Learn these AC/DC songs with Fret Zealot
Australian rock band AC/DC formed in Sydney in 1973 by Scottish-born brothers Malcolm and Angus Young, as well as Colin Burgess (drums), Larry Van Kriedt (bass guitar) and Dave Evans (lead vocals). The band went through several line-up changes before releasing their debut album, High Voltage (1975). After the release of Let There Be Rock (1977), the lineup was set with the Young brothers, Phil Rudd on drums, Cliff Williams on bass guitar and Bon Scott on lead vocals. Scott died of alcohol poisoning only seven months after the release of Highway to Hell in 1979. The band tapped English singer Brian Johnson as their new frontman for 1980’s Back in Black – dedicated to Scott’s memory, and the second best-selling record of all time!
Check out these AC/DC songs you can learn with Fret Zealot.
You don’t have to be a guitar pro to master “You Shook Me All Night Long” – the main verse and riff follow a simple G-C-D chord progression.
“Highway to Hell” is about the exhausting nature of constant touring, which Angus Young referred to as the “Highway to Hell”. Australia’s Canning Highway also was part of the song’s namesake.
This song was included on AC/DC’s fourth album, 1977’s Let There Be Rock. “Hell Ain’t A Bad Place to Be” also shares its name with a 2012 biography of the band.
This song contains a commonly misunderstood line – often heard as “Dirty deeds and the thunder chief” (the correct lyrics are in the title!)
One of AC/DC’s most recognizable songs gets its name from a childhood toy of the Young brothers. In the liner notes of The Razor’s Edge 2003 re-release, Young said that they were searching for a name for the song when they came up with the “thunder” motif, based on their childhood toy Thunderstreak. “It seemed to have a good ring to it. AC/DC = Power. That’s the basic idea,” he wrote.
With an unmistakable opening riff, “Back in Black” was written in honor of AC/DC’s former singer Bon Scott who died in 1980.
This song begins with the tolling of a bell – an actual, 2,000 lb. bronze bell made by John Taylor & Co. Bellfounders in England. The bell sound was recorded in a mobile studio inside of the bell foundry after the tracking sessions for “Back in Black” were complete.
“All Screwed Up” was featured on AC/DC’s 2000 album Stiff Upper Lip. This album was the last one produced by Malcolm and Angus Young’s older brother George Young, who died in 2017.
One of AC/DC’s most popular songs, “Whole Lotta Rosie’ started off as another song entirely. The main riff was featured on an earlier recording called “Dirty Eyes”, which had a different chorus chord progression and a slower tempo. It was recorded in 1976 for an EP that got scrapped and later recrafted into “Whole Lotta Rosie”.
For Those About to Rock (We Salute You)
You might not associate AC/DC with classical literature, but Angus Young said that one of the inspirations for the lyrics of this 1981 track was gleaned from a story by poet and novelist Robert Graves. Young explained that the story was about gladiators in Ancient Rome preparing to fight in the Coliseum, who used the salute “Ave, Caesar, morituri te salutant” (“Hail Caesar, those who are about to die salute you”).
“The Jack” (Australian slang for a venereal disease) was created when Malcolm Young, jamming out with Bon Scott, received a note from a woman who said she contracted it from Malcolm. Bon Scott began teasing Young with a blues riff with the phrase – and “The Jack” was born.
Did you know that “Beatin’ Around the Bush” off of AC/DC’s 1979 album Highway to Hell is a cover? The song was originally recorded by Australian blues, rock and R&B band Jo Jo Zep & The Falcons. It was released in July 1976 and was featured on the soundtrack to the 1976 film Oz.
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