AC/DC
Bonfire
Box Set (1997)
review
by: Chris Orcutt
Date:
2/10/02
I
have to say that I'm a little ashamed to be 33 and reviewing
this AC/DC box set. My father got it for me for Christmas
and I was prepared to keep it a secret guilty pleasure
but . . . you just gotta get this. It's by far some of
the most exciting, rocking stuff I've ever heard.
I
got into AC/DC with Back in Black so I never really heard
the music they did with their original singer, Bon Scott
(who died in true rock & roll fashion - he drank himself
to death). This set is 4 CDs of unreleased Bon Scott material
and a remastered version of Back in Black. I have to say
the Bon Scott material, especially the live stuff, is
infinitely better. Disc One is a live radio broadcast
they did from Atlantic Studios and you can hear the invite-only
crowd (probably record company weasels) get rowdier and
rowdier as AC/DC essentially tramples them with their
crunching, blistering tunes. Discs 2&3 are the band
live in Paris; again they are so tight and the songs are
so catchy in an in-your-face, bludgeoning sort of way
that by the time they get to "TNT" - maybe the
best song in this whole set - the French crowd is just
screaming through the whole thing. The fourth CD is outtakes
from AC/DCs last album with Bon Scott, Highway to Hell,
and there's some real gems here, including unlisted sound
bites from Scott and the band on tour (by the way, their
first Australian tour was called "Lock up Your Daughters,"
probably for good reason). The final disc, the remastered
version of Back in Black is great, of course, but listening
to it always makes me turn back to the earlier stuff.
Though Brian Johnson could scream like a banshee, Bon
Scott was simply irreplaceable.
Angus
Young, their eternal schoolboy guitar player, is great
on each and every tune. Listening to this stuff makes
you realize that he's one of the best guitarists ever,
maybe not flashy-technique-wise, but definitely in what
he chooses to play. He's a great rhythm player with awesome
feel. And the rhythm section of Phil Rudd and Cliff Williams
does exactly what the best rhythm sections do: lay down
a ferocious bottom that you don't notice unless you happen
to consider how great everybody sounds together. Really
- get this set. There's no possible way you could be disappointed.
AC/DC
Let
There Be Rock (1977)
review
by: Glenn Pfeifer
Date:
2/27/01
My
fellow headbanger Brian C was so right on with this review,
I had to agree in writing! Bon Scott brought something
to AC/DC that Brian Johnson (however talented he
may be) just cannot duplicate. I'm not sure if it's Bon's
trademark gravel-throat, or his lyrically evident rock-n-roll
lifestyle - but he will always be one of the legendary
hard rockers. This is AC/DC in their finest hour
- a stripped down, head-banging straight ahead extravaganza
of pure rock 'n' roll. This is hard rock before it turned
into leather, metal, and the "show" being more important
than the music. AC/DC may continually get lumped
in with heavy metal acts of the time....but this band
was about nothing EXCEPT the music!
My
review would not be complete, however if I also didn't
pay homage here to Highway to Hell, which really put AC/DC
on the fast track to superstardom. It's Bon's final disc....much
more polished and thought out than "Let.....Rock," but
equally powerful in it's air guitar inspiration. If you
need a disc to get you up in the morning or get you pumped
in the evening...this is the one! Thank you Brian C...and
thank you Angus, Malcom & Bon!
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