| Stairway
To Where
Excerpt from:
Reverse Speech: Voices From The Unconscious
If there were a "Top 40" of
backmasked songs, "Stairway to Heaven,"
by Led Zeppelin would have to be at the top of
the chart. It has been quoted, misquoted, and
dissected for years by religious fundamentalists
as being one of the most occultic or satanic
songs ever to have been released. I disagree
strongly based on my research into the background
of this song.
According to Stephen Davis, author of the
Zeppelin saga, Hammer of the Gods, the
controversy began in 1982, when a prominent
Baptist used his radio pulpit to preach that
"Stairway to Heaven" carried subliminal
backward messages. Then, in April 1982, the
California State Assembly played a backward tape
of the song in a public session. Some members of
the committee claimed they heard the words,
"I live for Satan." Led Zeppelin were
duly denounced as agents of Satan who were luring
millions of teenagers into damnation as unwitting
disciples of the Antichrist.
Eddie Kramer, the producer and engineer who
worked on four Led Zeppelin albums, says that
these charges are "totally and utterly
ridiculous. Why would they want to spend so much
studio time doing something so dumb?" 9
The Lyrics to "Stairway to Heaven" were written in one
afternoon by Robert Plant of Led Zeppelin.after he heard the
music that Jimmy Page had written. The
song has been reported to employ a technique of
encoded words and double meanings similar to
those used in Black Spirituals in which some
songs were used as maps and other lyrics served
to alert plantation slaves of an impending break
for freedom. 10
Until approximately 1985, Crowley devotee Jimmy Page owned and lived
in Crowley's former house, "Boleskine,"
a sprawling farmhouse on the shores of Loch Ness,
sometimes called the "Toolhouse"
Boleskine was originally purchased in 1900, by
Crowley, for almost twice its value, because it
met certain requirements of the Books of Sacred
Magic of Abra-Melin the Mage. These requirements
included windows and a door that opened to the
north toward a secluded structure that was to
serve as an oratory. It's commonly assumed that a
small outbuilding to the far right was the
oratory. 11
Crowley stated in his diary that "shadowy
shapes" used to escape the oratory and enter
the house. It's been reported that during
subsequent rituals these "shadowy shapes"
were unleashed with dire effects on visitors,
staff, and a few hapless visitors from nearby
Foyers.12
According to Davis, Jimmy Page was quoted in
Roadrunner magazine discussing further cases of
madness and mayhem including the story that
Boleskine was once the site of "a church
that burned to the ground with the congregation
in it." 13 This brief, historical background
gives tremendous insights into the profoundly
significant metaphors contained in both the
forward and reversed lyrics of "Stairway to
Heaven." Sung forward, the song is basically
a story of a woman who's searching for the
meaning of life and the path to heaven. In the
forward lyrics she sees signs on the wall but
cautions that words can have more than one
meaning. The bird that sings from the tree tells
of thoughts that are misgiven. The thoughts carry
images of "smoke" (perhaps fog) in the
trees and the voices of those who stand
apparently watching from among the trees. This is
apparently the same group that is rewarded for
their long-standing with the dawn of a new day
and the forest's echo of laughter. There's great
significance to the lyrics when they're viewed
from the perspective of Reverse Speech. When we
consider the complementary nature of the song, it
appears to be partially a song of hope for all
those who according to the legends once suffered
at Boleskine.
The lyrics also seem to be a message from the unconscious
mind that details its own communicative style. In the process of
writing the song the way he did, Robert Plant unknowingly
established the complementary criteria for
reversals to occur that speak of their own
existence.
"Words have two meanings," and
"thoughts are misgiven," appear at the
start of the song. Note the complementarity with
the last reversal on the song. As soon as the
song is reversed, it says quite clearly, "Pl-a-a-a-a-a-y
backward. Hear words sung." This is not an
intentionally backmasked message, but rather a
genuine speech reversal. It almost seems as
though the unconscious mind is calling out and
saying, "Hey, listen to me. I can
communicate."
The lyrics also form a reversal that says:
There was a little tool shed where he made us
suffer, sad Satan. Jimmy Page may have
unconsciously used the words tool shed to refer
to the small outbuilding that was the oratory (Boleskine
itself was the Toolhouse). The reported "shadowy
figures" may be those who have stood for so
long in the smoke, but are promised the dawning
of a new day.
The last stanza declares not only that there
are two paths that can be taken, but also that it
is not too late to change roads. This last stanza
contains the reversal It's my sweet Satan, the
one whose little path would make me sad, whose
power is fake.
Their are references to "path,"
"forest," and "hedgerow" all
of which are descriptive of the setting of the
Boleskine mansion. The word Satan itself may be a
metaphor for the suffering and pain that occurred
in and around Boleskine. The parallels of these
images and the legends that surround Boleskine
are compelling.
Other reversals that some people have quoted
in this song as a basis for their claims, include:
"There's no escaping it / I will sing 'cause
I live with Satan / They gotta live for Satan."
These reversals are so vague and imprecise,
however (validity 1-2), that only the very bold
would use them as the basis for an argument.
Finally, a reversal appears on a live version
of the song sung in 1976, that says: Forgive me
Lord, forgive me Lord, forgive me Lord. How could
this be considered satanic? Who's asking for
forgiveness and why? Since when does the nature
of Satan, metaphoric or otherwise, include
forgiveness? Is the song a stairway to heaven, a
stairway to hell, or something totally different?
Stephen Davis wrote a description that may be
accurate regardless of how you choose to answer
these questions. He said: "It expressed an
ineffable yearning for spiritual transformation
deep in the heart of the generation for which it
was intended." 14
Some of these reversals are listed on the Music
Reversals Page.
To purchase a copy of this book go to the Products
Section of this website.
9. Stephen Davis, The Hammer of the Gods,
William Morrow and Company Inc., New York, 1985,
p. 335.
10. Raymond B. MacPherson, private letter,
Melbourne, 1988.
11. C.R. Cammell, Aleister Crowley, New
English Library, London, 1969.
12. Ibid.
13. Davis, op.cit.
14. Davis, op.cit. p. 146.
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