Zombie Rock
Zombies are terrifying, there is no denying that, but do they also Rock Out?
Jonathan Coulton seems to think so, and illustrates this point with his song Re: Your Brains.
“Re: Your Brains” plays out a fictional conversation between your average middle management type person, and a previous co-worker who is now a zombie. The Zombie is negotiating a settlement for eating the survivors.
Here is a video-clip which has Jonathan Coulton’s song played out using The Forsaken in World of Warcraft.
On a different note, Songs to wear pants to wrote a song regarding the best and indeed only way to deal with zombies.
Here is a video clip with the mentioned music with clips from the show Supernatural.
It should be mentioned that neither of these songs are especially recent, however both are good.
It should also be mentioned that the creatures in the Supernatural video clip are not zombies. In fact, in the three seasons of the show they have vanquished exactly one Zombie.
It is still, in my opinion, the only video clip which does the song “Shoot the Zombies” justice.

[...] The zombification model created and used is based on the SIR models for infectious diseases, with some modifications - because, unlike the measles, when you encounter a zombie you have an opportunity to cave their head in instead of becoming a zombie, reducing the effective infection rate of the infected population (ie: stop the zombies by shooting them in the head, they can’t eat you if you made them dead.) [...]
Pingback by Zombies Bite » When Zombies Attack!: 2009 Mathematical and Statistical Paper — August 28, 2009 @ 11:21 am
[...] The zombification model created and used is based on the SIR models for infectious diseases, with some modifications — because, unlike the measles, when you encounter a zombie you have an opportunity to cave their head in instead of becoming a zombie, reducing the effective infection rate of the infected population (ie: stop the zombies by shooting them in the head, they can’t eat you if you made them dead.) [...]
Pingback by Zombies Bite! » Blog Archive » When Zombies Attack!: 2009 Mathematical and Statistical Paper — December 9, 2009 @ 10:25 am