10 Best Songs Of AC | Eager Lad

Top 10 Songs Of AC/DC

Some people believe that all AC/DC songs sound the same. No, not exactly. The band's consistency makes any song in their catalog sound instantly familiar, but the subtle nuances of their unbreakable framework make each track unique. Malcolm and Angus Young, guitarist brothers, took their inherent love of blues, amplified the voltage of its shimmy and shake, and created something sinister and a little more naughty.


AC/DC is one of only a few bands to have achieved success with two singers. Before his untimely death in 1980, Bon Scott had already become a cultural icon.Brian Johnson was quickly recruited and Back in Black recorded and commercial success grew even stronger. Scott's witty wit and Johnson's working-class charm have both served the music well over the years. The songs are powerful, mischievous, and epoch-making.

Brian Johnson was quickly recruited and Back in Black recorded and commercial success grew even stronger. For years, both Scott's playful language and Johnson's charm as the working class have served music well. The songs are strong, bizarre and timeless.

It is daunting to determine the 10 best AC/DC songs from such great music, but with the following list we have tried our best:

10."What's Next to the Moon?"

Powerage was the first AC/DC album to be released in all the territories with the same track and cover art simultaneously. 'What's next to the Moon' is a tough 'n' rumbling behavior, with slashing chords and lyrical node of Bon Scott to both Jones and Superman. After changing the broken guitar strings the opening riff is said to have been made by Angus Young to try out a few notes. The following audio is a live version of the track that is vocalized with Brian Johnson.


9."Sin City"

"Sin City" is an AC/DC trademark syncopated guitar chords and crash cymbals. This methodology confirmed the musical critics of the day, who compares the band with punk. The bass-anchored bridge gives the track a great tension to blast to the maximum strength after the guitar solo. Bon Scott is at his poetic best in the world with his non-sensory poems about ladders and snakes. 23 years later, Twisted Sister covering the song reveals plainly the effect of AC/DC on their look.


8."Rock 'n' Roll Train"

Black Ice has probably been the best AC/DC album since Back in Black after eight years of relative inactivity. Producer Brendan O'Brien demanded that the young brothers integrate music-breather nuances, encouraging singer Brian Johnson to change his gear properly and to maneuver his voice to the high standard. The first single of 'Rock 'n' Roll Train' has a vivid guitar that weaves verses over the rhythm of the strong pocket of Phil Rudd's drummer.


7."Problem Child"


The fourth album from AC/DC was eventually released five years later in the U.S. After its original release in 1976, capitalizing on Back in Black. The "Child issue" is the middle finger of the thumb-nose against obedience and power. Bon Scott enjoys family rejection and threats aggression conflict. Musically, these are basic chords that accompany Angus Young's frenzied solos to a successful recovery. The international version of Let Be Rock in 1977 also showed the problem of "Problem Child," without the expanded coda.


6."You Shook Me All Night Long"

The iconic jangling guitar leading to the drum beat is so well-known that the first few notes of "You Shook Me All Night Long" can now be heard. Though his lyrics may have been stuck in clever innuendo, Bon Scott has happily put it on the table with a glad celebration of carnal fun that is absolutely not coy. It's infectious, singing, and Phil Rudd is a masterful syncopated hook throughout his strategic cymbal crashes in the solo guitar.


5." For Those About to Rock (We Salute You)."

The final addition of the AC/DC live set list remains. anthem. The slower pacing of the verses eventually gives way to the sound of fist-pumping cannon fire, lighting the fuse to a full-throttle quicker rhythm that propels the track to its conclusion. The album's opening track, which follows the landmark Back in Black, is a flawless declaration of continuity, taking up right where they left off. Blasts are a common effect given by a cannon arsenal during a concert.

4."Thunderstruck"

After many lower-sold albums propelled by "Thunderstruck' fame, Razors Edge returned to greater commercial success. The descending progression of the notes is identical to that of the "Who Made Who" guitar pattern. Fisting in the air as the "thunder" chorus screamed the whole change from sweaty drinking songs to anthems in the stadium. In recent years the New England Patriots at the Gillette Stadium commemorated every touchdown celebration.


3."Whole Lotta Rosie"

The paean of Bon Scott to the more important women is the staple of the AC/DC concert. Recorded in Glasgow, Scotland, the live version of If You Will Blood sets a pattern of calling and answering between the riffing of Angus Young and the crowd singing his name. The song eventually gave the name to an inflatable likeness of the suggestive seductor (as seen in the following video), who is now an integral part, along with cannons and church gloves during Hells Bells, of the band's live output.


2."Highway to Hell"

One of the songs that moralists used to falsely accuse AC/DC of being a satanic band. The lyrics in a single length tell us how rigorous touring is, literally, the fatigue of traveling the Australian Canning Highway. The AC/DC-sounds from the bar band were assisted by Mutt Lange's production techniques. The tempo and cadence is primarily a blues base, in particular the organized back and forth exchange between drums and guitars in every verse.


1."Back In Black"

The title track of the second best-selling album in the world is a tribute to late Bon Scott, the band's leader. Brian Johnson, the successor, describes an otherworldly influence that influenced him when writing the lyrics. Musically, the track, like "Highway to Hell," is based on the cadence and groove formed by the interplay of guitars and drums. Johnson jokes that friends have said they've never heard him sing so high, to which he responds that he hasn't either.



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