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1976
was a fine year for the rock world. At one end of the planetary axis the
Ramones made their debut, and at the metallic pole AC/DC unleashed their
first album, High Voltage. But unlike the Ramones, these gnarly
Aussies--Young brothers Angus and Malcolm, bassist Mark Evans, drummer
Phil Rudd and singer Brian Johnson (who replaced original frontman Bon
Scott when he died in 1980)--have never won critical respect. Working
with a similarly limited palette of chords, AC/DC tapped into the same
primal rock vein as the Ramones, but whipped their take on the trusty
old I-IV-V into a much raunchier rhythmic pitch and imbued it with an
irrepressibly (often hilariously) libidinous outlook. The music is raw,
monomaniacal and full of essential rock spunk.
AC/DC's prodigious discography (they've recorded some 15 albums in 21
years) has its high points and its fair-to-middling moments, but by and
large the disparity isn't that big. Even their weakest albums are
energetically executed and usually pack at least one memorable song. The
exception to that rule is Back In Black, an absolutely pristine slab of
rock 'n' roll no matter how you slice it. The songwriting is as acute as
the playing, the production keeps it all in line without damping the
sizzle, and for a band whose stock-in-trade is yer basic down 'n' dirty
bump-and-grind, the material is amazingly diverse--ranging from the
saucy anthemic thrash of the title track to the most "sensitive" song
AC/DC has ever recorded, "You Shook Me All Night Long," an oddly moving
combination of luggish double entendre and poignant melodicism.
AC\DC Links
Over
the years AC/DC's albums have continued to sell consistently and the
band remains a solid concert draw. The '90s were particularly kind to
the band--its two decade efforts, 1990's The Razor's Edge and 1995's Ballbreaker, hit No. 2 and No. 4, respectively on the Billboard 200.
Additionally, a boxed set, Bonfire, was released in 1997; the set
featured five discs of live and rare tracks, including a special edition
of Back In Black. The band is continuing to shake into the Millennium
and shows no sign of stopping: In February of 2000, AC/DC released Stiff
Upper Lip, which was well-received by rock radio and fans alike. |