Weitere Beispiele werden automatisch zu den Stichwörtern zugeordnet - wir garantieren ihre Korrektheit nicht.
Backmasking has been used as a recording technique since the 1960s.
There is another use of backmasking at the start of track 15.
The "Paul is dead" rumor popularized the idea of backmasking in popular music.
Artists often use backmasking of sounds or instrumental audio to produce interesting sound effects.
Backmasking is often used for aesthetics, i.e., to enhance the meaning or sound of a track.
When done on tape, such use of backmasking is known as reverse tape effects.
This, in turn, was a parody of the Satanic backmasking scare during the early 1980s.
Rumors of backmasking in popular music have been described as auditory pareidolia.
Vokey and Read concluded that if backmasking does exist, it is ineffective.
Backmasking is a type of reverse tape effect.
He further satirised it by releasing an entire album strewn with backmasking.
In Track 1, there is a brief instance of backmasking when the "opening act" is introduced.
The album contains several instances of backmasking throughout.
There also seem to be hints that backmasking is present even when the track is played forwards.
Backmasking has also been used to record statements perhaps too critical or explicit to be used forwards.
A common use of backmasking is hiding a comedic or parodical message backwards in a song.
The song also contains an unusual backmasking at the beginning and end of the song:
Backmasking is a deliberate process, whereas a message found through phonetic reversal may be unintentional.
Some people think that backmasking causes subliminal persuasion.
In backmasking, a sound or message is recorded backwards onto a track that is meant to be played forwards.
Grand Buffet have stated that the word "Batman" is hidden on the album by backmasking.
The track appears to contain backmasking.
Some Christian websites have claimed that backmasking is widely used for Satanic purposes.
It was recorded normally, and Backmasking.