In every respect this compilation is an enrichment for the rock fan. The live recordings from the Atlantic Studios sound as if the band strikes up in your living room. Unadulterated, authentic live feeling. Between songs applause and "noise" from an estimated 10 Livehaftig present. And you wish you had been there ... CD2 and 3 are the live recording of the concert in Paris in 1979 and is more or less the "soundtrack" for the concert film "Let There Be Rock", which was filmed at this event. Here we have a little more audience than in the Atlantic Studios and another live atmosphere. But even here genuine and rough in the Sound. You can hear during the breaks between the pieces, as Bon Scott chats with the audience and the songs announcing the monitor speakers hum or sometimes a feedback from the microphone. All this makes all the fun wonderfully unpolished and honest! CD4 is an interesting collection of rare live tracks and studio recordings. Mostly we have well-known songs in a completely new guise, such as "a touch too much" with other text and other music, as well as "Get it hot". Or "School Days" by the Australian release of the TNT album ... There truly is much to discover. Again and again one finds what was a terrific mix: the older by a few years Bon Scott with his given inherently hotter timbre and the young Brothers Young with their noisy guitars ...
The fifth and last shekel of the box is the well-known and the second best-selling album in music history - "Back in Black" in the latest remastered edition. Here is now Brian Johnson on vocals. That the album still in this box no "miscast" is, is partly due to the fact that it has been substantially influenced by Bon Scott. Secondly, it marks a small turning point in the band's history. It is the first album without Bon, but his spirit still hovered over the tape to the success he had contributed. This release celebrates one of the greats of rock. CD purely turn up in the player volume. Bright and clear as sunlight is the message. This man is not dead. Bon Scott lives forever.