(1977) was their gospel: loud guitars, no ballads. Powerage (1978) dug deeper – bluesy, dark, pure hunger. Then Highway to Hell (1979) broke America. Producer "Mutt" Lange polished their dynamite. It was their biggest album… and their last with Bon Scott.
I can help with both! Here's a quick, engaging built around AC/DC’s discography, followed by the complete list of their studio albums. The Story of AC/DC: From High Voltage to Power Up It began in Sydney, 1973. Two brothers, Angus and Malcolm Young, plugged in and turned up. Their first spark was High Voltage (1975) – raw, reckless, and recorded in a few days. Australia heard it and shook.
February 1980. Bon died. The world wept. AC/DC almost ended.
But they found Brian Johnson. And (1980) rose from tragedy – a monument of rock. 50 million copies sold. Every riff a middle finger to fate. "Hells Bells," "You Shook Me All Night Long," the title track. Immortal.
(1988) brought a minor hit ("Heatseeker") but the band was tired. Then The Razors Edge (1990) – a thunderous comeback with "Thunderstruck." New fans, new fire.
(1995) was heavy, grumpy, fun. Stiff Upper Lip (2000) swung like a blues boogie. Black Ice (2008) – their biggest tour ever, 5 million tickets sold. Rock or Bust (2014) marked Malcolm's farewell (dementia forced him out). He died in 2017.









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