young*, says his latest work was motivated by both cultural history and personal reflection.

“It felt important to collate pop music’s history with the swastika and the Third Reich,” he explained. “There are personal reasons too, which go back to my childhood.”

Growing up in Birmingham, England, in the 1980s, Rachel was captivated by punk music before fully understanding its provocations. “I would happily sing along to ‘Belsen Was a Gas’,” he said. “I saw images of Sid Vicious with a swastika armband and thought it was funny. At the same time, raised in a Jewish house, I began to understand what the Holocaust was, and to see images of mass burial sites at Belsen while singing ‘Belsen Was a Gas’ triggered an emotion that was difficult to unravel. It has stayed with me ever since.”

### Bowie, Lennon, and the Dangerous Allure of Fascist Imagery

In his book, Rachel traces how artists from the 1960s onward used fascist imagery to shock or seduce audiences – often with little awareness of its real and devastating historical weight.

David Bowie’s 1970s persona, the Thin White Duke, was described by Bowie himself as “a very Aryan, fascist type.” In 1975, Bowie called for “an extreme right front (to) sweep everything off its feet and tidy everything up,” later telling *Playboy*, “Adolf Hitler was one of the first rock stars.”

“Bowie, Mick Jagger, and Bryan Ferry have talked about the impact of Leni Riefenstahl’s film of the Nuremberg rallies,” Rachel said. “When you watch *Triumph of the Will*, it’s easy to see a parallel between Hitler doing a Sieg Heil before thousands of people and a rock star on the lip of a stadium stage, controlling an audience. But in rock’n’roll there has been an attempt to divorce the spectacle from the reality, which was an attempt to exterminate the Jewish people.”

Rachel points out that Bowie’s statements—later dismissed by the musician as the product of cocaine addiction and confusion—were not isolated. John Lennon once drew himself as Hitler, while The Who’s Keith Moon once dressed in an SS uniform and marched through north London’s Golders Green, a predominantly Jewish area.

More recently, Kanye West has praised Hitler and sold swastika-themed T-shirts online, continuing the troubling tradition.

### Provocation, Ignorance, and the Roots of Shock Culture

“I don’t want to be the Simon Wiesenthal (a famous Holocaust survivor) of rock’n’roll,” Rachel said, “but it’s happening in plain sight and being digested by, in some cases, millions of people. Having laid all this out in the book, I’m asking, why is this still going on?”

Rachel believes the fascination some musicians have with Naziism and Hitler stems from rock’s enduring impulse to provoke. “Both stupidity and provocation are the substance of rock’n’roll,” he said. “I was in a band for most of my younger years, and not thinking about what you’re doing is a mainstay of band life. But that’s why the infrastructure around it has to take responsibility.”

He adds that ignorance has also played a significant role. “The Holocaust was an orchestrated genocide,” Rachel said. “That understanding wasn’t necessarily present in the history of rock’n’roll, but it should be now.”

### A Personal Reckoning With the Past

While researching his book, Rachel visited Poland’s concentration camps and confronted his own curiosity. “I found myself almost wanting to buy SS memorabilia, to hold these relics associated with mass murder,” he admitted. “So I do understand the fascination. But Keith Moon parading around Golders Green in an SS uniform only 20 years after the Holocaust? That can’t be right.”

Daniel Rachel’s exploration shines a harsh light on a disturbing but often overlooked aspect of rock history, urging readers and the music world alike to grapple seriously with the legacy of Nazi imagery in popular culture.
https://radaronline.com/p/musicians-who-praised-hitler-reasons-revealed-bowie-kanye-west/

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