Choose a format:
| 1 | Go Down | Scott/Young/Young | 5:31 |
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| 2 | Dog Eat Dog | Scott/Young/Young | 3:34 |
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| 3 | Let There Be Rock | Young/Scott/Young | 6:06 |
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| 4 | Bad Boy Boogie | Scott/Young/Young | 4:27 |
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| 5 | Problem Child | Young/Scott/Young | 5:24 |
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| 6 | Overdose | Scott/Young/Young | 6:09 |
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| 7 | Hell Ain't a Bad Place to Be | Young/Young/Scott | 4:14 |
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| 8 | Whole Lotta Rosie | Young/Scott/Young | 5:33 |
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Overview
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Production Details
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Editorial Reviews
Let There Be Rock
Audio Compact Disc
Style: Hard Rock
Let There Be Rock
UPC: 075679244529
Release Date: 09/20/1994
Original Release Date: 09/20/1994
- AC/DC
Main Performer
Stephen Thomas Erlewine
Let There Be Rock, the fourth AC/DC album -- and first to see simultaneous international release -- is as lean and mean as the original lineup ever got. Shaved down to the bone -- there are only eight tracks, giving this a lethal efficiency even with a couple of meandering jams -- this is a high-voltage, brutal record, filled with "Bad Boy Boogie." It has a bit of a bluesier edge than other AC/DC records, but this is truly the sound of the band reaching its peak. There's the near majesty of "Let There Be Rock," there's Bon Scott acknowledging with a wink that "Hell Ain't a Bad Place to Be," and then there's the monumental "Whole Lotta Rosie." Which gets down to a key thing about AC/DC. If Led Zeppelin were celebrating a "Whole Lotta Love," AC/DC got down to the grimy details in their leering tribute to the joys of sex with a plus-sized woman. And that's AC/DC's allure in a nutshell -- it's sweaty, dirty, nasty rock, music that is played to the last call and beyond, and they've rarely done that kind of rock better than they did here. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine, Rovi
