Band Members:
* Angus Young - guitars
* Brian Johnson - vocals
* Malcolm Young - guitars
* Phil Rudd - drums
* Cliff WIlliams - bass
This theatrical Australian hard rock band was formed in November 1973
by Malcolm Young (b. 6 January 1953, Glasgow, Scotland; rhythm guitar)
after the demise of his previous outfit, the Velvet Underground (no
relation to the US group). Young, whose elder brother George had already
achieved stardom in Australia as a member of the Easybeats, also enlisted
his younger brother, Angus Young (b. 31 March 1955, Glasgow, Scotland;
guitar). Their sister later suggested that Angus wear his school uniform
on stage, a gimmick that rapidly became their trademark. The two brothers
made their debut appearance in a bar in Sydney on 31 December 1973,
along with Dave Evans (vocals), Larry Van Kriedt (bass) and Colin
Burgess (drums). In late 1974, the Young brothers and Evans moved
to Melbourne. Another immigrant from the UK, Bon Scott (b. Ronald
Belford Scott, 9 July 1946, Forfar, Scotland, d. 19 February 1980,
London, England; vocals), graduated from being the band's chauffeur
to becoming their vocalist when Dave Evans refused to go on stage
one night. (Evans went on to form Rabbit, releasing two albums for
CBS Records in Australia, before joining Hot Cockerel in 1984 and
releasing David Evans And Thunder Down Under in 1986.) Scott had previously
recorded with two Australian outfits, pop group the Valentines (1966-68)
and rockers Fraternity (1970-74). Indeed, after he emigrated from
Scotland in 1951, he had also spent five consecutive years as drum
champion (under-17 section) with the Perth Pipe Band. After such a
wholesome start, a prison conviction for assault and battery indicated
a more volatile side to his nature, and resulted in him being refused
admission to the army. In 1965, he joined the Spectors, before the
aforementioned periods with the Valentines and Fraternity.
The AC/DC line-up that welcomed Scott had already recorded a solitary
single, "Can I Sit Next To You Girl", but it was his voice
that graced their first two albums, High Voltage and T.N.T.. The latter
album also introduced two new members, Mark Evans (b. 2 March 1956,
Melbourne, Australia; bass) and Phil Rudd (b. Phillip Hugh Norman
Witschke, 19 May 1954, Melbourne, Australia; drums). Both sets were
produced by George Young and his writing partner, another former Easybeat,
Harry Vanda. Neither set was issued outside Australia, though Atlantic
Records in Britain did offer a selection of material from both records
under the title High Voltage in 1976. These albums established AC/DC
as a major draw in their native territory, and brought them to the
attention of Atlantic, who promptly relocated the band to London in
January 1976. However, Evans was replaced by Cliff Williams (b. 14
December 1949, Romford, Essex, England; ex-Home) in June 1977 after
the former tired of touring. He went on to Finch/Contraband, then
a variety of bands including Swanee, Heaven, Best and Party Boys.
Once AC/DC began to tour outside Australia, the band quickly amassed
a cult following, as much for the unashamed gimmickry of its live
show as for its furious, frequently risqu? brand of hard rock. Let
There Be Rock broke them as a chart act in the UK, with its contents
including the perennial crowd-pleaser, "Whole Lotta Rosie'. The
live If You Want Blood You've Got It consolidated their position,
but 1979"s Highway To Hell established them as international
stars. This, the band's first album with producer Mutt Lange, also
proved to be their last with Bon Scott. On 19 February 1980, after
a night of heavy drinking, he was left unconscious in a friend's car,
and was later found to be dead, having choked on his own vomit. The
coroner recorded a verdict of death by misadventure.
Scott's death threatened the band's future, but his replacement, former
Geordie lead singer Brian Johnson (b. 5 October 1947, Dunston, England),
proved more than equal to the task. His first album with the band,
Back In Black, reached number 1 in the UK and Australia, number 4
in the USA, and spawned the UK number 15 single "Rock 'n' Roll
Ain't Noise Pollution". The album was certified as having sold
12 million copies in the USA by March 1996. In 1981, For Those About
To Rock (We Salute You) topped the American charts for three weeks,
the band headlined at the Donington Festival and also achieved two
Top 20 UK singles ("Let's Get It Up" and "For Those
About To Rock (We Salute You)"). After Flick Of The Switch in
1983, drummer Phil Rudd left the band to become a helicopter pilot
in New Zealand, and was replaced by Simon Wright (b. 19 June 1963;
ex-A II Z and Tytan) - who in turn departed to join Dio in 1989. His
replacement was Chris Slade (b. 30 October 1946; ex-Manfred Mann's
Earth Band).
In keeping with their superstar status, AC/DC maintained an increasingly
relaxed schedule through the 80s, touring to support each carefully
spaced album release. Two UK Top 20 singles, "Who Made Who"
(1986) and "Heatseeker" (1988), confirmed their enduring
popularity. There were further "casualties", however. When
Malcolm Young was unfit to tour in 1988 his cousin, Stevie Young (ex-Starfighters),
temporarily deputized. Paul Greg also stepped in for Cliff Williams
on the US leg of their 1991 tour. A year earlier, The Razors Edge
had been one of the more successful albums of their later career,
producing a Top 20 UK hit, "Thunderstruck" and reaching
number 2 on the album chart in America. In 1992, they issued a live
album, while the attendant single, "Highway To Hell", made
the UK Top 20. With Brian Johnson long having buried the ghost of
Bon Scott, the band showed no signs of varying its winning musical
formula, and in 1994 were buoyed by the return of Rudd to the line-up.
The following year's Ballbreaker marked a powerful return after a
lengthy break from recording. The ensuing Bonfire box set, meanwhile,
served as a fitting memorial to Bon Scott. The band greeted the new
millennium in typical style with the "business as usual"
recording, Stiff Upper Lip.