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Powerage

Released: 5 May 1978
Recorded: January–March 1978 at Albert Studios in Sydney, Australia
Label: Atlantic
It was the band's fourth internationally released studio album and the fifth to be released in Australia. It was also the first AC/DC album to feature Cliff Williams on bass. All songs were written by Angus Young, Malcolm Young and Bon Scott. After a 12-date European tour opening for Black Sabbath in April, bassist Mark Evans was fired from AC/DC on May 3, 1977. Young brothers were seriously considering Colin Pattenden of Manfred Mann fame until Browning, who feared Pattenden was too old and did not fit their image, pushed Englishman Cliff Williams, who had played with Home and Bandit. Williams, who could also sing background vocals, passed the audition and would go on to record on Powerage, although Evans insists that the album also has bass by him, as the Powerage songs started being done during the recording of his last album Let There Be Rock, and producer George Young while Williams was having trouble getting his work visa. The band finally toured America for the first time in the summer of 1977, focusing on smaller markets at first but eventually playing CBGB's in New York and the Whiskey A Go Go in Los Angeles. In December they played a set in front of a small audience at Atlantic Recording Studios in New York City which was broadcast live over Radio WIOQ in Philadelphia and hosted by Ed Sciaky. owerage were started in July 1977 during the band's first rehearsals with Williams at Albert Studios, including "Kicked in the Teeth," "Up To My Neck In You," an early version of "Touch Too Much," and possibly "Riff Raff." The Powerage sessions officially got going in January 1978 and stretched over a period of about eight weeks. With the first pressings of Powerage ready to go in the UK, the band complied and recorded "Rock 'n' Roll Damnation"; the song, which features handclaps and maracas and does not have a traditional guitar solo, was released in Britain at the end of May and went to #24, the best performance yet by an AC/DC single. However, Powerage would be the final Bon Scott-era studio album the band would record with the team of Harry Vanda and George Young, who had produced all of the bands albums up to that point , the feeling from Atlantic being that a more commercial producer might do wonders for the band's profile in the lucrative American market. 
Band members:
Phil Rudd – drums
Bon Scott – lead vocals
cliff3.jpg
Cliff Williams – bass guitar, backing vocals. Clifford Williams was born on 14 December 1949 in Romford, Essex, on the outskirts of London. The Williams family moved to Hoylake, near Liverpool, in 1961, where he was influenced by the local Merseybeat movement and decided to become a rock musician. At the age of 13, he and some friends formed a band. Williams has listed The Rolling Stones, The Kinks and blues musicians such as Bo Diddley as influences for his style. He mostly learned to play bass guitar by "listening to records and picking out notes", with formal training limited to some lessons from a professional Liverpool bassist. Williams left school when he was 16 years old, becoming an engineer by day and musician by night. In 1966, Williams became a professional musician and moved back to London, where he worked at a demolition site and in supermarkets, and played in short-lived bands. Williams met guitarist Laurie Wisefield (later a member of Wishbone Ash), and the two became members of a band, Sugar, which soon broke up. In 1970, Williams and Wisefield joined with singer Mick Stubbs, keyboardist Clive John and drummer Mick Cook to form the progressive rock group Home. The band signed a recording deal with Epic Records and issued their debut LP, Pause for a Hoarse Horse, in 1971. Home was a supporting act for Jeff Beck, Mott the Hoople, The Faces and Led Zeppelin. In 1972, Jim Anderson replaced John on keyboards and Home released a self-titled album, featuring their only hit single, "Dreamer". Their next album, The Alchemist, followed in 1973, but did not gain chart success. When British folk singer-songwriter Al Stewart suggested that Home back him on his first American tour in March 1974, Mick Stubbs left the group. The rest of the members became the Al Stewart Band, but split up after the tour. Williams briefly played with the American band Stars before forming Bandit in 1974. Bandit's line-up included vocalist Jim Diamond and drummer Graham Broad (later in Bucks Fizz and Roger Waters's band). The group signed with Arista Records and released a self-titled album in 1977. Bandit also performed as Alexis Korner's backing band on 1977's The Lost Album before disbanding later that year. In 1977, Williams considered retiring from music when Bandit disbanded, but one of the group's guitarists, Jimmy Litherland, convinced him to audition for Australian heavy rockers AC/DC. They were looking for a bassist as Mark Evans had been fired shortly after recording the 1977 studio album Let There Be Rock. Williams said shortly after being told about AC/DC's auditions, he saw the band on Top of the Pops and reacted positively, describing them as "outrageous". For his audition, Williams played four jam sessions with the band, and on 27 May 1977, he was asked to join AC/DC. Angus declared it was partly motivated because he thought the bassist's good looks would attract more women to their concerts. Given Williams was replacing an Australian musician, he initially had difficulties obtaining a work permit to enter the country. His first performances with AC/DC were on the tour there supporting Let There Be Rock, with two secret gigs at Sydney's Lifesaver. The album Powerage (1978), produced by Vanda & Young, marked Williams's studio debut. 
Angus Young – lead guitar
Malcolm Young – rhythm guitar, backing vocals
Michael A. Browning - Management
Mark Opitz - Engineer
Harry Vanda - Producer
George Young - Producer
Acdc_Powerage.JPG
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zYWYDx16JFg
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ErXbMB9R5-0
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ASJy3c4ACiU

Whole Lotta Rosie

Released: 1977
Recorded: 1977
Format: 7"
Label: ATCO
The song is about an obese Tasmanian woman, Rosie, with whom the singer had a one-night stand at the Freeway Gardens Motel in North Melbourne. In addition to pointing out the woman's size, the singer finds her to be one of the most talented lovers he's ever experienced. The song's first verse reveals Rosie's substantial physical measurements (42"-39"-56"), and that she weighs nineteen stone (266 pounds/approximately 120 kilograms). 
Band members:
Mark Evans – bass
Phil Rudd – drums
Bon Scott – lead vocals
Angus Young – lead guitar
Malcolm Young – rhythm guitar
Harry Vanda - producer
George Young - producer
Acdc-whole_lotta_rosie_s.jpg
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UKlO0hM-zMw

Let There Be Rock

Released: October 1977
Recorded: 1977, 1976
Format: 7", 12"
Label: ATCO
It is the third and title track of their album Let There Be Rock, released in March 1977, and was written by Angus Young, Malcolm Young, and Bon Scott. It was also released as a single, with a B-side of "Problem Child", in 1977. The song provides an encapsulated, fictionalised version of the history of rock 'n' roll. Following rock's birth, rock bands appeared everywhere, musicians found fame (while businesses made money off their efforts), and millions of people learned how to play electric guitar. The music video for "Let There Be Rock" was filmed in July 1977. It was recorded in the Surry Hills Kirk Gallery church, and featured Bon Scott, Angus Young, Malcolm Young, Phil Rudd, and Cliff Williams, who replaced Mark Evans as the band's bassist shortly after the Let There Be Rock album was released. This marked one of Williams' first public appearances with AC/DC. Scott was dressed as a priest and the rest of the band as altar boys, with Angus Young wearing a halo prop on his head. Towards the end of the video it shows Angus, and the rest of the band jamming while he plays the guitar. In an alternate ending of the video, the colors are morphed and the camera zooms in on the stained glass window. According to an interview with the Young brothers, Scott injured himself in the final jump from the podium. In the video and studio recording, Scott also sings the pre-chorus incorrectly, introducing sound before light. This is corrected during live performances of the song.
Band members:
Mark Evans – bass
Phil Rudd – drums
Bon Scott – lead vocals
Angus Young – lead guitar
Malcolm Young – rhythm guitar
Harry Vanda - producer
George Young - producer
220px-Let_There_Be_Rock.gif
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wpxYoU4WAv8


Dog Eat Dog

Released: 21 March 1977
Recorded: 1977
Label: ATCO
It is the second track of their album Let There Be Rock, released in 1977, and was written by Angus Young, Malcolm Young, and Bon Scott. It was released as a single in Australia, and included the non-album track "Carry Me Home" on the B-side, which was later released on Backtracks. AC/DC played "Dog Eat Dog" on their Black Ice World Tour until early 2010 when they dropped it from the set list and added "High Voltage".
Band members:
Mark Evans – bass guitar
Phil Rudd – drums
Bon Scott – lead vocals
Angus Young – lead guitar
Malcolm Young – rhythm guitar, backing vocals
Harry Vanda - Producer
George Young - Producer
Dog_Eat_Dog_%28ACDC_song%29.jpg
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=t22TpvtLOro

Let There Be Rock

Released: 21 March 1977
Recorded: January–February 1977, Albert Studios, Sydney, Australia
Label: Albert Productions
It was the band's third internationally released studio album and the fourth to be released in Australia. It was originally released on 21 March 1977 in Australia on the Albert Productions label. A modified international edition was released on 25 July 1977 on Atlantic Records. By 1977, AC/DC had become extremely successful in their native Australia and had also achieved a degree of popularity in the U.K. and Europe, largely on the strength of their pulverizing live show. However, Atlantic Records in the United States had rejected the band's third album Dirty Deeds Done Dirt Cheap, feeling the production was not up to par, and the band, which had yet to tour America, returned to Albert Studios in Sydney to record another album. Let There Be Rock, on the other hand, was recorded in one go and represented a major evolution in the band's sound, with many critics and fans citing it as the first true AC/DC album.
Band members:
Mark Evans – bass guitar
Phil Rudd – drums, percussion
Bon Scott – lead vocals
Angus Young – lead guitar
Malcolm Young – rhythm guitar, backing vocals
Bob Defrin - Art direction
Murray Engleheart - Liner notes
Michael Fraser - Mastering supervisor
George Marino - Mastering
Eugene Nastasi - Digital assembly
Mark Opitz - Engineer
Al Quaglieri - Mastering supervisor
Harry Vanda - Producer
George Young - Producer
220px-ACDC-LetThereBeRock.jpg