Codes and Choruses:
The deal with hidden messages in songs
Mara H.
Every time a new song is released, there would be a handful of people already back masking it and making conspiratorial messages behind each of them.
To be honest, these so-called “conspiratorial messages” do not even exist. Back-mask any song and it would really sound odd, and it wouldn’t be a surprise that you would even find a few words behind these.
For example, a back-masked version of an experimental song by The Beatles, Revolution 9, stated that Paul McCartney was dead and that the band was just covering the accident—after a line that said, “Turn me on, dead man” was discovered.
But it’s all just hocus-pocus. Paul is well and alive—even poking fun at the rumor by making an album filled with songs live from his concert, titled “Paul is Live”.
This should be a lesson that not all things should be taken seriously, and by spreading nonsense about one thing—you would create a big fuss over nothing at all.
Img source: https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/thumb/1/13/GreatHoax.jpg/220px-GreatHoax.jpg