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Wikipedia

Backmasking

Backmasking is a recording technique in which a message is recorded backward onto a track that is meant to be played forward.[1] It is a deliberate process, whereas a message found through phonetic reversal may be unintentional.

Artists have used backmasking for artistic, comedic and satiric effect, on both analogue and digital recordings. It has also been used to censor words or phrases for "clean" releases of explicit songs.

In 1969, rumors of a backmasked message in the Beatles song "Revolution 9" fueled the Paul is dead urban legend.[2] Since at least the early 1980s, Christian groups in the United States alleged that backmasking was being used by prominent rock musicians for Satanic purposes,[3][need quotation to verify] leading to record-burning protests and proposed anti-backmasking legislation by state and federal governments during the 1980s, as part of the Satanic panic movement of the time.

Many popular musicians were accused of including backmasked messages in their music. However, apparent backmasked messages may in fact be examples of pareidolia (the brain's tendency to recognize patterns in meaningless data), coincidental phonetic reversal,[2] or as deliberate responses to the allegations themselves.[4]

History edit

Development edit

The backwards playing of records was advised as training for magicians by occultist Aleister Crowley, who suggested in his 1913 book Magick (Book 4) that an adept "train himself to think backwards by external means", one of which was to "listen to phonograph records, reversed".[5][2] In the movie Gold Diggers of 1935, the end of the dancing-pianos musical number, "The Words Are in My Heart," is filmed in reverse motion, with the accompanying instrumental score incidentally being reversed.

 
Tape recorders allow backward recording in recording studios.

In 1959, a vocal group called The Eligibles released a record called "Car Trouble", which contains two nonsense passages. When reversed, they reveal the phrases "And you can get my daughter back by 10:30, you bum!" and (perhaps inevitably) "Now, lookit here, cats, stop running these records backwards!". Peaking at #107 on the Billboard magazine charts that summer, "Car Trouble" is believed to be the first hit record to contain backmasking.[6]

The Beatles, who incorporated the techniques of concrète into their recordings, were responsible for popularizing the concept of backmasking.[7] Singer John Lennon and producer George Martin both claimed they discovered the backward recording technique during the recording of 1966's Revolver; specifically the album tracks "Tomorrow Never Knows" and "I'm Only Sleeping", and the single "Rain".[8] Lennon stated that, while under the influence of marijuana, he accidentally played the tapes for "Rain" in reverse and enjoyed the sound. The following day he shared the results with the other Beatles, and the effect was used first in the guitar solo for "Tomorrow Never Knows" and later in the coda of "Rain".[9][10] According to Martin, the band had been experimenting with changing the speeds of and reversing the "Tomorrow Never Knows" tapes, and Martin got the idea of reversing Lennon's vocals and guitar, which he did with a clip from "Rain". Lennon then liked the effect and kept it.[11][12] Regardless, "Rain" was the first Beatles song to feature a backmasked message: "Sunshine ... Rain ... When the rain comes, they run and hide their heads" (listen; the last line is the reversed first verse of the song).[13]

Controversies edit

The Beatles were involved in the spread of backmasking both as a recording technique and as the center of a controversy. The latter has its roots in an event in 1969, when WKNR-FM DJ Russ Gibb received a phone call from a student at Eastern Michigan University who identified himself as "Tom". The caller asked Gibb about a rumor that Beatle Paul McCartney had died, and claimed that the Beatles song "Revolution 9" contained a backward message confirming the rumor. Gibb played the song backwards on his turntable, and heard "Turn me on, dead man ... turn me on, dead man ... turn me on, dead man ...".[14] Gibb began telling his listeners about what he called "The Great Cover-up",[15] and to the original clue were added various others, including the alleged backmasked message "Paul is a dead man, miss him, miss him, miss him", in "I'm So Tired".[14]

The "Paul is dead" rumor popularized the idea of backmasking in popular music.[7] After Gibb's show, many more songs were found to contain phrases that sounded like known spoken languages when reversed. Initially, the search was done mostly by fans of rock music; but, in the late 1970s,[16] during the rise of the Christian right in the United States,[17] fundamentalist Christian groups began to claim that backmasked messages could bypass the conscious mind and reach the unconscious mind, where they would be unknowingly accepted by the listener.[18] In 1981, Christian DJ Michael Mills began stating on Christian radio programs that Led Zeppelin's "Stairway to Heaven" contained hidden Satanic messages that were heard by the unconscious.[19]

In early 1982, the Trinity Broadcasting Network's Paul Crouch hosted a show with self-described neuroscientist William Yarroll, who argued that rock stars were cooperating with the Church of Satan to place hidden subliminal messages on records.[20] Also in 1982, fundamentalist Christian pastor Gary Greenwald held public lectures on dangers of backmasking, along with at least one mass record-smashing.[21] During the same year, thirty North Carolina teenagers, led by their pastor, claimed that singers had been possessed by Satan, who used their voices to create backward messages, and held a record-burning at their church.[22]

Allegations of demonic backmasking were also made by social psychologists, parents and critics of rock music,[23] as well as the Parents Music Resource Center (formed in 1985),[24] which accused Led Zeppelin of using backmasking to promote Satanism.[25]

Legislation edit

One result of the furor was the firing of five radio DJs who had encouraged listeners to search for backward messages in their record collections.[16] A more serious consequence was legislation by the state governments of Arkansas and California. The 1983 California bill was introduced to prevent backmasking that "can manipulate our behavior without our knowledge or consent and turn us into disciples of the Antichrist".[26] Involved in the discussion on the bill was a California State Assembly Consumer Protection and Toxic Materials Committee hearing, during which "Stairway to Heaven" was played backwards, and William Yaroll testified.[27] The successful bill made the distribution of records with undeclared backmasking an invasion of privacy for which the distributor could be sued.[21] The Arkansas law passed unanimously in 1983, referenced albums by the Beatles, Pink Floyd, Electric Light Orchestra, Queen and Styx,[17] and mandated that records with backmasking include a warning sticker: "Warning: This record contains backward masking which may be perceptible at a subliminal level when the record is played forward." However, the bill was returned to the state senate by Governor Bill Clinton and defeated.[21] House Resolution 6363, introduced in 1982 by Representative Bob Dornan (R-California), proposed mandating a similar label;[28] the bill was referred to the Subcommittee on Commerce, Transportation and Tourism and was never passed.[29] Government action was also called for in the legislatures of Texas and Canada.[21]

 
The compact disc made finding backward messages difficult, causing interest in backmasking to decline.

With the advent of compact discs in the 1980s, but prior to the advent of sound editing technology for personal computers in the 1990s, it became more difficult to listen to recordings backwards, and the controversy died down.[23]

Resurgence edit

Although the backmasking controversy peaked in the 1980s, the general belief in subliminal manipulation became more widespread in the United States during the following decade,[30] with belief in Satanic backmasking on records persisting into the 1990s.[31] At the same time, the development of sound editing software with audio reversal features simplified the process of reversing audio,[23] which previously could only be done with full fidelity using a professional tape recorder.[18] The Sound Recorder utility, included with Microsoft Windows from Windows 95 to Windows XP, allows one-click audio reversal,[32] as does popular open source sound editing software Audacity.[33] Following the growth of the Internet, backmasked message searchers used such software to create websites featuring backward music samples, which became a widely used method of exploring backmasking in popular music.[23]

In January 2014, the first backmasked video was released as part of a Grammy Awards promotional campaign. A customized video player allowed the user to watch a piece of film accompanied by a music soundtrack both forwards and backwards. The backwards content contained a hidden visual story and the words 'music unleashes you' embedded into the reversed audio track.

Use edit

Backmasking has been used as a recording technique since the 1960s. In the era of magnetic tape sound recording, backmasking required that the source reel-to-reel tape actually be played backwards, which was achieved by first being wound onto the original takeup reel, then reversing the reels so as to use that reel as the source (this would reverse the stereo channels as well).[34]

Backmasked words are unintelligible when played forward, but when played backwards are clear speech.[22] Listening to backmasked audio with most turntables requires disengaging the drive and rotating the album by hand in reverse[35] (though some can play records backwards).[18] With magnetic tape, the tape must be reversed and spliced back into the cassette.[35] Compact discs were difficult to reverse when first introduced, but digital audio editors, which were first introduced in the late 1980s and became popular during the next decade,[36] allow easy reversal of audio from digital sources.[23]

Film and television edit

In the I Love Lucy episode "Home Movies", Lucy makes an audition film that features clips that are played backwards.

In the 1973 film The Exorcist, a tape of noises from the possessed victim was discovered to contain a message when the tape was played backwards. This scene might have inspired subsequent copycat musical effects. Stanley Kubrick used "Masked Ball", an adaptation by Jocelyn Pook of her earlier work "Backwards Priests" (from the album Flood) featuring reversed Romanian chanting, as the background music for the masquerade ball scene in Eyes Wide Shut.[37]

Backmasking was also parodied in a 2001 episode of the television series The Simpsons titled "New Kids on the Blecch". Bart Simpson joins a boy band called the Party Posse, whose song "Drop da Bomb" includes the repeated lyric "Yvan eht nioj". Lisa Simpson becomes suspicious and plays the song backward, revealing the backmasked message "Join the Navy", which leads her to realize that the boy band was created as a subliminal recruiting tool for the United States Navy. In the episode titled "Lisa the Vegetarian" Lisa Simpson is told by Paul McCartney that playing his 1970 song "Maybe I'm Amazed" backwards will reveal "a recipe for a really rippin' lentil soup".[38][39] A modified version of the song plays in the final scene, then over the closing credits of the episode;[40] when played backwards, McCartney can be heard reciting the recipe in the song. One of the backwards snippets says, "Oh, and by the way, I'm alive",[41] a reference to the "Paul is dead" urban legend.[38][41]

The Futurama episode "Calculon 2.0" also has a scene where an installation disc is played backward on what looks like an old fashioned gramophone player, with the words "rise from the dead in the name of Satan" coming from it.

Disney's Gravity Falls features an instance of backmasking, as the episode "Boyz Crazy" contains a plot device about a love song vinyl which contains mind controlling elements when played in reverse.

Music edit

On 19 April 1981, English extreme metal band Venom released the song "In League with Satan" (recorded January 1981) which included a backmasked message "Satan, raised in hell, raised in hell, I'm gonna burn your soul, crush your bones, I'm gonna make you bleed, you gonna bleed for me." This is perhaps the earliest instance of a true backtracked message referencing Satan.

During the Judas Priest subliminal message trial, lead singer Rob Halford admitted to recording the words "In the dead of the night, love bites" backwards into the track "Love Bites", from the 1984 album Defenders of the Faith. Asked why he recorded the message, Halford stated that "When you're composing songs, you're always looking for new ideas, new sounds."[42]

Backmasking has been used by heavy metal bands to deliberately insert messages in their lyrics or imagery. Bands have utilized Satanic imagery for commercial reasons.[43] For example, thrash metal band Slayer included at the start of the band's 1985 album Hell Awaits a deep backmasked voice repeatedly chanting "join us".[44] Cradle of Filth, another band that has employed Satanic imagery, released a song entitled "Dinner at Deviant's Palace", consisting almost entirely of unusual sounds and a reversed reading of the Lord's Prayer.[45] Oingo Boingo has a Christian message promoting salvation through Christ backmasked into one of their songs, "Cry of the Vatos", a satire on claims of Satanism in their music.[citation needed]

At the end of "Before I Forget" by Slipknot, lead singer Corey Taylor's voice can be heard saying "... You're wasting it" which is in reference to how Rick Rubin, the producer of their album Vol. 3: The Subliminal Verses, wanted Taylor to change the chorus vocal melody because he felt it wasn't catchy; however, Taylor stood his ground and the chorus stayed unchanged.[46]

Artists often use backmasking of sounds or instrumental audio to produce interesting sound effects.[34][47] One such sound effect is the reverse echo. When done on tape, such use of backmasking is known as reverse tape effects. Backmasking has been used for artistic effect by Missy Elliott ("Work It",[48]), Jay Chou ("You Can Hear"[49]) At the Drive-In ("300 MHz"[50]), Klaatu ("Anus of Uranus"/"Silly Boys",[51]) and Lacuna Coil ("Self Deception"[52])

A related technique is to reverse an entire instrumental track. John Lennon originally wanted to do so with "Rain", but objections by producer George Martin and bandmate Paul McCartney cut the backward section to 30 seconds.[9] Danish band Mew's 2009 album No More Stories... contains a track, "New Terrain", which, when listened to in reverse, reveals a new song, entitled "Nervous".[53] Soul duo Gnarls Barkley released a companion version of their album The Odd Couple, an instrumental album called elpuoc ddo eht, consisting of the original album, fused into a single 38:44-long track, and reversed. This album can be legally obtained[clarification needed] by owners of the original, as it is meant to complement it, and be a resource to samplers.

The B-side of the 1966 Napoleon XIV single "They're Coming to Take Me Away, Ha-Haaa!" is a reversed version of the entire forwards record, titled "!aaaH-aH ,yawA eM ekaT oT gnimoC er'yehT". The forward version reached #3 in the US charts and #4 in the UK.[54]

Seattle-based grunge band Soundgarden parodied the phenomenon of Satanic backmasking on their 1989 album Ultramega OK. When played backwards, the songs "665" and "667" reveal a song about Santa Claus.[55]

Matthew Sweet's 1999 album In Reverse includes reversed guitar parts which were played directly onto a tape running in reverse.[56] For live concerts, the guitar parts were played live on stage using a backward emulator.[57]

The Beatles song "Free as a Bird" was originally composed and recorded in 1977 as a home demo by John Lennon. In 1995 a studio version of the recording, incorporating contributions from Paul McCartney, George Harrison and Ringo Starr, was released as a new single from The Beatles Anthology 1 project, 25 years after their break-up and 15 years after Lennon's death. In a humorous self-parody and tribute to Lennon, the surviving Beatles inserted a backmasked clip of Lennon saying "Turned out nice again" at the very end of the song.

Pink Floyd dropped a backmasked message into "Empty Spaces":

  • ... Congratulations. You have just discovered the secret message. Please send your answer to Old Pink, care of the Funny Farm, Chalfont ...
  • Roger! Carolyne's on the phone!
  • Okay.

The first line may refer to former lead singer Syd Barrett, who is thought to have had a nervous breakdown years earlier.[58]

In "Weird Al" Yankovic's "Nature Trail to Hell", from 1984's "Weird Al" Yankovic in 3-D, Yankovic's backmasked voice declares that "Satan eats Cheez Whiz".[23] Another early example can be found on the J. Geils Band track "No Anchovies, Please", from 1980s album Love Stinks. The message, disguised as a foreign-sounding language spoken under the narration, is, "It doesn't take a genius to tell the difference between chicken shit and chicken salad."[59] Belgian act Poésie Noire included a satirical backmasked message on their 1988 album Tetra saying "You fucking asshole, play the record in the normal way".[60] Tenacious D includes the backmasked message "Eat Donkey Crap" at the end of "Karate" from their self-titled first album.[61]

 
After being accused of Satanic backmasking, Styx included an actual backmasked message in Kilroy Was Here: "Annuit cœptis, Novus ordo seclorum".

Electric Light Orchestra and Styx, following their involvement in the 1980s backmasking controversy, released songs that parody the allegations made against them. ELO, after being accused of Satanic backmasking on their 1974 album Eldorado, included backmasked messages in two songs on their next album, 1975's Face the Music.[62] "Down Home Town" begins with a voice twice repeating (in reverse) "Face the mighty waterfall".[63] And the opening instrumental "Fire On High" contains the backmasked message "The music is reversible, but time is not. Turn back! Turn back! Turn back! Turn back!" (listen).[64] In 1983, ELO released an entire album, Secret Messages, in response to the controversy.[65] Among the many backmasked messages on the album are: "Welcome to the big show" (2x);[18] "Thank you for listening"; "Look out there's danger ahead"; "Hup two three four"; "Time After Time"; and "You're playing me backwards".[63] Styx also released an album in response to allegations of Satanic backmasking:[66] 1983's Kilroy Was Here, which deals with an allegorical group called the "Majority for Musical Morality" that outlaws rock music.[17] A sticker on the album cover contains the message, "By order of the Majority for Musical Morality, this album contains secret backward messages", and the song "Heavy Metal Poisoning" does in fact contain the backmasked Latin words "Annuit cœptis, Novus ordo seclorum" ("[God] has favored our undertakings; a new order for the ages")—part of the Great Seal which encircles the pyramid on the back of the American dollar bill.[28]

Iron Maiden's 1983 album Piece of Mind features a short backwards message, included by the band in response to allegations of Satanism that were surrounding them at the time.[67] Between the songs "The Trooper" and "Still Life" is inebriated drummer Nicko McBrain doing an impression of Idi Amin Dada: "'What ho', sed de t'ing wid de t'ree bonce [said the thing with the three heads]. Don't meddle wid t'ings you don't understand," followed by a belch.[68] Prince's controversial song "Darling Nikki" includes the backmasked message, "Hello, how are you? I am fine, because I know that the Lord is coming soon."[69] The Waitresses' 1982 EP I Could Rule the World if I Could Only Get the Parts included a backwards masking warning on the cover and a message masked within the song "The Smartest Person I Know": "Anyone who believes in backwards masking is a fool."

Some messages chastise or poke fun at the listener who is playing the song backwards. One such message was included by "Weird Al" Yankovic in "I Remember Larry", from the 1996 album Bad Hair Day, on which Yankovic lightly chastises the listener with the backmasked remark, "Wow, [you] must have an awful lot of free time on your hands".[70] Similarly, the B-52's song "Detour Through Your Mind", from the 1986 LP Bouncing off the Satellites, contains the message, "I buried my parakeet in the backyard. Oh no, you're playing the record backwards. Watch out, you might ruin your needle."[71] A similar message comes from the Canadian band Frozen Ghost from their 1987 self-titled debut album: "You are ruining your needle!"

Meanwhile, Christian rock group Petra included in their song "Judas' Kiss", from the 1982 album More Power to Ya, the message, "What are you looking for the devil for, when you ought to be looking for the Lord?"[59] Bloodhound Gang's 1996 controversy-begging track "Lift Your Head Up High (And Blow Your Brains Out)" mocked the Judas Priest controversy directly, and included the backmasked phrase "Devil child, wake up and eat Chef Boyardee Beefaroni".[72] The band Mindless Self Indulgence released a song titled "Backmaskwarning!", which contains the forward lyrics "Play that record backwards / Here's a message yo for the suckas / Play that record backwards / And go fuck yourself". The backwards messages in the song include, "clean your room", "do your homework", "don't stay out too late", and "eat your vegetables".[50][73]

Other edit

 
The manual for the popular sound program SoX advised that the "reverse" option could be used "for finding Satanic subliminals".

WWE wrestler Al Snow had a theme song that had backmasking in it. The song was mostly instrumental, but at one point a clearly audible voice can be heard saying a line of gibberish. When the song is played backward, the gibberish is actually saying: "I AM THE ONE IN CONTROL." The message played on Al Snow's character as an unstable mad man.

Censorship edit

 
Frank Zappa used backmasking to avoid censorship.

Backmasking has been used to avoid censorship. On Frank Zappa's track "Hot Poop", from We're Only in It for the Money (1968), the released version contains at the end of its side "A" the backmasked message "Better look around before you say you don't care. / Shut your fucking mouth 'bout the length of my hair. / How would you survive / If you were alive / shitty little person?" This profanity-laced verse, originally from the song "Mother People", was censored by Verve Records, so Zappa edited the verse out, reversed it, and inserted it elsewhere in the album as "Hot Poop" (though even in the backward message the word "fucking" is censored).[74] On the same album, a modified backmasking can be heard in "Harry, You're a Beast" with Madge saying, "Don't come in me, in me" repeatedly before she starts crying. In at least one bootleg version of the album, these words are very clear.[75]

Another example is found in Roger Waters' 1992 album Amused to Death, on which Waters recorded a backward message, possibly critical of film director Stanley Kubrick, who had refused to let Waters sample a breathing sound from 2001: A Space Odyssey.[76] The message appears in the song "Perfect Sense Part 1", in which Waters' backmasked voice says, "Julia, however, in light and visions of the issues of Stanley, we have changed our minds. We have decided to include a backward message, Stanley, for you and all the other book burners."[77]

On the other hand, backmasking can be used to censor words and phrases deemed inappropriate on radio edits and "clean" album releases.[78] For example, the Fugees' clean version of the album The Score contains various backmasked profanities;[78] thus, when playing the album backwards, the censored words are clearly audible among the backward gibberish.[79] When used with the word "shit", this type of backmasking results in a sound similar to "ish". As a result, "ish" became a euphemism for "shit".[80]

Iron Maiden used a similar technique on the radio edit of their "Holy Smoke" single, in which there are two rare instances of profanity in their lyrics, which were reversed to give "Flies around tish/Bees around honey" and "I've lived in filth, I've lived in sin/And I still smell cleaner than the tish you're in".

In Britney Spears' 2011 song "Till the World Ends", Spears says "if you want this good shit". However, on the official version, "shit" is reversed, creating the "ish" sound; therefore, the official version says "if you want this good ish". Backmasking is also used to censor the word "joint" in the video for "You Don't Know How It Feels" by Tom Petty, resulting in the line "Let's roll another tnioj".[81]

Accusations edit

Artists who have been accused of backmasking include Led Zeppelin,[82] the Beatles,[82] Pink Floyd,[82] Electric Light Orchestra,[82] Queen, Styx,[82] Judas Priest,[82] the Eagles,[82] The Rolling Stones,[82] Jefferson Starship,[82] AC/DC,[83] Black Oak Arkansas,[83] Rush,[84] Britney Spears,[85] and Eminem.[23]

Electric Light Orchestra was accused of hiding a backward Satanic message in their 1974 album Eldorado. The title track, "Eldorado", was said to contain the message "He is the nasty one / Christ, you're infernal / It is said we're dead men / Everyone who has the mark will live."[83] ELO singer and songwriter Jeff Lynne responded by calling this accusation (and the related charge of being "devil-worshippers") "skcollob",[65] and stating that the message "is absolutely manufactured by whoever said, 'That's what it said.' It doesn't say anything of the sort."[71] The group included several backward messages in later albums in response to the accusations.

In 1981, Styx was accused of putting the backward message "Satan move through our voices" on the song "Snowblind", from Paradise Theatre.[17] Guitarist James Young called these charges "rubbish,"[86] and responded, "If we want to make a statement, we'll do it in a way that people can understand us and not in a way where you have to go out and buy a $400 tape player to understand us." The vinyl reproduction of Paradise Theatre had laser etching on side one, spelling out Styx at the top, and two ladies facing each other on the sides. But on side two, the side with the song (Snow Blind) it had a black label with a small hole cut out where you could place the eraser side of a pencil, and play the album backwards to hear the backward message.[66] In 1983, the band released a concept album, Kilroy Was Here, satirizing the Moral Majority.

A well-known alleged message is found in Led Zeppelin's 1971 song "Stairway to Heaven". The backwards playing of a portion of the song purportedly results in words beginning with "Here's to my sweet Satan" (listen).[87] Swan Song Records issued a statement to the contrary: "Our turntables only play in one direction—forwards."[19] Led Zeppelin vocalist Robert Plant denied the accusations in an interview: "To me it's very sad, because 'Stairway to Heaven' was written with every best intention, and as far as reversing tapes and putting messages on the end, that's not my idea of making music."[88] Another widely known alleged message, "It's fun to smoke marijuana", in Queen's song "Another One Bites the Dust", is similarly disclaimed by the group's spokesperson.[23]

Subliminal persuasion edit

Fundamentalist Christian groups edit

Various fundamentalist Christian groups have declared that Satan—or Satan-influenced musicians—use backmasked messages to subliminally alter behavior. Pastor Gary Greenwald claimed that subliminal messages backmasked into rock music induce listeners towards sex and drug use.[89] Minister Jacob Aranza wrote in his 1982 book Backward Masking Unmasked that rock groups "are using backmasking to convey Satanic and drug related messages to the subconscious."[16] Christian DJ Michael Mills argued in 1981 that "the subconscious mind is being successfully affected by the repetition of beat and lyrics—being affected through a subliminal message."[90] Mills has toured America warning Christian parents about subliminal messages in rock music.[21]

Some Christian websites have claimed that backmasking is widely used for Satanic purposes.[22] The web page for Alabama group Dial-the-Truth Ministries argues for the existence of Satanic backmasking in "Stairway to Heaven", saying that the song contains the backward message, "It's my sweet Satan ... Oh I will sing because I live with Satan."[91]

PMRC edit

In 1985, Joe Stuessy testified to the United States Congress at the Parents Music Resource Center hearings that:

The message [of a piece of heavy metal music] may also be covert or subliminal. Sometimes subaudible tracks are mixed in underneath other, louder tracks. These are heard by the subconscious but not the conscious mind. Sometimes the messages are audible but are backward, called backmasking. There is disagreement among experts regarding the effectiveness of subliminals. We need more research on that.[92]

Stuessy's written testimony stated that:

Some messages are presented to the listener backwards. While listening to a normal forward message (often somewhat nonsensical), one is simultaneously being treated to a backwards message (in other words, the lyric sounds like one set of words going forward, and a different set of words going backwards). Some experts believe that while the conscious mind is absorbing the forward lyric, the subconscious is working overtime to decipher the backwards message.[92]

Court cases edit

Serial killer Richard Ramirez, on trial in 1988, stated that AC/DC's music, and specifically the song "Night Prowler" on Highway to Hell, inspired him to commit murder.[91] Reverse speech advocate David John Oates claimed that "Highway to Hell", on the same album, contains backmasked messages including "I'm the law", "my name is Lucifer", and "she belongs in hell".[93] AC/DC's Angus Young responded that "you didn't need to play [the album] backwards, because we never hid [the messages]. We'd call an album Highway to Hell, there it was right in front of them."[94]

In 1990, British heavy metal band Judas Priest was sued over a suicide pact made by two young men in Nevada. The lawsuit by their families claimed that the 1978 Judas Priest album Stained Class contained hidden messages, including the forward subliminal words "Do it" in the song "Better by You, Better than Me" (a cover version of a Spooky Tooth song), and various backward subliminal messages. The case was dismissed by the judge for insufficient evidence of Judas Priest's placement of subliminal messages on the record,[95] and the judge's ruling stated that "The scientific research presented does not establish that subliminal stimuli, even if perceived, may precipitate conduct of this magnitude. There exist other factors which explain the conduct of the deceased independent of the subliminal stimuli."[96] Judas Priest members commented that if they wanted to insert subliminal commands in their music, messages leading to the deaths of their fans would be counterproductive, and they would prefer to insert the command "Buy more of our records."[97]

Skepticism edit

Skeptic Michael Shermer says that the emergence of the "Paul is dead" phenomenon, including the alleged message at the end of "I'm So Tired", was caused by faulty perception of a pattern. Shermer argues that the human brain evolved with a strong pattern recognition ability that was necessary to process the large amount of noise in man's environment, but that today this ability leads to false positives.[98] Stanford University psychology professor Brian Wandell postulates that the observance of backward messages is a mistake arising from this pattern recognition facility, and argues that subliminal persuasion theories are "bizarre" and "implausible."[35] Rumors of backmasking in popular music have been described as auditory pareidolia.[99] James Walker, president of Christian research group Watchman Fellowship, states that "You could take a Christian hymn, and if you played it backwards long enough at different speeds, you could make that hymn say anything you want to"; Led Zeppelin publicist BP Fallon concurs, saying "Play anything backwards, and you'll find something." Eric Borgos of audio reversal website talkbackwards.com[100] states that "Mathematically, if you listen long enough, eventually you'll find a pattern",[23] while Jeff Milner[87] recounts, "Most people, when I show them the site, say that they're not able to hear anything, until, of course, I show them the reverse lyrics."[101]

Audio engineer Evan Olcott says that messages by artists including Queen and Led Zeppelin are coincidental phonetic reversals, in which the spoken or sung phonemes form new combinations of words when listened to backwards.[11] Olcott states that "Actually engineering or planning a phonetic reversal is next to impossible, and even more difficult when trying to design it with words that fit into a song."[24]

In 1985, University of Lethbridge psychologists John Vokey and J. Don Read conducted a study using Psalm 23 from the Bible, Queen's "Another One Bites the Dust", and other sound passages made up for the experiment. Vokey and Read concluded that if backmasking does exist, it is ineffective. Participants had trouble noticing backmasked phrases when the samples were played forwards, were unable to judge the types of messages (Christian, Satanic, or commercial), and were not led to behave in a certain way as a result of being exposed to the backmasked phrases. Vokey concluded that "we could find no effect of the meaning of engineered, backward messages on listeners' behaviour, either consciously or unconsciously."[102] Similar results to Vokey and Read's were obtained by D. Averill in 1982.[103] A 1988 experiment by T.E. Moore found "no evidence that listeners were influenced, consciously or unconsciously, by the content of the backward messages."[30] In 1992, an experiment found that exposure to backward messages did not lead to significant changes in attitude.[104] Psychology professor Mark D. Allen says that "delivering subliminal messages via backward masking is totally and ridiculously impossible".[105]

The finding of backward Satanic messages has been explained as caused by the observer-expectancy effect. The Skeptic's Dictionary states that "you probably won't hear [backmasked] messages until somebody first points them out to you. Perception is influenced by expectation and expectation is affected by what others prime you for."[106] In 1984, S. B. Thorne and P. Himelstein found that "when vague and unfamiliar stimuli are presented, [test subjects] are highly likely to accept suggestions, particularly when the suggestions are presented by someone with prestige and authority."[107] Vokey and Read concluded from their 1985 experiment that "the apparent presence of backward messages in popular music is a function more of active construction on the part of the perceiver than of the existence of the messages themselves."[21]

In popular culture edit

Backmasking has been satirized in the comic strip Bloom County on several occasions when one "expert" claims to have found Satanic verses hidden in songs recorded by Debby Boone[108] and Billy Joel;[109] and by Milo Bloom investigating the fictional heavy metal group Billy and the Boingers (formerly Deathtöngue).[110]

A page in Frank Miller's comic The Dark Knight Returns depicts a character named "Arnold Cimp," who becomes convinced Led Zeppelin is trying to kill him after hearing "Stairway To Heaven" backwards.

See also edit

References edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ backmasking, Merriam-Webster, retrieved February 3, 2022
  2. ^ a b c Erik, Davis (2005). [Led Zeppelin IV]. New York, NY: Continuum. ISBN 0826416586. OCLC 57452450. Retrieved August 14, 2018.
  3. ^ Billiter, Bill (April 28, 1982). "Satanic Messages Played Back for Assembly Panel". The Los Angeles Times. p. B3.
  4. ^ Macdonald, Fiona (October 21, 2014). "The hidden messages in songs". BBC. After Christian fundamentalists claimed that a line in the title track of their 1974 album Eldorado sounded like 'He is the nasty one – Christ you're infernal' when reversed, the Electric Light Orchestra inserted a deliberately backmasked segment into their next album.
  5. ^ Crowley, Aleister (1997) [1913]. Magick (Book 4). Weiser. p. 648. ISBN 978-0-87728-919-7.
  6. ^ "The Eligibles – Car Trouble". Archived from the original on December 21, 2021 – via www.youtube.com.
  7. ^ a b Sullivan, Mark (October 1987). "'More Popular Than Jesus': The Beatles and the Religious Far Right". Popular Music. 6 (3): 313–326. doi:10.1017/S0261143000002348. S2CID 190680105.
  8. ^ Mugan, Chris (October 13, 2006). . The Independent. London. Archived from the original on September 30, 2007. Retrieved March 10, 2007.
  9. ^ a b Stevens, John (2002). The Songs of John Lennon: The Beatles Years. Berklee Press. pp. 149, 155–156. ISBN 978-0-634-01795-7.
  10. ^ Aldridge, Alan (1991). The Beatles Illustrated Lyrics. Houghton Mifflin. p. 135. ISBN 978-0-395-59426-1. On the end of 'Rain' you hear me singing it backwards. We'd done the main thing at EMI and the habit was then to take the song home and see what you thought a little extra gimmick or what the guitar piece would be. So I got home about five in the morning, stoned out of my head, I staggered up to my tape recorder and I put it on, but it came out backwards, and I was in a trance in the earphones, what is it, what is it. It's too much, you know, and I really wanted the whole song backwards almost, and that was it. So we tagged it on the end.
  11. ^ a b Olcott, Evan. . Triplo Press. Archived from the original on August 21, 2006. Retrieved August 26, 2006.
  12. ^ Giuliano, Geoffrey; Devi, Vrnda (1999). Glass Onion: The Beatles in their own words. Da Capo Press. p. 265. ISBN 978-0-306-80895-1. I'd introduced John to backwards music on 'Rain' when I took his voice and turned it 'round when he was out on a coffee break. When I played it for him, he flipped.
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Bibliography edit

External links edit

backmasking, confused, with, backward, masking, film, backmask, film, broader, coverage, this, topic, reverse, tape, effects, recording, technique, which, message, recorded, backward, onto, track, that, meant, played, forward, deliberate, process, whereas, mes. Not to be confused with backward masking For the film see Backmask film For broader coverage of this topic see Reverse tape effects Backmasking is a recording technique in which a message is recorded backward onto a track that is meant to be played forward 1 It is a deliberate process whereas a message found through phonetic reversal may be unintentional Artists have used backmasking for artistic comedic and satiric effect on both analogue and digital recordings It has also been used to censor words or phrases for clean releases of explicit songs In 1969 rumors of a backmasked message in the Beatles song Revolution 9 fueled the Paul is dead urban legend 2 Since at least the early 1980s Christian groups in the United States alleged that backmasking was being used by prominent rock musicians for Satanic purposes 3 need quotation to verify leading to record burning protests and proposed anti backmasking legislation by state and federal governments during the 1980s as part of the Satanic panic movement of the time Many popular musicians were accused of including backmasked messages in their music However apparent backmasked messages may in fact be examples of pareidolia the brain s tendency to recognize patterns in meaningless data coincidental phonetic reversal 2 or as deliberate responses to the allegations themselves 4 Contents 1 History 1 1 Development 1 2 Controversies 1 3 Legislation 1 4 Resurgence 2 Use 2 1 Film and television 2 2 Music 2 3 Other 2 4 Censorship 3 Accusations 3 1 Subliminal persuasion 3 1 1 Fundamentalist Christian groups 3 1 2 PMRC 3 1 3 Court cases 3 2 Skepticism 3 3 In popular culture 4 See also 5 References 5 1 Notes 5 2 Bibliography 6 External linksHistory editDevelopment edit The backwards playing of records was advised as training for magicians by occultist Aleister Crowley who suggested in his 1913 book Magick Book 4 that an adept train himself to think backwards by external means one of which was to listen to phonograph records reversed 5 2 In the movie Gold Diggers of 1935 the end of the dancing pianos musical number The Words Are in My Heart is filmed in reverse motion with the accompanying instrumental score incidentally being reversed nbsp Tape recorders allow backward recording in recording studios In 1959 a vocal group called The Eligibles released a record called Car Trouble which contains two nonsense passages When reversed they reveal the phrases And you can get my daughter back by 10 30 you bum and perhaps inevitably Now lookit here cats stop running these records backwards Peaking at 107 on the Billboard magazine charts that summer Car Trouble is believed to be the first hit record to contain backmasking 6 The Beatles who incorporated the techniques of concrete into their recordings were responsible for popularizing the concept of backmasking 7 Singer John Lennon and producer George Martin both claimed they discovered the backward recording technique during the recording of 1966 s Revolver specifically the album tracks Tomorrow Never Knows and I m Only Sleeping and the single Rain 8 Lennon stated that while under the influence of marijuana he accidentally played the tapes for Rain in reverse and enjoyed the sound The following day he shared the results with the other Beatles and the effect was used first in the guitar solo for Tomorrow Never Knows and later in the coda of Rain 9 10 According to Martin the band had been experimenting with changing the speeds of and reversing the Tomorrow Never Knows tapes and Martin got the idea of reversing Lennon s vocals and guitar which he did with a clip from Rain Lennon then liked the effect and kept it 11 12 Regardless Rain was the first Beatles song to feature a backmasked message Sunshine Rain When the rain comes they run and hide their heads listen the last line is the reversed first verse of the song 13 Controversies edit The Beatles were involved in the spread of backmasking both as a recording technique and as the center of a controversy The latter has its roots in an event in 1969 when WKNR FM DJ Russ Gibb received a phone call from a student at Eastern Michigan University who identified himself as Tom The caller asked Gibb about a rumor that Beatle Paul McCartney had died and claimed that the Beatles song Revolution 9 contained a backward message confirming the rumor Gibb played the song backwards on his turntable and heard Turn me on dead man turn me on dead man turn me on dead man 14 Gibb began telling his listeners about what he called The Great Cover up 15 and to the original clue were added various others including the alleged backmasked message Paul is a dead man miss him miss him miss him in I m So Tired 14 The Paul is dead rumor popularized the idea of backmasking in popular music 7 After Gibb s show many more songs were found to contain phrases that sounded like known spoken languages when reversed Initially the search was done mostly by fans of rock music but in the late 1970s 16 during the rise of the Christian right in the United States 17 fundamentalist Christian groups began to claim that backmasked messages could bypass the conscious mind and reach the unconscious mind where they would be unknowingly accepted by the listener 18 In 1981 Christian DJ Michael Mills began stating on Christian radio programs that Led Zeppelin s Stairway to Heaven contained hidden Satanic messages that were heard by the unconscious 19 In early 1982 the Trinity Broadcasting Network s Paul Crouch hosted a show with self described neuroscientist William Yarroll who argued that rock stars were cooperating with the Church of Satan to place hidden subliminal messages on records 20 Also in 1982 fundamentalist Christian pastor Gary Greenwald held public lectures on dangers of backmasking along with at least one mass record smashing 21 During the same year thirty North Carolina teenagers led by their pastor claimed that singers had been possessed by Satan who used their voices to create backward messages and held a record burning at their church 22 Allegations of demonic backmasking were also made by social psychologists parents and critics of rock music 23 as well as the Parents Music Resource Center formed in 1985 24 which accused Led Zeppelin of using backmasking to promote Satanism 25 Legislation edit One result of the furor was the firing of five radio DJs who had encouraged listeners to search for backward messages in their record collections 16 A more serious consequence was legislation by the state governments of Arkansas and California The 1983 California bill was introduced to prevent backmasking that can manipulate our behavior without our knowledge or consent and turn us into disciples of the Antichrist 26 Involved in the discussion on the bill was a California State Assembly Consumer Protection and Toxic Materials Committee hearing during which Stairway to Heaven was played backwards and William Yaroll testified 27 The successful bill made the distribution of records with undeclared backmasking an invasion of privacy for which the distributor could be sued 21 The Arkansas law passed unanimously in 1983 referenced albums by the Beatles Pink Floyd Electric Light Orchestra Queen and Styx 17 and mandated that records with backmasking include a warning sticker Warning This record contains backward masking which may be perceptible at a subliminal level when the record is played forward However the bill was returned to the state senate by Governor Bill Clinton and defeated 21 House Resolution 6363 introduced in 1982 by Representative Bob Dornan R California proposed mandating a similar label 28 the bill was referred to the Subcommittee on Commerce Transportation and Tourism and was never passed 29 Government action was also called for in the legislatures of Texas and Canada 21 nbsp The compact disc made finding backward messages difficult causing interest in backmasking to decline With the advent of compact discs in the 1980s but prior to the advent of sound editing technology for personal computers in the 1990s it became more difficult to listen to recordings backwards and the controversy died down 23 Resurgence edit Although the backmasking controversy peaked in the 1980s the general belief in subliminal manipulation became more widespread in the United States during the following decade 30 with belief in Satanic backmasking on records persisting into the 1990s 31 At the same time the development of sound editing software with audio reversal features simplified the process of reversing audio 23 which previously could only be done with full fidelity using a professional tape recorder 18 The Sound Recorder utility included with Microsoft Windows from Windows 95 to Windows XP allows one click audio reversal 32 as does popular open source sound editing software Audacity 33 Following the growth of the Internet backmasked message searchers used such software to create websites featuring backward music samples which became a widely used method of exploring backmasking in popular music 23 In January 2014 the first backmasked video was released as part of a Grammy Awards promotional campaign A customized video player allowed the user to watch a piece of film accompanied by a music soundtrack both forwards and backwards The backwards content contained a hidden visual story and the words music unleashes you embedded into the reversed audio track Use editSee also List of backmasked messages Backmasking has been used as a recording technique since the 1960s In the era of magnetic tape sound recording backmasking required that the source reel to reel tape actually be played backwards which was achieved by first being wound onto the original takeup reel then reversing the reels so as to use that reel as the source this would reverse the stereo channels as well 34 Backmasked words are unintelligible when played forward but when played backwards are clear speech 22 Listening to backmasked audio with most turntables requires disengaging the drive and rotating the album by hand in reverse 35 though some can play records backwards 18 With magnetic tape the tape must be reversed and spliced back into the cassette 35 Compact discs were difficult to reverse when first introduced but digital audio editors which were first introduced in the late 1980s and became popular during the next decade 36 allow easy reversal of audio from digital sources 23 Film and television edit In the I Love Lucy episode Home Movies Lucy makes an audition film that features clips that are played backwards In the 1973 film The Exorcist a tape of noises from the possessed victim was discovered to contain a message when the tape was played backwards This scene might have inspired subsequent copycat musical effects Stanley Kubrick used Masked Ball an adaptation by Jocelyn Pook of her earlier work Backwards Priests from the album Flood featuring reversed Romanian chanting as the background music for the masquerade ball scene in Eyes Wide Shut 37 Backmasking was also parodied in a 2001 episode of the television series The Simpsons titled New Kids on the Blecch Bart Simpson joins a boy band called the Party Posse whose song Drop da Bomb includes the repeated lyric Yvan eht nioj Lisa Simpson becomes suspicious and plays the song backward revealing the backmasked message Join the Navy which leads her to realize that the boy band was created as a subliminal recruiting tool for the United States Navy In the episode titled Lisa the Vegetarian Lisa Simpson is told by Paul McCartney that playing his 1970 song Maybe I m Amazed backwards will reveal a recipe for a really rippin lentil soup 38 39 A modified version of the song plays in the final scene then over the closing credits of the episode 40 when played backwards McCartney can be heard reciting the recipe in the song One of the backwards snippets says Oh and by the way I m alive 41 a reference to the Paul is dead urban legend 38 41 The Futurama episode Calculon 2 0 also has a scene where an installation disc is played backward on what looks like an old fashioned gramophone player with the words rise from the dead in the name of Satan coming from it Disney s Gravity Falls features an instance of backmasking as the episode Boyz Crazy contains a plot device about a love song vinyl which contains mind controlling elements when played in reverse Music edit On 19 April 1981 English extreme metal band Venom released the song In League with Satan recorded January 1981 which included a backmasked message Satan raised in hell raised in hell I m gonna burn your soul crush your bones I m gonna make you bleed you gonna bleed for me This is perhaps the earliest instance of a true backtracked message referencing Satan During the Judas Priest subliminal message trial lead singer Rob Halford admitted to recording the words In the dead of the night love bites backwards into the track Love Bites from the 1984 album Defenders of the Faith Asked why he recorded the message Halford stated that When you re composing songs you re always looking for new ideas new sounds 42 Backmasking has been used by heavy metal bands to deliberately insert messages in their lyrics or imagery Bands have utilized Satanic imagery for commercial reasons 43 For example thrash metal band Slayer included at the start of the band s 1985 album Hell Awaits a deep backmasked voice repeatedly chanting join us 44 Cradle of Filth another band that has employed Satanic imagery released a song entitled Dinner at Deviant s Palace consisting almost entirely of unusual sounds and a reversed reading of the Lord s Prayer 45 Oingo Boingo has a Christian message promoting salvation through Christ backmasked into one of their songs Cry of the Vatos a satire on claims of Satanism in their music citation needed At the end of Before I Forget by Slipknot lead singer Corey Taylor s voice can be heard saying You re wasting it which is in reference to how Rick Rubin the producer of their album Vol 3 The Subliminal Verses wanted Taylor to change the chorus vocal melody because he felt it wasn t catchy however Taylor stood his ground and the chorus stayed unchanged 46 Artists often use backmasking of sounds or instrumental audio to produce interesting sound effects 34 47 One such sound effect is the reverse echo When done on tape such use of backmasking is known as reverse tape effects Backmasking has been used for artistic effect by Missy Elliott Work It 48 Jay Chou You Can Hear 49 At the Drive In 300 MHz 50 Klaatu Anus of Uranus Silly Boys 51 and Lacuna Coil Self Deception 52 A related technique is to reverse an entire instrumental track John Lennon originally wanted to do so with Rain but objections by producer George Martin and bandmate Paul McCartney cut the backward section to 30 seconds 9 Danish band Mew s 2009 album No More Stories contains a track New Terrain which when listened to in reverse reveals a new song entitled Nervous 53 Soul duo Gnarls Barkley released a companion version of their album The Odd Couple an instrumental album called elpuoc ddo eht consisting of the original album fused into a single 38 44 long track and reversed This album can be legally obtained clarification needed by owners of the original as it is meant to complement it and be a resource to samplers The B side of the 1966 Napoleon XIV single They re Coming to Take Me Away Ha Haaa is a reversed version of the entire forwards record titled aaaH aH yawA eM ekaT oT gnimoC er yehT The forward version reached 3 in the US charts and 4 in the UK 54 Seattle based grunge band Soundgarden parodied the phenomenon of Satanic backmasking on their 1989 album Ultramega OK When played backwards the songs 665 and 667 reveal a song about Santa Claus 55 Matthew Sweet s 1999 album In Reverse includes reversed guitar parts which were played directly onto a tape running in reverse 56 For live concerts the guitar parts were played live on stage using a backward emulator 57 The Beatles song Free as a Bird was originally composed and recorded in 1977 as a home demo by John Lennon In 1995 a studio version of the recording incorporating contributions from Paul McCartney George Harrison and Ringo Starr was released as a new single from The Beatles Anthology 1 project 25 years after their break up and 15 years after Lennon s death In a humorous self parody and tribute to Lennon the surviving Beatles inserted a backmasked clip of Lennon saying Turned out nice again at the very end of the song Pink Floyd dropped a backmasked message into Empty Spaces Congratulations You have just discovered the secret message Please send your answer to Old Pink care of the Funny Farm Chalfont Roger Carolyne s on the phone Okay The first line may refer to former lead singer Syd Barrett who is thought to have had a nervous breakdown years earlier 58 In Weird Al Yankovic s Nature Trail to Hell from 1984 s Weird Al Yankovic in 3 D Yankovic s backmasked voice declares that Satan eats Cheez Whiz 23 Another early example can be found on the J Geils Band track No Anchovies Please from 1980s album Love Stinks The message disguised as a foreign sounding language spoken under the narration is It doesn t take a genius to tell the difference between chicken shit and chicken salad 59 Belgian act Poesie Noire included a satirical backmasked message on their 1988 album Tetra saying You fucking asshole play the record in the normal way 60 Tenacious D includes the backmasked message Eat Donkey Crap at the end of Karate from their self titled first album 61 nbsp After being accused of Satanic backmasking Styx included an actual backmasked message in Kilroy Was Here Annuit cœptis Novus ordo seclorum Electric Light Orchestra and Styx following their involvement in the 1980s backmasking controversy released songs that parody the allegations made against them ELO after being accused of Satanic backmasking on their 1974 album Eldorado included backmasked messages in two songs on their next album 1975 s Face the Music 62 Down Home Town begins with a voice twice repeating in reverse Face the mighty waterfall 63 And the opening instrumental Fire On High contains the backmasked message The music is reversible but time is not Turn back Turn back Turn back Turn back listen 64 In 1983 ELO released an entire album Secret Messages in response to the controversy 65 Among the many backmasked messages on the album are Welcome to the big show 2x 18 Thank you for listening Look out there s danger ahead Hup two three four Time After Time and You re playing me backwards 63 Styx also released an album in response to allegations of Satanic backmasking 66 1983 s Kilroy Was Here which deals with an allegorical group called the Majority for Musical Morality that outlaws rock music 17 A sticker on the album cover contains the message By order of the Majority for Musical Morality this album contains secret backward messages and the song Heavy Metal Poisoning does in fact contain the backmasked Latin words Annuit cœptis Novus ordo seclorum God has favored our undertakings a new order for the ages part of the Great Seal which encircles the pyramid on the back of the American dollar bill 28 Iron Maiden s 1983 album Piece of Mind features a short backwards message included by the band in response to allegations of Satanism that were surrounding them at the time 67 Between the songs The Trooper and Still Life is inebriated drummer Nicko McBrain doing an impression of Idi Amin Dada What ho sed de t ing wid de t ree bonce said the thing with the three heads Don t meddle wid t ings you don t understand followed by a belch 68 Prince s controversial song Darling Nikki includes the backmasked message Hello how are you I am fine because I know that the Lord is coming soon 69 The Waitresses 1982 EP I Could Rule the World if I Could Only Get the Parts included a backwards masking warning on the cover and a message masked within the song The Smartest Person I Know Anyone who believes in backwards masking is a fool Some messages chastise or poke fun at the listener who is playing the song backwards One such message was included by Weird Al Yankovic in I Remember Larry from the 1996 album Bad Hair Day on which Yankovic lightly chastises the listener with the backmasked remark Wow you must have an awful lot of free time on your hands 70 Similarly the B 52 s song Detour Through Your Mind from the 1986 LP Bouncing off the Satellites contains the message I buried my parakeet in the backyard Oh no you re playing the record backwards Watch out you might ruin your needle 71 A similar message comes from the Canadian band Frozen Ghost from their 1987 self titled debut album You are ruining your needle Meanwhile Christian rock group Petra included in their song Judas Kiss from the 1982 album More Power to Ya the message What are you looking for the devil for when you ought to be looking for the Lord 59 Bloodhound Gang s 1996 controversy begging track Lift Your Head Up High And Blow Your Brains Out mocked the Judas Priest controversy directly and included the backmasked phrase Devil child wake up and eat Chef Boyardee Beefaroni 72 The band Mindless Self Indulgence released a song titled Backmaskwarning which contains the forward lyrics Play that record backwards Here s a message yo for the suckas Play that record backwards And go fuck yourself The backwards messages in the song include clean your room do your homework don t stay out too late and eat your vegetables 50 73 Other edit nbsp The manual for the popular sound program SoX advised that the reverse option could be used for finding Satanic subliminals WWE wrestler Al Snow had a theme song that had backmasking in it The song was mostly instrumental but at one point a clearly audible voice can be heard saying a line of gibberish When the song is played backward the gibberish is actually saying I AM THE ONE IN CONTROL The message played on Al Snow s character as an unstable mad man Censorship edit nbsp Frank Zappa used backmasking to avoid censorship Backmasking has been used to avoid censorship On Frank Zappa s track Hot Poop from We re Only in It for the Money 1968 the released version contains at the end of its side A the backmasked message Better look around before you say you don t care Shut your fucking mouth bout the length of my hair How would you survive If you were alive shitty little person This profanity laced verse originally from the song Mother People was censored by Verve Records so Zappa edited the verse out reversed it and inserted it elsewhere in the album as Hot Poop though even in the backward message the word fucking is censored 74 On the same album a modified backmasking can be heard in Harry You re a Beast with Madge saying Don t come in me in me repeatedly before she starts crying In at least one bootleg version of the album these words are very clear 75 Another example is found in Roger Waters 1992 album Amused to Death on which Waters recorded a backward message possibly critical of film director Stanley Kubrick who had refused to let Waters sample a breathing sound from 2001 A Space Odyssey 76 The message appears in the song Perfect Sense Part 1 in which Waters backmasked voice says Julia however in light and visions of the issues of Stanley we have changed our minds We have decided to include a backward message Stanley for you and all the other book burners 77 On the other hand backmasking can be used to censor words and phrases deemed inappropriate on radio edits and clean album releases 78 For example the Fugees clean version of the album The Score contains various backmasked profanities 78 thus when playing the album backwards the censored words are clearly audible among the backward gibberish 79 When used with the word shit this type of backmasking results in a sound similar to ish As a result ish became a euphemism for shit 80 Iron Maiden used a similar technique on the radio edit of their Holy Smoke single in which there are two rare instances of profanity in their lyrics which were reversed to give Flies around tish Bees around honey and I ve lived in filth I ve lived in sin And I still smell cleaner than the tish you re in In Britney Spears 2011 song Till the World Ends Spears says if you want this good shit However on the official version shit is reversed creating the ish sound therefore the official version says if you want this good ish Backmasking is also used to censor the word joint in the video for You Don t Know How It Feels by Tom Petty resulting in the line Let s roll another tnioj 81 Accusations editArtists who have been accused of backmasking include Led Zeppelin 82 the Beatles 82 Pink Floyd 82 Electric Light Orchestra 82 Queen Styx 82 Judas Priest 82 the Eagles 82 The Rolling Stones 82 Jefferson Starship 82 AC DC 83 Black Oak Arkansas 83 Rush 84 Britney Spears 85 and Eminem 23 Electric Light Orchestra was accused of hiding a backward Satanic message in their 1974 album Eldorado The title track Eldorado was said to contain the message He is the nasty one Christ you re infernal It is said we re dead men Everyone who has the mark will live 83 ELO singer and songwriter Jeff Lynne responded by calling this accusation and the related charge of being devil worshippers skcollob 65 and stating that the message is absolutely manufactured by whoever said That s what it said It doesn t say anything of the sort 71 The group included several backward messages in later albums in response to the accusations In 1981 Styx was accused of putting the backward message Satan move through our voices on the song Snowblind from Paradise Theatre 17 Guitarist James Young called these charges rubbish 86 and responded If we want to make a statement we ll do it in a way that people can understand us and not in a way where you have to go out and buy a 400 tape player to understand us The vinyl reproduction of Paradise Theatre had laser etching on side one spelling out Styx at the top and two ladies facing each other on the sides But on side two the side with the song Snow Blind it had a black label with a small hole cut out where you could place the eraser side of a pencil and play the album backwards to hear the backward message 66 In 1983 the band released a concept album Kilroy Was Here satirizing the Moral Majority A well known alleged message is found in Led Zeppelin s 1971 song Stairway to Heaven The backwards playing of a portion of the song purportedly results in words beginning with Here s to my sweet Satan listen 87 Swan Song Records issued a statement to the contrary Our turntables only play in one direction forwards 19 Led Zeppelin vocalist Robert Plant denied the accusations in an interview To me it s very sad because Stairway to Heaven was written with every best intention and as far as reversing tapes and putting messages on the end that s not my idea of making music 88 Another widely known alleged message It s fun to smoke marijuana in Queen s song Another One Bites the Dust is similarly disclaimed by the group s spokesperson 23 Subliminal persuasion edit Further information Subliminal message Fundamentalist Christian groups edit Various fundamentalist Christian groups have declared that Satan or Satan influenced musicians use backmasked messages to subliminally alter behavior Pastor Gary Greenwald claimed that subliminal messages backmasked into rock music induce listeners towards sex and drug use 89 Minister Jacob Aranza wrote in his 1982 book Backward Masking Unmasked that rock groups are using backmasking to convey Satanic and drug related messages to the subconscious 16 Christian DJ Michael Mills argued in 1981 that the subconscious mind is being successfully affected by the repetition of beat and lyrics being affected through a subliminal message 90 Mills has toured America warning Christian parents about subliminal messages in rock music 21 Some Christian websites have claimed that backmasking is widely used for Satanic purposes 22 The web page for Alabama group Dial the Truth Ministries argues for the existence of Satanic backmasking in Stairway to Heaven saying that the song contains the backward message It s my sweet Satan Oh I will sing because I live with Satan 91 PMRC edit In 1985 Joe Stuessy testified to the United States Congress at the Parents Music Resource Center hearings that The message of a piece of heavy metal music may also be covert or subliminal Sometimes subaudible tracks are mixed in underneath other louder tracks These are heard by the subconscious but not the conscious mind Sometimes the messages are audible but are backward called backmasking There is disagreement among experts regarding the effectiveness of subliminals We need more research on that 92 Stuessy s written testimony stated that Some messages are presented to the listener backwards While listening to a normal forward message often somewhat nonsensical one is simultaneously being treated to a backwards message in other words the lyric sounds like one set of words going forward and a different set of words going backwards Some experts believe that while the conscious mind is absorbing the forward lyric the subconscious is working overtime to decipher the backwards message 92 Court cases edit Serial killer Richard Ramirez on trial in 1988 stated that AC DC s music and specifically the song Night Prowler on Highway to Hell inspired him to commit murder 91 Reverse speech advocate David John Oates claimed that Highway to Hell on the same album contains backmasked messages including I m the law my name is Lucifer and she belongs in hell 93 AC DC s Angus Young responded that you didn t need to play the album backwards because we never hid the messages We d call an album Highway to Hell there it was right in front of them 94 In 1990 British heavy metal band Judas Priest was sued over a suicide pact made by two young men in Nevada The lawsuit by their families claimed that the 1978 Judas Priest album Stained Class contained hidden messages including the forward subliminal words Do it in the song Better by You Better than Me a cover version of a Spooky Tooth song and various backward subliminal messages The case was dismissed by the judge for insufficient evidence of Judas Priest s placement of subliminal messages on the record 95 and the judge s ruling stated that The scientific research presented does not establish that subliminal stimuli even if perceived may precipitate conduct of this magnitude There exist other factors which explain the conduct of the deceased independent of the subliminal stimuli 96 Judas Priest members commented that if they wanted to insert subliminal commands in their music messages leading to the deaths of their fans would be counterproductive and they would prefer to insert the command Buy more of our records 97 Skepticism edit Skeptic Michael Shermer says that the emergence of the Paul is dead phenomenon including the alleged message at the end of I m So Tired was caused by faulty perception of a pattern Shermer argues that the human brain evolved with a strong pattern recognition ability that was necessary to process the large amount of noise in man s environment but that today this ability leads to false positives 98 Stanford University psychology professor Brian Wandell postulates that the observance of backward messages is a mistake arising from this pattern recognition facility and argues that subliminal persuasion theories are bizarre and implausible 35 Rumors of backmasking in popular music have been described as auditory pareidolia 99 James Walker president of Christian research group Watchman Fellowship states that You could take a Christian hymn and if you played it backwards long enough at different speeds you could make that hymn say anything you want to Led Zeppelin publicist BP Fallon concurs saying Play anything backwards and you ll find something Eric Borgos of audio reversal website talkbackwards com 100 states that Mathematically if you listen long enough eventually you ll find a pattern 23 while Jeff Milner 87 recounts Most people when I show them the site say that they re not able to hear anything until of course I show them the reverse lyrics 101 Audio engineer Evan Olcott says that messages by artists including Queen and Led Zeppelin are coincidental phonetic reversals in which the spoken or sung phonemes form new combinations of words when listened to backwards 11 Olcott states that Actually engineering or planning a phonetic reversal is next to impossible and even more difficult when trying to design it with words that fit into a song 24 In 1985 University of Lethbridge psychologists John Vokey and J Don Read conducted a study using Psalm 23 from the Bible Queen s Another One Bites the Dust and other sound passages made up for the experiment Vokey and Read concluded that if backmasking does exist it is ineffective Participants had trouble noticing backmasked phrases when the samples were played forwards were unable to judge the types of messages Christian Satanic or commercial and were not led to behave in a certain way as a result of being exposed to the backmasked phrases Vokey concluded that we could find no effect of the meaning of engineered backward messages on listeners behaviour either consciously or unconsciously 102 Similar results to Vokey and Read s were obtained by D Averill in 1982 103 A 1988 experiment by T E Moore found no evidence that listeners were influenced consciously or unconsciously by the content of the backward messages 30 In 1992 an experiment found that exposure to backward messages did not lead to significant changes in attitude 104 Psychology professor Mark D Allen says that delivering subliminal messages via backward masking is totally and ridiculously impossible 105 The finding of backward Satanic messages has been explained as caused by the observer expectancy effect The Skeptic s Dictionary states that you probably won t hear backmasked messages until somebody first points them out to you Perception is influenced by expectation and expectation is affected by what others prime you for 106 In 1984 S B Thorne and P Himelstein found that when vague and unfamiliar stimuli are presented test subjects are highly likely to accept suggestions particularly when the suggestions are presented by someone with prestige and authority 107 Vokey and Read concluded from their 1985 experiment that the apparent presence of backward messages in popular music is a function more of active construction on the part of the perceiver than of the existence of the messages themselves 21 In popular culture edit Backmasking has been satirized in the comic strip Bloom County on several occasions when one expert claims to have found Satanic verses hidden in songs recorded by Debby Boone 108 and Billy Joel 109 and by Milo Bloom investigating the fictional heavy metal group Billy and the Boingers formerly Deathtongue 110 A page in Frank Miller s comic The Dark Knight Returns depicts a character named Arnold Cimp who becomes convinced Led Zeppelin is trying to kill him after hearing Stairway To Heaven backwards See also editList of backmasked messages Phonetic reversal Programming the Nation Reverse speech Subliminal stimuliReferences editNotes edit backmasking Merriam Webster retrieved February 3 2022 a b c Erik Davis 2005 Led Zeppelin IV New York NY Continuum ISBN 0826416586 OCLC 57452450 Retrieved August 14 2018 Billiter Bill April 28 1982 Satanic Messages Played Back for Assembly Panel The Los Angeles Times p B3 Macdonald Fiona October 21 2014 The hidden messages in songs BBC After Christian fundamentalists claimed that a line in the title track of their 1974 album Eldorado sounded like He is the nasty one Christ you re infernal when reversed the Electric Light Orchestra inserted a deliberately backmasked segment into their next album Crowley Aleister 1997 1913 Magick Book 4 Weiser p 648 ISBN 978 0 87728 919 7 The Eligibles Car Trouble Archived from the original on December 21 2021 via www youtube com a b Sullivan Mark October 1987 More Popular Than Jesus The Beatles and the Religious Far Right Popular Music 6 3 313 326 doi 10 1017 S0261143000002348 S2CID 190680105 Mugan Chris October 13 2006 Subliminal advertising The voice within The Independent London Archived from the original on September 30 2007 Retrieved March 10 2007 a b Stevens John 2002 The Songs of John Lennon The Beatles Years Berklee Press pp 149 155 156 ISBN 978 0 634 01795 7 Aldridge Alan 1991 The Beatles Illustrated Lyrics Houghton Mifflin p 135 ISBN 978 0 395 59426 1 On the end of Rain you hear me singing it backwards We d done the main thing at EMI and the habit was then to take the song home and see what you thought a little extra gimmick or what the guitar piece would be So I got home about five in the morning stoned out of my head I staggered up to my tape recorder and I put it on but it came out backwards and I was in a trance in the earphones what is it what is it It s too much you know and I really wanted the whole song backwards almost and that was it So we tagged it on the end a b Olcott Evan Audio Reversal In Popular Culture Triplo Press Archived from the original on August 21 2006 Retrieved August 26 2006 Giuliano Geoffrey Devi Vrnda 1999 Glass Onion The Beatles in their own words Da Capo Press p 265 ISBN 978 0 306 80895 1 I d introduced John to backwards music on Rain when I took his voice and turned it round when he was out on a coffee break When I played it for him he flipped Cross Craig 2005 The Beatles Day by Day Song by Song Record by Record New York iUniverse p 425 ISBN 978 0 595 34663 9 a b Reeve Andru J Turn Me On Dead Man The Beatles And The Paul Is Dead Hoax AuthorHouse pp 11 13 Yoakum Jim May June 2000 The Man Who Killed Paul McCartney The Gadfly Archived from the original on October 11 2007 Retrieved October 12 2007 a b c Blecha 2004 p 49 a b c d Holden Stephen March 27 1983 Serious Issues Underlie a New Album from Styx New 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Rock Music Radio interview 1981 blog wfmu org Introduction at 1 22 a b Watkins Terry Rock Music The Devil s Advocate Dial the Truth Ministries Retrieved March 17 2007 a b United States Senate 1985 Record Labeling Hearing before the Committee on Commerce Science and Transportation United States Senate Ninety ninth Congress First Session on Contents of Music and the Lyrics of Records September 19 1985 Washington DC U S Government Printing Office pp 118 25 retrieved June 9 2007 via Joesapt net Von Ulrich Meyerratken Edited by George Michael translated from German by Galbraith Evan Untitled reversespeech com archived from the original on December 30 2006 retrieved March 17 2007 Originally published in Esotera magazine June 1997 Young Angus Young Malcolm December 2004 AC DC Celebrate Their Quarter Century Mojo Interview Interviewed by Sylvie Simmons Archived from the original on December 17 2006 Vokey 2005 p 261 Sophia Cassiel Subliminal Suicide Metareligion Retrieved March 17 2007 Van Taylor David KNPB Channel 5 Public Broadcasting 1982 Dream Deceivers The Story Behind James Vance Vs Judas Priest Shermer Michael May 2005 Turn Me On Dead Man Scientific American Retrieved January 25 2012 Zusne amp Jones 1989 p 77 Backmasking and Reverse Speech TalkBackwards com Retrieved June 5 2007 Hopper Tristin January 26 2006 Student sets up backmasking website The Charlatan Carleton University Ottawa Retrieved April 20 2007 Vokey 2005 p 260 Averill D September 12 1982 Did the Devil make you do it Tulsa World Oklahoma p 17 Cited in Zusne amp Jones 1989 p 79 Swart L C Morgan C L December 1992 Effects of subliminal backward recorded messages on attitudes Perceptual and Motor Skills 75 3 Pt 2 1107 13 doi 10 2466 PMS 75 8 1107 1113 PMID 1484773 Glover Melanie January 19 2006 Backmasking Satan marijuana and Cheez Whiz The California Aggie Archived from the original on September 27 2007 Retrieved March 1 2007 Carroll Robert Todd December 28 2006 Backwards satanic messages backmasking The Skeptic s Dictionary online ed Archived from the original on May 1 2007 Retrieved April 18 2007 Thorne Stephen B Himelstein Philip 1984 The Role of Suggestion in the Perception of Satanic Messages in Rock And Roll Recordings Journal of Psychology 116 2 245 8 doi 10 1080 00223980 1984 9923643 Cited in Hicks Robert D 1991 In Pursuit of Satan The Police And the Occult Buffalo NY Prometheus p 306 ISBN 978 1 59102 219 0 March 24 1983 Bloom County gocomics com March 25 1983 Bloom County gocomics com Pilgrimage Journal Cimarronline blogspot com Retrieved March 16 2023 Bibliography edit Blecha Peter 2004 Taboo Tunes A History of Banned Bands and Censored Songs Backbeat Books ISBN 978 0 87930 792 9 Denisoff R Serge 1988 Inside MTV Transaction ISBN 978 0 88738 864 4 Patterson R Gary 2004 Take a Walk on the Dark Side Rock and Roll Myths Legends and Curses Fireside ISBN 978 0 7432 4423 7 Poundstone William 1983 Secret Messages on Records Big Secrets New York City William Morrow and Company ISBN 978 0 688 04830 3 Chapter also available with commentary by Malinda McCall Poundstone William 1986 Backward Messages on Records Bigger Secrets Houghton Mifflin ISBN 978 0 395 45397 1 Vokey John R 2005 Subliminal Messages Psychological Sketches PDF 7th ed Lethbridge Alberta Psyence Ink pp 249 261 Retrieved January 25 2012 Zusne Leonard Jones Warren H 1989 Anomalistic Psychology A Study of Magical Thinking Lawrence Erlbaum Associates p 78 ISBN 978 0 8058 0508 6 External links editBackmasking essay on backmasking amp a small survey about perception of alleged satanic messages in the song Stairway to Heaven by Led Zeppelin Backmask Online clips and analysis of possible backmasked messages Jeff Milner s Backmasking Page a Flash player with forward and backward versions of songs claimed to contain backmasking the focus of the Wall Street Journal article Subliminal Audio Database Another flash player with forward and backward versions of songs claimed to contain backmasking TalkBackwards com allows uploaded music to be reversed Hidden and Satanic Messages In Rock Music 1981 radio interview with Michael Mills Excerpt with alleged backward messages by Led Zeppelin The Beatles Queen Backwards Messages in Rock Music Revealed podcast featuring The Beatles Led Zeppelin The Eagles Rush Jefferson Starship Wings Queen Phil Collins Britney Spears Judas Priest Pink Floyd Iron Maiden Electric Light Orchestra Xuxa Prince and Information Society Radio program exploring backmasking by announcer Joe Kleon broadcast on WRQK FM with audio samples from Britney Spears Led Zeppelin Pink Floyd Metallica Styx Cheap Trick and others A Touch Radio podcast made of backmasking both as a tribute and as an artistic approach Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Backmasking amp oldid 1189753547, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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