Def Leppard - Love Bites 〈FAST · 2024〉

For decades, fans speculated that the distorted voice at the end of the song contained a satanic message—specifically, "Jesus of Nazareth, go to hell".

There is also a faint, hidden message at the very beginning of the track that reportedly sounds like "f * off"**. Meaning of the Lyrics Def Leppard - Love Bites

The band and producer have debunked this repeatedly. The voice is actually Mutt Lange speaking through a vocoder in a heavy Yorkshire accent, saying: "Yes it does, bloody hell" (referring back to the lyric "love bites"). For decades, fans speculated that the distorted voice

The story behind Def Leppard's (1987) is one of unexpected origins, sonic experimentation, and a persistent urban legend. From Country Ballad to Rock Anthem The voice is actually Mutt Lange speaking through

While it sounds like a tender love song, the lyrics explore a much darker side of romance:

The song didn't start as a rock power ballad. Producer originally presented it to the band as a country song that sounded similar to music by The Eagles . Guitarists Phil Collen and Steve Clark "Leppardized" it by adding power rock elements, complex harmony guitar orchestration, and backing vocals influenced by R&B grooves . The Hidden Messages & Urban Legends

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For decades, fans speculated that the distorted voice at the end of the song contained a satanic message—specifically, "Jesus of Nazareth, go to hell".

There is also a faint, hidden message at the very beginning of the track that reportedly sounds like "f * off"**. Meaning of the Lyrics

The band and producer have debunked this repeatedly. The voice is actually Mutt Lange speaking through a vocoder in a heavy Yorkshire accent, saying: "Yes it does, bloody hell" (referring back to the lyric "love bites").

The story behind Def Leppard's (1987) is one of unexpected origins, sonic experimentation, and a persistent urban legend. From Country Ballad to Rock Anthem

While it sounds like a tender love song, the lyrics explore a much darker side of romance:

The song didn't start as a rock power ballad. Producer originally presented it to the band as a country song that sounded similar to music by The Eagles . Guitarists Phil Collen and Steve Clark "Leppardized" it by adding power rock elements, complex harmony guitar orchestration, and backing vocals influenced by R&B grooves . The Hidden Messages & Urban Legends