T W A U ... The Chase....today's...
Film, Media & TV2 mins ago
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http://www.triplo.com/ev/reversal/
http://jeffmilner.com/backmasking.htm
http://www.geocities.com/muslimtruth/backmasking.html
and this ones bloody scary http://www.albinoblacksheep.com/flash/backmasking
...........................serisouly weird eh ?
The most famous alleged Backward message (BM) - or backmasking - is from the song "Stairway to Heaven" by Led Zeppelin. When the words "If there's a bustle in your hedgerow [...] there's still time to change the road you're on" are played backwards, the result is a garbled phrase that some claim is the phrase "here's to my sweet Satan. The One whose little path would make me sad, whose power is fate. He'll give you (give you) 666, there was a little toolshed where he made us suffer, sadly." However, most people believe the idea is an urban legend.
Several musicians have deliberately recorded BMs into their songs, to make an artistic statement, and to have fun at their critics. Deliberate BMs are usually unintelligible noise when played forward. On Pink Floyds "The Wall" there is an intentional BM at the beginning of the track "Empty Spaces": "...congratulations. Youve Just discovered the secret message. Please send your answer to Old Pink, care of the funny farm, Chalfont," which refers to former lead singer Syd Barrett, who suffered a breakdown years earlier. On Roger Waters' 1991 album Amused to Death, he recorded a BM critical of Stanley Kubrick, who had refused to let him sample a breathing sound from 2001: A Space Odyssey. The Beatles produced two of the first instances of backmasking in popular music in 1966, first on Rain, the B-side of Paperback Writer, which contains the first line of the song played backwards at the end, and again on I'm Only Sleeping, which contains a backwards guitar line in the middle. The Christian rock group Petra in their song "Judas Kiss" included the message "What are you looking for the devil for, when you ought to be looking for the Lord?" The techno music group Information Society, in their cover of the Gary Numan song "Are Friends Electric?", contained "Obey your parents, do your homework, winners don't do drugs".
I think a more famous case that that mentioned already is the two teenagers who claimed that a backwards message on Judas Priest's album encouraged them into a suicide pact. One of the youths successfully blew his own head off, the other failed, and was dreadfully disfidgured - eventually successfully killing himself a fewe years later.
A court case was broguth by the parents of the two lads - and successfully defended by members of the band - included in their defence was sections of the record played backwards which contained sounds which could be 'interpereted' - but were complete gibberish!
In the end, the court agreed that any imagined 'messages' were simply coincidence, caused in one example by the reversed sound of vocalist Rob Halford taking a breath. The band denied deliberately 'messaging' their fans - and backed up by the defence's more sensible advice that two teenage lads playing records backwards in their rooms for hours at a time were in need of some psychological counselling by professionals, or at least being noted for behaving badly by their parents, the case was dismissed.
The simple fact is, a disturbed mind can see a 'message' anywhere it wants, from music, novels (Mark Chapman) - even everyday life - the problem lies with the individual, not the art form they attempt to blame.
octavious - the stairway to heaven one is true - I have heard it myself many times, just by manually reversing the record. Its actually not garbled really either.
Me and a friend then recorded it digitally on his computer and reversed it that way - and the message was still there! so not double groove.
I agree that you can imagine messages, some are just a jumble of random words, but some are so clear and make coherrent sentences, its hard to think that these ones are chance.
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