AC/DC
Formed in Sydney in 1973 by brothers Malcolm and Angus Young, AC/DC built one of the most immediately recognisable sounds in rock history — huge riffs, relentless rhythm guitar, and an electrifying live presence that filled stadiums for five decades. Back in Black alone has sold over 50 million copies.
About AC/DC
AC/DC formed in Sydney on 31 October 1973 when Malcolm Young placed an advert for musicians and his younger brother Angus joined almost immediately. Both had been born in Glasgow, Scotland, and emigrated to Australia as children — part of a large Young family that also included George Young of the Easybeats, who would later produce several of the band's early albums. From the start, the music was built around Malcolm's locked-in rhythm guitar and Angus's fluid, blues-rooted lead work, a partnership that would define the band's sound for five decades.
The early years were defined by Bon Scott, a Scottish-born vocalist who joined in 1974 and brought a wild, unpredictable energy to the band's already confrontational music. Albums including High Voltage, Dirty Deeds Done Dirt Cheap, Let There Be Rock, Powerage and Highway to Hell established AC/DC as one of the most exciting live acts in hard rock — abrasive, funny, sexually provocative and technically tighter than they ever let on. Highway to Hell (1979) was the moment they broke internationally, with a title track that remains one of the great rock songs. Bon Scott died of acute alcohol poisoning in February 1980, aged 33, just as the band were on the verge of their biggest success.
Rather than disband, AC/DC recruited Brian Johnson — vocalist of British band Geordie — and made Back in Black, one of the most extraordinary records in rock history. Conceived as a tribute to Bon Scott, recorded in six weeks, it sold over 50 million copies and became the second best-selling album of all time behind only Thriller. Johnson's gravel-and-glass voice worked differently from Scott's — less theatrical, more immediate — and the band's sound simplified still further into the most powerful version of itself. For Those About to Rock We Salute You, Fly on the Wall, The Razors Edge and Black Ice followed across the next three decades, with varying critical reception but never much deviation from the formula. Power Up (2020) was recorded as a tribute to Malcolm Young, who died in 2017 after a long battle with dementia, and reassembled the classic Johnson-era line-up one more time.
Top 10 AC/DC Songs
Ranked by songwriting craft, cultural impact, live legacy and how well each track represents what AC/DC do at their best.
For the full ranking see the best AC/DC songs guide.
AC/DC Albums: Where to Start
Key albums with honest notes on who each one is for.
AC/DC: Key Moments
AC/DC Trivia Quiz
Five questions — how many can you get right?
Best AC/DC Songs by Listening Mood
Not sure where to begin? Use this as your entry point.