High Voltage AC/DC

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CD - Special Edition

  • Release Date: 05/26/2009
  • Original Release: 1976
  • Sales Rank: 113,697
  • Label: SONY UK
  • UPC: 886973994221

Listener Rating: (15 ratings)

Detailed Rating: "Sound Quality" See All

 
  • Overview
  • Tracks
  • Editorial Reviews
  • Customer Reviews
  • Details & Credits
Track List
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High Voltage

1LISTENIt's a Long Way to the Top (If You Wanna Rock 'n' Roll) 5:16
2LISTENRock 'n' Roll Singer 5:04
3LISTENThe Jack 5:52
4LISTENLive Wire 5:50
5LISTENT.N.T. 3:34
6LISTENCan I Sit Next to You Girl 4:12
7LISTENLittle Lover 5:37
8LISTENShe's Got Balls 4:51
9LISTENHigh Voltage 4:03

About this Artist

Editorial Reviews

One of the perennial complaints about AC/DC is that they've never changed -- and if that's true, High Voltage is the blueprint they've followed all their career. Comprised of highlights from their first two Australian albums -- 1975's TNT and its 1976 follow-up, also entitled High Voltage -- the album has every single one of AC/DC's archetypes. There are songs about rock & roll, slow sleazy blues, high-voltage boogie, double entendres so obvious they qualify as single entendres and, of course, the monster riffs of Angus Young, so big and bold they bruise the listener upon contact. It's those riffs -- so catchy they sound lifted when they're original, so simple they're often wrongly dismissed as easy -- that give the music its backbone, the foundation for Bon Scott to get dirty, and rockers never got quite as dirty as Bon Scott. Scott sounded as if you could catch a disease by listening to him. He sounded like the gateman at hell, somebody who never hid the notion that lurking behind the door are some bad, dangerous things, but they're also fun, too, and he made no apologies for that. But for as primal as High Voltage is, it's also a lot weirder and funnier than it's given credit for, too -- those are bagpipes that solo on "It's a Long Way to the Top (If You Want to Rock & Roll)," and "She's Got Balls" is a perversely funny dirty joke. This is music so primal that it's enduring -- it feels like it existed before AC/DC got there, and it will exist long afterward. And if AC/DC did wind up bettering this blueprint in the future, there's no question that this original is still potent, even thrilling, no matter how many times they returned to the well, or how many times this record is played. Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Music Guide

Customer Reviews

Classics! The excellent beginning of a long way.by Anonymous

Reader Rating:
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May 02, 2009: Excellent an album. Good has begun .AC/DC not when will not bother. It is music on all times.

This review was written about the CD Remastered / Special Edition edition.

I Also Recommend: Highway to Hell, Back in Black.

the beginingby Anonymous

Reader Rating:
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November 19, 2006: ac/dc's first album and what an album it is with songs like tnt live wire its a long way to the top and the title track you cant go rong

This review was written about the CD Remastered / Special Edition edition.


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