"Black Ice" CD by AC/DC

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Appearing in a Digipak and with a 12-page booklet.

Time for retirement? Not at all! 'Black Ice,' the fourteenth studio album by the hard rock legends, is their longest one to date. And it includes 'Rock'n'Roll Train,' a song that can already be considered a classic among AC/DC tracks.

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General

Item no. 436941
Responsible economic operator EU Sony Music Entertainment Germany GmbH
Balanstraße 73 // Haus 31
81541 MΓΌnchen
Germany
kontakt@sonymusic.com
Musical Genre Hard Rock
Exclusive No
Media - Format 1-3 CD
Product topic Bands
Band AC/DC
Product type CD
Release date 10/17/08
Gender Unisex

CD 1

  • 1.
    Rock 'N' Roll Train (Album Version)
  • 2.
    Skies On Fire (Album Version)
  • 3.
    Big Jack (Album Version)
  • 4.
    Anything Goes (Album Version)
  • 5.
    War Machine (Album Version)
  • 6.
    Smash 'N' Grab (Album Version)
  • 7.
    Spoilin' For A Fight (Album Version)
  • 8.
    Wheels (Album Version)
  • 9.
    Decibel (Album Version)
  • 10.
    Stormy May Day (Album Version)
  • 11.
    She Likes Rock 'N' Roll (Album Version)
  • 12.
    Money Made (Album Version)
  • 13.
    Rock 'N' Roll Dream (Album Version)
  • 14.
    Rocking All The Way (Album Version)
  • 15.
    Black Ice (Album Version)

by Marcel Anders (26.10.2008) Question: all band members are older than 50 years, they haven’t released a single new peep since the year 2000, and their creative heyday were the Seventies and early Eighties – so what can you expect from a band like this? Answer: A whole lotta Rock’n’Roll – as demonstrated pretty impressively on "Black ice", the sixteenth album of the Australian/British quintet. Angus & Co. are back – and revel in their well-known assets: earthy, bluesy Power Rock with juicy riffs, hefty solo work and galloping drums, terrific throaty vocals and lots of choruses inviting you to sing along. What does that remind you of? Ahh, well, sweaty gigs brimming over with those AC/DC-classics... And they also have some of them up their sleeves this time around: "RockΒ΄nΒ΄Roll train", "Anything goes", or "Money made" are some of the highlights, for example. The 15 songs contain exactly the expected! No ballads, a rough production and obvious citations of their own vintage stuff. "Highway to hell" has clearly been the inspiration for "Rocking all the way", and "Skies on fire" is a remake of "Back in black". Regarding that, AC/DC are somehow the Ramones of Hard Rock – and that’s meant as a clear-cut compliment here.