Nuclear Assault Lyrics — by Popularity
84 songs · Page 1 of 2
| 1 | Brainwashed |
| 2 | Cold Steel |
| 3 | Rise From the Ashes |
| 4 | After the Holocaust |
| 5 | Stranded in Hell |
| 6 | Nuclear War |
| 7 | Inherited Hell |
| 8 | Brain Death |
| 9 | Surgery |
| 10 | Vengeance |
| 11 | Emergency |
| 12 | F# |
| 13 | F# (Wake Up) |
| 14 | When Freedom Dies |
| 15 | Search & Seizure |
| 16 | Fight to Be Free |
| 17 | Survive |
| 18 | Great Depression |
| 19 | Equal Rights |
| 20 | Technology |
| 21 | Something Wicked |
| 22 | Wired |
| 23 | The Plague |
| 24 | Justice |
| 25 | Good Times Bad Times |
| 26 | Cross of Iron |
| 27 | Third World Genocide |
| 28 | Long Haired Asshole |
| 29 | Price of Freedom |
| 30 | Whine and Cheese |
| 31 | Another Violent End |
| 32 | Human Wreckage |
| 33 | Living Hell |
| 34 | Sign in Blood |
| 35 | Defiled Innocence |
| 36 | Behind Glass Walls |
| 37 | Ballroom Blitz |
| 38 | Chaos |
| 39 | Fashion Junkie |
| 40 | Too Young to Die |
| 41 | No Time |
| 42 | Exoskeletal |
| 43 | Discharged Reason |
| 44 | Eroded Liberty |
| 45 | The Forge |
| 46 | Fractured Minds |
| 47 | To Serve Man |
| 48 | Poetic Justice |
| 49 | Resurrection |
| 50 | Preaching to the Deaf |
Nuclear Assault Albums
About Nuclear Assault
Nuclear Assault was a thrash metal band from Queens, New York, formed in 1985 by bassist Dan Lilker (ex-Anthrax) that became one of the genre's most politically charged and technically proficient acts. Their aggressive sound combined blistering speed, complex riffing, and socially conscious lyrics addressing nuclear war, environmental destruction, and political corruption, exemplified on classics like "Game Over" and breakthrough albums such as "Game Over" (1986) and "Handle with Care" (1989). Songs like "Brainwashed" and "Critical Mass" showcased their ability to merge lightning-fast thrash with crossover hardcore punk elements, influencing countless metal and punk bands. Though they never achieved the commercial success of the "Big Four" thrash bands, Nuclear Assault's uncompromising intensity and activist stance made them underground legends who helped define the more extreme end of 1980s thrash metal.