... Because so wonderfully pure Hard Rock and was played not by too many bands, and who, like me, adores the voice of Bon Scott, has a total of only there about 60 songs to choose from. I am a little bit in a dilemma because I "Let There Be Rock" and "Powerage" that I liked even better than this album, also have given five stars, but honestly: these plate skin a Rock'n ' Roll fan but the stool, right? 1. It's a Long Way to the Top: A perfect rock number, the better you can not play. I contend that the number of people who like to hear rock and not love this song, most less than a hundred. Honest. 2. Rock'n'Roll Singer: Almost as good, definitely the same style, almost like Fifties R'n'R, only louder. And this ... Bon :-) ("I got the devil in my blood, telling me what to do ... and I'm all ears.") 3. The Jack: The legendary AC / DC Blues with the text wonderfully ambiguous. (Jack is a slang for gonorrhea, the viewpoint is from the card game something else entirely.) Sung live by the way from the very beginning with a different, unique text. 4. Livewire: Actually, the perfect start of the concert, as the video "Let There Be Rock" shown. For a while wummert only the bass, then comes the quiet Rhtythmusgitarre it. Some bars on the Hi-Hats from the drums, and soon after crashing the lead guitar and drums to the rest. And so the number rolled smooth but strong then. I like. * Smacking * 5. TNT: A grenade, as she herself has this band rarely accomplished. But knows anyway everyone, this midtempo tampers with Mitbrüllteil. 6. Can I sit next to you girl: The very first song of AC / DC, Bon Scott re-sung. (Original single was still with Dave Evans.) For now quite well, but smells of the previous five a little off. 7. Little Lover: slow, bluesy. (Although Bon was no blues singer, but whatever.) Not great, but okay. 8. She's got balls: Even more slowly, but snappy and angry. The number has something no question. But I personally prefer the first five before, and: 9. High Voltage: Here we go again, in the same style as the first two numbers. And again a huge success. A straighter rock song, which is still played like live. One of the six top performances on the album.
Finally, I should perhaps mention that this album is actually piecemeal, because in Australia the plate was originally published with the title "TNT" and a slightly different tracklist. The few weaker tracks on this disc are missing original, it is still the killer number "Rocker" and the Chuck Berry cover "School Days" plan. When in doubt, therefore, more likely to buy the Australian stock.