After the huge announcement that AC/DC frontman Brian Johnson will be withdrawing from the remainder of the Rock or Bust World Tour, to be replaced by Axl Rose of Guns N’ Roses, unsurprisingly, it turns out that fans aren’t very happy.

According to The Independent, concert promoter Live Nation issued a statement revealing that approximately 7,000 tickets were refunded for the Belgian show alone. Billboard’s source said that this was similar with Spain as well, but that people involved in the tour “aren’t worried about it.” Fans have been offered refunds for the remaining 12 dates in the Europe stopover, so it will definitely be interesting to see whether the rest of the tour will follow suit.

In an emotional statement released last month, Johnson called his withdrawal from the group “the darkest day of his professional life.”

Despite this, the band is determined to keep the show going, saying, “We are dedicated to fulfilling the remainder of our touring commitments to everyone that has supported us over the years, and are fortunate that Axl Rose has kindly offered his support to help us fulfil this commitment.”

If you wanted a little try before you buy, it seems someone has managed to take some sneaky footage from one of the sound-checks for an upcoming show. While it’s pretty muffled and distant, listen to Axl performing with the group in the track Thunderstruck below. 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3K5J-8SMdks

Following the AC/DC tour, Rose will continue his run of live shows with the Guns N’ Roses North America stadium reunion tour, which currently does not involve guitarist Izzy Stradlin

For more information on AC/DC World tour, click here.

Image: Yahoo

It was recently announced that AC/DC frontman Brian Johnson regrettably had to withdraw from the legendary rock band’s remaining Rock Or Bust World Tour dates due to injury. It’s also been announced that Axl Rose of Guns N Roses will be replacing him, which was cemented at their recent Coachella headline show, during which AC/DC’s Angus Young came out on stage and performed a few of their own hits for the huge crowd.

Johnson has now released an official statement to fans, directly addressing his reasons for pulling out of the tour, and more:

As many AC/DC fans know, the remaining shows for the 2016 AC/DC Rock or Bust World Tour, including 10 postponed U.S. shows, are being rescheduled with a guest singer.  I want personally to explain the reason because I don’t believe the earlier press releases sufficiently set out what I wanted to say to our fans or the way in which I thought it should be presented.

On March 7th, after a series of examinations by leading physicians in the field of hearing loss, I was advised that if I continue to perform at large venues, I risked total deafness.  While I was horrified at the reality of the news that day, I had for a time become aware that my partial hearing loss was beginning to interfere with my performance on stage.  I was having difficulty hearing the guitars on stage and because I was not able to hear the other musicians clearly, I feared the quality of my performance could be compromised.  In all honesty this was something I could not in good conscience allow.  Our fans deserve my performance to be at the highest level, and if for any reason I can’t deliver that level of performance I will not disappoint our fans or embarrass the other members of AC/DC.  I am not a quitter and I like to finish what I start, nevertheless, the doctors made it clear to me and my bandmates that I had no choice but to stop performing on stage for the remaining shows and possibly beyond.  That was the darkest day of my professional life. 

Since that day, I have had several consultations with my doctors and it appears that, for the near future, I will be unable to perform on stage at arena and stadium size venues where the sound levels are beyond my current tolerance, without the risk of substantial hearing loss and possibly total deafness.  Until that time, I tried as best as I could to continue despite the pain and hearing loss but it all became too much to bear and too much to risk.

I am personally crushed by this development more than anyone could ever imagine.  The emotional experience I feel now is worse than anything I have ever in my life felt before.  Being part of AC/DC, making records and performing for the millions of devoted fans this past 36 years has been my life’s work.  I cannot imagine going forward without being part of that, but for now I have no choice.  The one thing for certain is that I will always be with AC/DC at every show in spirit, if not in person.

Most importantly, I feel terrible having to disappoint the fans who bought tickets for the canceled shows and who have steadfastly supported me and AC/DC these many years.  Words cannot express my deep gratitude and heartfelt thanks not just for the recent outpouring to me personally of kind words and good wishes, but also for the years of loyal support of AC/DC.  My thanks also go to Angus and Cliff for their support. 

Finally, I wish to assure our fans that I am not retiring.  My doctors have told me that I can continue to record in studios and I intend to do that.  For the moment, my entire focus is to continue medical treatment to improve my hearing.  I am hoping that in time my hearing will improve and allow me to return to live concert performances.  While the outcome is uncertain, my attitude is optimistic.  Only time will tell.

Once again, my sincere best wishes and thanks to everyone for their support and understanding.

Love,

Brian

You can find all tour dates and more details here.

Image: Metal Injection

There are some things you just can’t make up. The kinds of things that make you sit back in your chair and just mouth “What the fuck?” Sentences like “Australian hard rock legends AC/DC being used to treat cancer” is one such thing. When I saw that this was something that existed in the world, I couldn’t resist. I had so many questions: How? Why? Has science gone too far?

Needless to say, I was intrigued.

Researchers at the University of South Australia have been using Thunderstruck to adapt the way that the chemotherapy-related drug Camptothecin (say it five times fast, I dare you) is delivered to patients. The track is being used to vibrate microparticles of the drug, which allows a thin polymer (plastic, but I like using science-y words) coating to be applied, increasing the time taken for the drug to reach the patient. Basically, the track is being used to make the drug kick cancer’s ass faster.

If you’re feeling like a more in-depth look at the research, there’s a paper which can be read here (warning, super science-y). Currently, it’s just a proof-of-concept, but sounds promising, and may lead to it being used in other areas of drug delivery.

ACDC70s

Image: Stereogum

In a recent interview with The Lead South Australia, Professor Nico Voelcker (one of the researchers on the project) explained the choice of music:

“Normally we would ignite a plasma onto the surface. The problem with doing that is you only form the coating on one side of the particle, the side that is exposed. But the side of the particle on the surface, the other side, is not going to get coated.”

“That is where we came up with the idea of using a loud speaker that we would play into the system. We would turn that loudspeaker to a song that it would vibrate and the particles would bounce up and down. The chaotic frequencies worked well and gave you a more homogenous coating.”

“We used a cold plasma, but an example of a hot plasma would be the rays of thunder. We ended up using Thunderstruck because we liked how it linked thunder and plasma gas.”

So that’s really cool! Although I would be lying if I said I wasn’t slightly disappointed to hear no mention of electroshock therapy, but it’s probably for the best.

[youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v2AC41dglnM]

AC/DC are currently searching for a touring replacement for Brian Johnson, with rumours of Axl Rose being the man to step in. Personally, I’m still hoping for Pelle Almqvist of The Hives, because oh my god.

Image: ABC

In the midst of their world tour, disaster has stuck for ACDC.

Frontman Brian Johnson has been forced to leave the tour on doctor’s orders after being told that he will permanently lose his hearing if he continues. With the position wide open, The Hives frontman Pelle Almqvist has taken the opportunity to apply. In a Facebook post (read below), he has expressed his interest in joining the legendary rock band for the remainder of their tour.

He began his application for the job sending love to Johnson and wishing him well on his recovery, but wasted no time getting straight to the point. “Very sad to hear Brian Johnson can’t do a bunch of AC/DC shows due to health problems. That man is a legend. I would like offer my sincerest well wishes and get wells. And if any help is needed, I put my foot forward and say: HERE I AM!”

He continued, detailing his experience and achievements as the “greatest frontman in rock”: “I have many many years of experience rocking the world’s biggest stages and, according to others, I am the greatest frontman in rock, plus judging from the reaction in Australia, your crowd already seems to really like me. Plus, I have already been singing those songs since I was six years old. So, AC/DC, please consider my application!”

https://www.facebook.com/hives/posts/10153395009913199

The comment section has a few fans willing to give Almqvist a glowing reference, while others are condemning the idea. In competition with Almqvist is Dave Evans, who was the original lead singer and played with the band briefly in 1974.

The final ten shows will be rescheduled for now. Hopefully, they find a suitable fill-in frontman soon. We also send our best wishes to Brian Johnson and wish him luck on his recovery.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uivqPSPpz-Y

Image: Spin

Today in nostalgic pop punk news, the now sans-Tom DeLonge version of Blink-182 are reportedly working on material for a new album with their newest member, Alkaline Trio frontman Matt Skiba. While the prospect of new Blink makes me more than a little hot under the collar, is it really new Blink when it’s going to be lacking that familiar angsty, nasally whine of DeLonge’s that made every Blink-182 song so instantly recognisable?

To be honest, this is really just going to feel more like Box Car Racer feat. Matt Skiba than anything else I’m predicting. Or it could be worse. Or maybe it’ll be amazing. Music history shows that either outcome is more than a possibility. Just a few of the bands who’ve tagged out their original frontman for another:

5: Stone Temple Pilots – with Chester Bennington

If you’re a fan of 90s grunge, there weren’t many names bigger than Stone Temple Pilots. Responsible for some of the hardest rocking sounds of that decade with hits like Plush, Interstate Love Song, Big Empty and Trippin’ On A Hole In A Paper Heart. 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yjJL9DGU7Gg

Frontman Scott Weiland has battled his fair share of demons throughout, the band going on more than a few breaks and hiatuses throughout their three decades. The final straw came in 2013, after months of speculation that Weiland was hoping to return to Velvet Revolver, the bizarro world incarnate of Guns N’ Roses. With plenty of names in the mix for the new frontman role, the rest of STP decided they really didn’t give two shits and hired this guy:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4qlCC1GOwFw

Chester Bennington of Linkin Park, the less terrible Limp Bizkit. Uh… sure I guess. Their first single as Stone Temple Pilots was this.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ogv_-D8cwAU

Connect-the-dots, paint-by-numbers, whatever you want to call it, this is the worst kind of derivative hard rock out there. Stone Temple should really have just called it a day and moved on. An EP that was received pretty ordinarily soon followed and they’re apparently still a band, despite all the evidence suggesting that they shouldn’t be.

4. Joy Division to New Order

Here’s an example of a switch in frontmen that worked amazingly well. After the devastating loss of original Joy Division frontman Ian Curtis in 1980, a history of depression and mental illness bringing his life to a tragic end shortly before the release of their second album and first ever American tour, the other members of the group decided to keep going.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zuuObGsB0No

Bernard Sumner, the guitarist for Joy Division, took over the vocal duties and the band changed their name to New Order. From there they became one of the forerunners at the head of the New Wave movement, creating synth-pop sounds that were miles ahead of the game and writing massive hits like Blue Monday and Bizarre Love Triangle.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7uEBuqkkQRk

It worked, in my opinion, because of the name change. The Joy Division name was rightfully associated with the haunting, gothic baritone of Ian Curtis and to have kept that name while now using the vocals of Brian Sumner simply for the sake of a credible and recognisable moniker would have been something that may have alienated fans of the original band. By changing the name and the sound, New Order were able to forge a brand new path to continue on, one that was so successful in its own right that they’re still around today.

3. Mötley Crüe – with John Corabi

Mötley Crüe are what would happen if four sexually transmittable diseases came to life and picked up guitars. They were hedonistic, lewd, crude and just the wildest band going for the majority of the 1980s. They played a brand of heavy metal that was dirty enough to distance itself from the saccharine pile of hair metal bands at the top of the charts at the time while still incorporating a lot of the style and the pop elements that made those bands so successful.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4WU6DpFFWTM

Then just about every rock and roll cliche imaginable happened to them. Most of them ended up in rehab, bassist Nikki Sixx even died for a couple of minutes. They cleaned up and released Dr. Feelgood in 1989 but then the 90s rolled around and grunge happened. All of a sudden nobody gave a shit about hair metal, the Crüe included.

Singer Vince Neil either was fired or just up and quit (they still all can’t agree on it) and the band decided to carry on with one John Corabi of little known LA hard rock group The Scream on the microphone. What followed was uh… awful. In an attempt to stay relevant, they went all over the shop. They tried to sound like Nine Inch Nails and adopt a more contemporary industrial sound. Crickets. They also tried to go grunge as well, see if you can listen to all six and a half minutes of this horror:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gASy4hRFJkA

None of the young crowd took their new sound seriously because they were fossils trying to make music well out of their depth, and they couldn’t sell tickets to the nostalgia crowd either because they all wanted the familiar voice of Vince Neil out front. The rest of the band also (according to Corabi himself in their amazing autobiography The Dirt) treated their new frontman with nothing short of contempt while he was part of the band. And so after just one album, the band fired Corabi (at his suggestion no less) and replaced him with old mate Vince, still releasing albums that were never anywhere near as good as their 80s work but at least able to sell out arena tour after arena tour flogging their old hits.

2. AC/DC – with Brian Johnson

Right before Joy Division made their change to New Order, Aussie hall of fame rockers AC/DC experienced a tragedy of their own, losing original frontman and all-around legend Bon Scott to acute alcohol poisoning. It was an absolute tragedy, the band having just broken into the lucrative American market and looking poised to be huge. Most predicted it would be the death blow for AC/DC, until they linked up with new frontman Brian Johnson and proceeded to blow up on a scale larger than anyone ever expected.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pAgnJDJN4VA

Unlike Joy Division, they continued using their original name. Back In Black, the first album the band put out with their new frontman, became their most successful to date. It sold over 50 million copies worldwide and is only behind Michael Jackson and Thriller for the highest selling album of all time.

That is absolutely huge, even more so when you consider how drastically the vocal sound of the band changed with its frontmen. Johnson’s vocals were raw power where Scott’s had been slithery sleaze, but fans accepted the change with open arms and proceeded to catapult AC/DC into the stratosphere as one of the biggest bands of all time.

Critically, Back In Black was their peak and they never released a better album, oftentimes devolving into the dumbest of generic arena rock, but their level of success after such a tragedy is yet to be ever repeated.

1. Black Sabbath – with Ronnie James Dio and Ian Gillan

The grandfathers of heavy metal music and so many of its subgenres. Black Sabbath were a revelatory experience when their self-titled debut album dropped in 1970. Doomy, dark and demonic, featuring guitars with the feedback cranked and the wailing, unforgettable lead vocals of showman-extraordinaire Ozzy Osbourne. 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TNKttMFgaf0

Sabbath, like Stone Temple Pilots many years later, went through plenty of ups and downs in terms of original frontmen, the Ozzman doing just about every drug known to mankind while almost swigging booze in his sleep. Whenever Ozzy departed, the band were quick to replace him and the results often varied enormously.

After the band got tired of Ozzy’s shit for the first time in 1979, they replaced him with then Rainbow lead singer, a singer who was diminutive in stature but possessed vocals that soared up in the heavens (rest his soul), Ronnie James Dio. Some of the band’s greatest work was done with Dio, who brought about a change in both sound and attitude. They recorded two albums together, Mob Rules and the utterly amazing Heaven And Hell.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=frtJQFe9apw

It seemed like the new Sabbath were going to be just fine without Ozzy, who was busy forging his own marketable solo career. Creative differences between Dio and the rest of the band began though, and when he left in late 1982, founding members Geezer Butler and Tony Iommi decided to replace him with the then vocalist of everyone’s dad’s favourite hard rock group: Deep Purple. It sounded approximately this terrible:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xFJkNk6z3OE

Born Again is frequently regarded as Sabbath’s critical and commercial nadir. It was reprehensible to say the least. Their tour in support of the album, replete with a stage set like Stonehenge, had the immortal piss taken out of it in the This Is Spinal Tap mockumentary.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Pyh1Va_mYWI

Gillan went one and done with the band and Black Sabbath ran through a whole mess of nobody vocalists for years after that, hooking up with Dio again for a brief period, before Ozzy rejoined them in 1997. They’ve been kicking around since then (with Dio once more touring Heaven And Hell again in 2007), the band currently comprised of Ozzy, Geezer and Iommi. They reportedly have one more album left in them, their twentieth, and a final tour in 2016 before retirement.

Their career remains an example of how new frontmen can work like magic and how they can fail in a disastrous explosion of awful. A rock and roll tale that is almost Shakespearean.

We wish Blink-182 all the best and look forward to seeing how their new frontman situation plays out.

Words by Alasdair Belling

With what is set to be the pub-rock stadium tour of the year drawing ever closer, the rumour mill for who would support AC/DC down under was wild enough to make even the most trained conspiracy theorist raise an eyebrow. Back in May, Triple M excitedly told the nation that Melbourne Rock revivalists Jet were the potential support act frontrunners, with home-grown heroes Powderfinger and Silverchair also reportedly offered a “mountain of cash” to reform for the tour.

Despite these sensational claims, it was announced today on the official tour Facebook page that Swedish punk rockers The Hives’ had received the “Ballbreaking, nutwrenching, fatwigglin news” that they will support the rock ‘n roll extravaganza around the country next month, with Kingswood joining in for the ride of a lifetime.

The Hives front man Pelle Almqvist stated on the band’s Facebook page that “When we were 6 years old in Fagersta, Sweden we were struck for the first time by the lightning that is Rock n Roll. That lightning was AC/DC. Now many years later we find ourselves in a successful rock n roll band and going on tour with them. It couldn’t be better if we made it up. Life rules.”

It will be The Hives’ first tour of Australia since Big Day Out in 2014.

As for Kingswood, the ‘Rock or Bust Tour’ will come right off the back of some select regional headline dates, kicking off at the end of October.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZDCs7ijNUVM

AC/DC ‘Rock or Bust’ Australian Tour Dates:

 

Wednesday 4th November: ANZ Stadium, Sydney
Saturday 7th November: ANZ Stadium, Sydney
Thursday 12th November: QSAC, Brisbane
Saturday 14th November: QSAC, Brisbane
Saturday 21st November: Adelaide Oval,Adelaide
Friday 27th November: Domain Stadium, Perth
Sunday 29th November: Domain Stadium, Perth
Sunday 6th December: Etihad Stadium, Melbourne
Tuesday 8th December: Etihad Stadium, Melbourne

 

 

 

Australian rock legends ACDC are set to release a new beer range, further embedding themselves in Australian culture. The band are teaming up with ALDI supermarkets for the beer range, in anticipation of their visit to Australia for their Rock Or Bust World Tour this coming November. This follows up from their successful wine range in 2011, and it’s Shiraz follow up in 2013.

It’s a unique type of merchandise, albeit one that a number of other musicians have branched out with in the past. Tool’s Maynard James Keenan has gone so far as to run his very own vineyard. This isn’t even the first time that ACDC have launched a drink brand – you can already purchase their own branded wine.

The beer will be available throughout New South Wales and Victorian stores, from the 30th of September. The beer is said to be a pale lager, available in a 568ml can, or a five litre keg with an integrated beer tap, brewed in Karlsberg, a German brewery.

An ALDI spokesperson said of the new range, “We’re very excited to celebrate AC/DC’s legendary rock status with the launch of AC/DC Beer in Australia.”

“The combination of great German Beer and Aussie Hard Rock just seems like a match made in heaven.”

Head to ALDI’s website if you’re keen, or Ticketek for tickets to their upcoming shows.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v2AC41dglnM&w=420&h=315]