It is a line AC/DC are obviously pleased with: theyβve wheeled it out more than once. The gag runs that, during some or other promotional campaign, some upstart critic accused them of having made the same album 11 times. AC/DC retort to the effect that this is an outrageous, ignorant and insupport...
It is a line AC/DC are obviously pleased with: theyβve wheeled it out more than once. The gag runs that, during some or other promotional campaign, some upstart critic accused them of having made the same album 11 times. AC/DC retort to the effect that this is an outrageous, ignorant and insupportable calumny: they have, in fact, made the same album 12 times. The numbers vary with the telling, but AC/DCβs repeated deployment of this quip is itself almost a meta-commentary on the joke theyβre telling against themselves. Itβs also an assertion of the β correct β belief that they got everything absolutely and unimprovably right the first time, back on 1975βs High Voltage, and have therefore perceived no subsequent reason to tinker with the formula.
Power Up does kind of, inevitably, amount to AC/DC having now made the same album 17 times, but its very appearance is some measure more remarkable than that of any of its predecessors. It would have been little surprise to anyone had AC/DC β or what remained of AC/DC β hung it up at the end of 2016βs Rock Or Bust Tour, itself a miracle of defiance. Guitarist Malcolm Young, plausibly the greatest pure rhythm player of all time, the malevolent metronome who underpinned AC/DCβs fundamentalist rockβnβroll, was dying in hospital in Sydney. Long-serving drummer Phil Rudd was serving home detention in New Zealand after being convicted of charges including drug possession and making threats to kill. Towards the end of the tour, singer Brian Johnson was forced out by encroaching deafness; AC/DCβs decision to swap in Guns Nβ Rosesβ Axl Rose prompted an uncharacteristically public outbreak of internecine sniping.
Malcolm Young died in November 2017 β just a few weeks after the death of his and Angus Youngβs brother George Young, the Easybeats and Flash & The Pan founder whoβd also co-produced AC/DCβs first few albums. Those losses β and the attendant funerals β seem to have been a significant catalyst in bringing the band back together. The AC/DC of Power Up are Brian Johnson, whose hearing has been sufficiently restored by experimental technology, Angus Young, Phil Rudd, Stevie Young β Malcolm and Angusβs nephew, who first picked up rhythm guitar when Malcolm became too ill to play in 2014 β and Cliff Williams, who did announce his retirement post-Rock Or Bust, but has had a change of heart.
This is all entirely in keeping with AC/DCβs ruggedly utilitarian βman down, drive onβ ethos. Famously, they were not knocked noticeably off their stride by the death of a lead singer: just five months elapsed between the passing of Bon Scott in 1980 and the release of Back In Black, not merely the biggest-selling album by AC/DC, but by some estimations the biggest-selling album by anybody other than Michael Jackson. While one obviously wishes Angus Young nothing but a long and healthy life, it would be strangely reassuring to believe that thereβs an up-and-coming Young cousin spending spare hours learning to duck-walk in a school uniform while tearing furious solos from the sweat-slathered neck of a Gibson SG as a battery of cannons erupts on the downbeat and a vast womanly dirigible writhes atop an immense blazing locomotive.
Angus Young has spoken of Power Up being a tribute to his late brother in much the way that Back In Black was a memorial to Bon Scott (not that Back In Black was overladen with sombre reflections on mortality, unless there was elegiac subtext buried deep in βGiven The Dog A Boneβ and βLet Me Put My Love Into Youβ). On Power Up, they get perhaps as morose as AC/DC are ever likely to on βThrough The Mists Of Timeβ, but this is nevertheless a pounding metal anthem with a soaring chorus, screeching solos and drums that pound like a diplodocusβs heartbeat.
The songs on Power Up are substantially posthumously credited to Malcolm Young, wrung from riffs heβd conjured around the writing of 2008βs Black Ice. There being no imaginable mileage in comparing any of Power Up to anything but previous AC/DC albums, itβs a solid second-tier AC/DC record: itβs no Highway To Hell or Dirty Deeds Done Dirt Cheap, but it wouldnβt be at all embarrassed by the company of, say, Ballbreaker or The Razorβs Edge. And the best individual songs are well worthy of the AC/DC marque: βRealizeβ, impossible to hear without imagining Angus Young in ecstatic soak atop a speaker stack; βDemon Fireβ, a monumental boogie recognisable as a descendant of βWhole Lotta Rosieβ; βWild Reputationβ, a swaggering retread of βRock And Roll Ainβt Noise Pollutionβ; βShot In The Darkβ, a rolling rocker illuminated by one of those Angus Young solos that emphasises the sheer mellifluous prettiness of his playing as well as its pyrotechnic flashiness.
It is perhaps regrettable that it now looks like there will not be an Axl Rose-fronted AC/DC album β those shows were fantastic, Rose endowing AC/DCβs familiar cheerful live pantomime with genuine feral menace β but it may be that AC/DC reflected, reasonably, that they donβt have that kind of time. At any rate, Power Up deserves acclaim for more than merely existing, and it deserves plenty for that. If AC/DCβs β and the worldβs β circumstances permit a tour, Rosieβs re-inflation will be abundantly justified.