According to Angus Young, this one classic AC/DC song epitomises the band and all of the success they experienced.
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Angus Young of AC/DC during Molson Canadian Rocks for Toronto - Show at Downsview Park in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. (Photo by ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. After a six-year recording break — during which frontman Brian Johnson struggled with serious hearing loss, drummer Phil Rudd ...
AC/DC have written some of the greatest riffs in music, but these are five that we would be better off without.
In a previously unpublished interview, the now late Malcolm Young explained how the band first came together and what drove his brother Angus Young to adopt what became his iconic AC/DC schoolboy ...
Both photos were shot by AC/DC fan Crystal Lambert, whose apartment is near the studio. Steve Newton, the Canadian blogger who first wrote that AC/DC are at the studio, writes that after the band was ...
AC/DC's Angus Young was born in Glasgow, Scotland, on March 31, 1955. His family would move to Australia when he was eight years old, and that's where he and his brother Malcolm later co-founded AC/DC ...
Like many artists, the band kicked around ideas for the new album for weeks. “We’d been in Miami, and we’d been in a rehearsal room and that’s what we were doing,” he said, Kerrang! reports. “We were ...
Angus Young said he's “still not done” with the collection of song ideas he co-wrote with late brother Malcolm for AC/DC. “A lot of these songs came from when we were going to do the [2008] album ...
“Hello!” greeted singer Brian Johnson as AC/DC took to the stage in Chicago as the American leg of their “Power Up” tour wound down. “It’s been too long. Where you been?” joked the singer, rejoining ...
Angus Young discussed his “great memories” of AC/DC’s early days, including the time they performed at a school for deaf children and received a powerful response. “A lot of great memories, going ...
Steve McNeil, of Toronto, Ontario, has been traveling to skate for 19 hours and 26 minutes in each of Canada's NHL cities to raise awareness and money for local Alzheimer's disease charities, the ...