Saga

Saga is a Swedish singer known for her white power numbers. She was at one point a member of the band Symphony of Sorrow.

Career
Between 2000 and 2001 she released three albums covering numerous numbers by the British neo-Nazi punks Skrewdriver. "Ian Stuart was the leader singer and his determination to sing about what he believed in despite the hateful opposition and the corporate music industry which wouldn't play his music unless it fit their agenda [sic]", she says.

She has described Rudolf Hess as "[a] true hero and martyr for our people. If I ever feel depressed over my situation I always compare to his sacrifices and then I always feel better cause I know that he took all those year for me and our folk." "Political systems and such things can change and can be fixed, but if our people dies it is gone forever", she says. "And that would mean that natures finest creation would be wiped out, wiped out forever."

Following accusations that her music influenced Anders Behring Breivik, whose manifesto praised her as "the best and most talented patriotic musician in the English speaking world" and quoted lyrics from her songs, she wrote that:

"[S]he is all about increased birthrates of European children", comments "Anonymous Coward" at the Godlike Productions forum.

One of her recordings is a cover of "Tomorrow Belongs to Me" from the musical "Cabaret". Apparently, she's oblivious to the fact that the two men who wrote the song, John Kander and Fred Ebb, are both Jews.

Following the Breivik mass shooting, Saga crawled back into the cave she came out of and disappeared from public life.

Other Sagas
There's a Canadian prog-rock band using the same name, but playing a lot better (and not racist) music.

Not to be confused with the British holiday company specialising in holidays for old people, whose name (contrary to popular opinion) stands for neither "Send A Granny Abroad" nor "Sex And Games for the Aged".

Also not to be confused with the beautifully drawn by Brian K. Vaughan and Fiona Staples.