Let There Be Rock Explained

Let There Be Rock
Type:studio
Artist:AC/DC
Cover:ACDC-LetThereBeRock.jpg
Caption:International cover
Recorded:
  • January–March 1976
  • January–February 1977
Studio:Albert (Sydney)
Genre:
Length: (Australia)
(international)
Label:
Producer:
Prev Title:Dirty Deeds Done Dirt Cheap
Prev Year:1976
Next Title:Powerage
Next Year:1978

Let There Be Rock is the fourth studio album by Australian rock band AC/DC. It was originally released on 21 March 1977 in Australasia, through Albert Productions label. A modified international edition was released on 25 July 1977, through Atlantic Records. It was the last AC/DC album to feature Mark Evans on bass.

Background

In late 1976 AC/DC were in a slump. "It was very close to being all over", manager Michael Browning said. "Things were progressing very well in London and Europe. We'd been through a whole thing with the Marquee where they broke all the house records. We'd done the "Lock Up Your Daughters" UK tour and the Reading Festival. It was all shaping up really well."[1] "In the middle of the tour, I get a phone call saying Atlantic Records in America didn't like the Dirty Deeds album", said Browning. "That, in fact, they were going to drop the group from the label. And that's when things got really bad."

Angus Young said, "Our brother George asked us what kind of album we wanted to make and we said it would be great if we could just make a lot of guitar riffs, because we were all fired up after doing all this touring."[2]

Artwork

The Australian cover features the fingers of guitarist Chris Turner, from Australian band Buffalo. "There was a bloke called Colin Stead, who was in Buffalo for about ten minutes," Turner recalled. "He was also the centrefold photographer for Playboy. He phoned me up and said he was doing the album cover for Let There Be Rock, but AC/DC were out of town, so could I help out? He wanted a flash guitar run up and down the neck. Apparently, when he saw it, Angus said, 'He's got fat fingers, hasn't he?'"[3]

The cover of the international version, released in July 1977, marked the first appearance of the band's now iconic logo, designed by Gerard Huerta. The photograph used for the international cover was taken at a concert on 19 March 1977 at the Kursaal Ballroom, Southend, Essex, UK, by rock photographer Keith Morris.[4]

Reception

Reception to Let There Be Rock was extremely positive; according to AllMusic, which gave the album a rating of four and a half out of five stars in a retrospective review, AC/DC played "sweaty, dirty, nasty rock" and the band had "rarely done that kind of rock better than they did" on Let There Be Rock.In 2001, Q magazine named Let There Be Rock as one of the 50 Heaviest Albums of All Time.[5]

Cashbox said "Heavy metal is their special forte and there is plenty of voltage displayed on this electrified disc."[6]

Eduardo Rivadavia of AllMusic enthuses, "Let There Be Rock sees AC/DC's religious-like respect for the simple art of making rock & roll brought to its logical conclusion: a veritable gospel to the glory of rock, canonized here in hymn-like worship. The near-epic title track to what is widely regarded as the best Bon Scott-era album, the song is a holy testimony, bringing good news to all those who believe in the healing power of rock & roll -- amen! Oh yeah, it also kicks unholy ass!"[7]

David Fricke of Rolling Stone wrote of the album in a 2008 cover story, "AC/DC's early albums were perfectly frenetic, but inconsistent. Their second U.S. LP was almost all killer. Scott sings 'Bad Boy Boogie' and 'Problem Child' like he's the enfant terrible...Angus' solos are true white heat." In 2006, AC/DC biographer Murray Engleheart wrote that Let There Be Rock "elevated AC/DC to the status of an album band, something that had previously been the exclusive domain of the likes of The Rolling Stones, The Who and Led Zeppelin." In 2000, Angus Young recalled to Guitar World that producer Mutt Lange once told him "of all the many albums we'd done with my brother George and his partner, Harry Vanda, the one Mutt wished he would have done, where he was envious of George, was Let There Be Rock." Band biographer Jesse Fink writes, "Wherever AC/DC ended up in the annals of rock history, this album would stand for all time as an expression of their unrivaled might as a guitar band."[8]

Track listing

International version

Notes

Personnel

AC/DC

Production

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Wall . Mick . Let There Be Rock: The album that saved AC/DC's career . Loudersound . 7 May 2016 . 19 March 2019 . 24 October 2018 . https://web.archive.org/web/20181024073817/https://www.loudersound.com/features/let-there-be-rock-the-album-that-nearly-killed-ac-dc . live .
  2. Web site: Rock's Backpages. AC/DC Celebrate Their Quarter Century. Sylvie Simmons. 11 June 2022. 19 October 2021. https://web.archive.org/web/20211019211227/https://rocksbackpages.com/Library/Article/acdc-celebrate-their-quarter-century. live.
  3. Mick. Wall. Mick Wall. Let there be light! Let there be sound! Let there be rock!. Classic Rock #170. May 2012. 42.
  4. Web site: AC/DC Tour History - 19 Mar. 1977 Southend (Kursaal Ballroom). www.ac-dc.net. 11 April 2018. 12 April 2018. https://web.archive.org/web/20180412082219/http://www.ac-dc.net/archive/acdc_tour_history.php?date_id=776. live.
  5. Web site: In our Lifetime #2. Rocklist.co.uk. 7 July 2011. 19 October 2018. https://web.archive.org/web/20181019101341/http://www.rocklistmusic.co.uk/qlistspage2.html. live.
  6. Album Reviews. Cash Box. World Radio History. 18. 16 July 1977. 25 November 2021. 25 November 2021. https://web.archive.org/web/20211125071703/https://worldradiohistory.com/Archive-All-Music/Cash-Box/70s/1977/CB-1977-07-16.pdf. live.
  7. Web site: Rivadavia . Eduardo . Let There Be Rock - AC/DC . AllMusic . 11 June 2024 . en.
  8. Book: Fink. Jesse. The Youngs: The Brothers Who Built AC/DC . Ebury . Australia. 2013. 9781742759791 . 148.
  9. Book: Kent, David . David Kent (historian) . 1993 . . illustrated . Australian Chart Book . . 0-646-11917-6.