Thursday, March 27, 2014
Bon Scott: Retrospective
I am at the end of an era. I have made it through multiple listenings of the Bon Scott ACDC era. I've made a playlist of my favorite songs from this era and listened to it almost daily.
Bon Scott was every bit the rock and roll singer he sung about being. I do not doubt his authenticity in leading the kind of life that is reflected in his songs. These songs are sung from experience, a kind of life that by all accounts the entire band lived during this era. The music of the band in the earlier days was very Chuck Berry inspired, but toward the end started branching into harder blues and Little Richard energy. The latter part, I can only assume was Bon Scott gaining more influence in the band. Bon Scott's rock and roll hero was Little Richard. Scott's screeching howl makes more sense when you think about this fact.
My favorites that feature Bon prominently are the ones where he gets "real" with us. I like "Its a Long Way to the Top", "Ain't No Fun", and "Let There Be Rock". I also like the songs where he stretches his singing ability a bit, like "Highway to Hell", "If you Want Blood", "Hell Ain't a Bad Place to Be", and "Rock and Roll Damnation". Finally, I can't forget his sleaziest, most witty songs "Big Balls" "Whole Lotta Rosie" and "The Jack".
Bon was also every bit as sleazy and dirty as I had heard growing up. He does not disappoint, coming up with very smart ass and very nasty word play in his lyrics. There is no making a saint out of Bon Scott, and that unapologetic attitude just makes him that much more a rock and roll legend. The thing is, there are a couple of songs where he seems to bare his soul a bit. An early example is "Its a Long Way to the Top", but the best example of this is "Ride On", and I feel like he was growing to have some maturity to him by then. Like with all life cut short, I have to wonder what we missed out on when he left.
Growing up, without the internet around, I heard all sorts of stories about how Brian Johnson became the new lead singer of ACDC after Bon's death. I had heard that he was a cab driver for them, and the band liked the way he yelled. I speculated later that he probably was not a cab driver like we think, but was just driving them around from a studio or gig they both had taken part in. There are some more less credible stories as well. The truth, I found out, was that it was Bon that picked him. One night Bon came back from watching a show, and told the band about this singer he had just seen. He told the band that this singer really howled on stage, got on the floor and tore up on stage. He told the band that this singer really had "it", he had that Little Richard mentality, he really knew what rock and roll was about. It just so happened, that was the night that Brian Johnson got appendicitis and he was genuinely howling in pain. Anyway, after the band realized that Bon would want them to go on after him, and continue being a band, the first name that came to Malcolm and Angus' mind was Brian Johnson, because they felt he had been given the "ok" by Scott all those years ago.
Wednesday, March 19, 2014
Mutt Lange, more than his marriage.
I wrote earlier that I was surprised that the "ACDC" sound was established in Powerage instead of Highway to Hell. It may have sounded like I did not give Mutt Lange enough credit for the work he did with the band. This can not be further from the truth. Listening to the albums he did with them(Highway to Hell, Back in Black, For Those About to Rock) has given me a lot of insight.
In Highway to Hell I hear Mutt's influence in many places. While the band seemed to learn how to play together in Powerage, Mutt had a huge influence on Bon Scott's vocals. The lyrics are tighter and less loose, and there are backing vocals used in the background. The songs seem to take on a less nebulous structure, and get even further away from the rockabilly sound that defined early ACDC.
The reason why I know this is Mutt's influence? Because of Def Leppard. You see, after his stint with ACDC, Mutt was hired to work for Def Leppard. Their most important 3 albums were done by Mutt, and all the songs you likely know from the band had Mutt at the helm. You can hear so much a similar tone. The recording, the song structure, and most of all, the backing vocal tracks, are pure Mutt Lange. You can hear it across all those ACDC and Def Leppard albums. Def Leppard was a huge influence through the late 80's, as were the ACDC albums of his era, so you can hear this whole Mutt Lange style everywhere from Poison to Motley Crue. There is a lot of hub bub over the Phil Spector "Wall of Sound" era of music recording, and I do not think Lange gets enough credit for his style taking over in the late 80's.
By the way, I know I have some good ole country folk in my social circles, I don't know if readin' this is your thing, but Mutt Lange is THAT Mutt Lange that married Shania Twain, and produced her biggest albums.
In Highway to Hell I hear Mutt's influence in many places. While the band seemed to learn how to play together in Powerage, Mutt had a huge influence on Bon Scott's vocals. The lyrics are tighter and less loose, and there are backing vocals used in the background. The songs seem to take on a less nebulous structure, and get even further away from the rockabilly sound that defined early ACDC.
The reason why I know this is Mutt's influence? Because of Def Leppard. You see, after his stint with ACDC, Mutt was hired to work for Def Leppard. Their most important 3 albums were done by Mutt, and all the songs you likely know from the band had Mutt at the helm. You can hear so much a similar tone. The recording, the song structure, and most of all, the backing vocal tracks, are pure Mutt Lange. You can hear it across all those ACDC and Def Leppard albums. Def Leppard was a huge influence through the late 80's, as were the ACDC albums of his era, so you can hear this whole Mutt Lange style everywhere from Poison to Motley Crue. There is a lot of hub bub over the Phil Spector "Wall of Sound" era of music recording, and I do not think Lange gets enough credit for his style taking over in the late 80's.
By the way, I know I have some good ole country folk in my social circles, I don't know if readin' this is your thing, but Mutt Lange is THAT Mutt Lange that married Shania Twain, and produced her biggest albums.
Wednesday, March 12, 2014
Powerage by ACDC
I started this journey through ACDC with a few preconceptions. Many of them were true. I thought the Bon Scott era was a dirty era with songs about wild rock and roll life; this was true. Some preconceptions were not true. I thought Bon Scott had only done 3 or so albums. I now know that Scott was there for many more hits and albums than I had previously thought.
I knew that early on ACDC took lots of inspiration from the 1950's rockers, like Chuck Berry and Little Richard. I had figured that the "middle" era of classic hits and THE "ACDC" sound came about largely as the influence of Mutt Lange producing Highway to Hell. The first couple of albums only reinforced this, as these albums are very much rock and roll, and not yet "hard rock".
Boy was I surprised when I listened to Powerage.
Powerage is the album BEFORE Mutt Lange met up with the guys. Powerage was produced and mixed by the same guys that had always did the ACDC albums before; Angus and Malcom's brother George, and his friend Harry Vanda. From track 1 to the last, the sound is much more what I hear as "ACDC" than what came before. Instead of quick power chords, the guitar tones are allowed to breath. Instead of a bluesy sort of solo, there were some fast play, and unless I"m mistaken there was some tapping. Instead of a Chuck Berry ripoff(that everyone from Jimmy Paige to Keith Richards have admitted to doing, its not a black spot to get lent a song by Chuck), there were ACDC riffs. Its like Malcom and Angus finally let go of their hero's inspiration and started paving their own road.
This has surprised me and given me MORE respect that I already had for the band. They have admitted that they are a band that need direction from a producer. Famously they disliked Rick Rubin's approach. Rubin made a career of getting put in charge of bands that have been dicked around by record companies, and using his clout to give them freedom. Brian Johnson complained, "we hardly ever saw the guy". This wasn't neglect, he was doing what he does, he was letting the band do whatever they want. Anyway, I had assumed that the big transition from an early blues rock band to the biggest hard rock band of all time was because Mutt Lange had taught them a thing or two about recording, and the success of Highway and Back in Black lead to them keeping that voice.
Now I know they came up with the sound themselves as a natural evolution of their touring, writing, and chemistry as a band.
Labels:
ACDC,
Angus,
Bon Scott,
Chuck Berry,
Classic,
Malcolm,
Mutt Lange,
Powerage,
rock,
Roll
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