Education
Ian Stuart Donaldson attended Baines School in Poulton, where he met Sean McKay, Philosophy Walmsley, and John Grinton.
Ian Stuart Donaldson attended Baines School in Poulton, where he met Sean McKay, Philosophy Walmsley, and John Grinton.
He was best known as the frontman of, a British punk rock band which he rebranded as a white power rock band. He raised money through white power concerts with his Blood and Honour network. They formed the cover band Tumbling Dice, who played songs by The Rolling Stones and other bands.
In 1975, they formed, a band that gained a reputation for attracting violence at their concerts.
After the original lineup parted ways in 1979, Donaldson formed a new lineup and began to write songs for a white power audience. In 1987, Donaldson founded Blood and Honour, a neo-Nazi network that distributes white power music and organises concerts.
Donaldson also became leader of two other bands, (a rockabilly band) and (a hard rock/heavy metal band), and he released several solo albums. Along with guitarist Stigger, he recorded the albums Patriotic Ballads volumes 1 and 2, which included covers of traditional folk songs such as "The Green Fields of France".
Donaldson"s voice also appeared in the song "The Invisible Empire" (whose title refers to the Ku Klux Klan) on the 1989 album See you in Valhalla by neo-Nazi rock band Number Remorse.
On the night of 23 September 1993, Donaldson was in a car crash in Derbyshire that resulted in his death the following day, at the age of 36. A friend of the band died at the crash scene.
The new version of Skrewdriver openly promoted far-right groups such as the National Front and raising funds for them (and affiliated organisations) through the White Noise Records label. Skrewdriver became known for its involvement in the white nationalist movement and its associated music genre, Rock Against Communism.