AC/DC threw Taylor Momsen a bat-themed birthday party, after the Pretty Reckless singer was bitten at a show where she was supporting the rock’n’roll icons. Talking in the new issue of Metal Hammer, ...
Long before Donald Trump ever had political aspirations, he was grabbing headlines as one of New York’s most talked-about real estate moguls. Trump’s penchant for partying -- and his numerous affairs ...
A decade after they last performed in Australia, AC/DC delivered a rock’n’roll masterclass spearheaded by Angus Young’s virtuosic, non-stop, age-defying guitar work. It was quite simply breathtaking.
Jo Coghlan does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organization that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their ...
AC/DC have announced dates for the 2026 leg of its ongoing “Power Up” tour, technically in support of their five-year-old latest studio album but of course actually a showcase for their incredible ...
Tehuan Harris is a news and features journalist at Collider, reporting and writing about all things music and reality TV (sometimes). She is a talented journalist and a natural storyteller who writes ...
As the story goes, the rock band AC/DC took its name from a label on an old sewing machine in the Young brothers’ home. It must have meant that the machine could run on either alternating-current or ...
AC/DC returns to several Billboard charts as "Thunderstruck" and "You Shook Me All Night Long" reappears on different rock rankings. Brian Johnson and Angus Young, both of the group AC/DC, film the ...
“Bedlam In Belgium” comes from AC/DC’s 1983 album Flick Of The Switch. Oddly enough, critics hated that album when it was first released. All the band really did was take their production efforts back ...
Precious few bands can fill a stadium 52 years into their career — let alone play to an audience heavily populated by parents and their children, both generations sporting red devil horn headbands and ...
MINNEAPOLIS – The sight of Marshall amps stacked three high and more than a dozen across the back of a stadium stage can mean only one thing: AC/DC is back. Taking the stage for their first U.S.