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T.N.T. (album)

T.N.T. is the second studio album by Australian hard rock band AC/DC, released only in Australia on 1 December 1975. This was the band's first release with bassist Mark Evans and drummer Phil Rudd, although the last two tracks feature George Young and Tony Currenti, both of whom previously appeared on High Voltage.

T.N.T.
Studio album by
Released1 December 1975 (1975-12-01)
RecordedMarch 1975[a]
StudioAlbert (Sydney)
Genre
Length41:55
LabelAlbert
Producer
AC/DC chronology
Singles from T.N.T.
  1. "High Voltage"
    Released: 23 June 1975
  2. "It's a Long Way to the Top (If You Wanna Rock 'n' Roll)"
    Released: 8 December 1975
  3. "T.N.T."
    Released: 1 March 1976

Recording edit

After the success of the single "Baby, Please Don't Go" and the album High Voltage, AC/DC returned to Albert Studios in Sydney to record their second LP with producers George Young and Harry Vanda. George was the older brother of guitarists Malcolm Young and Angus Young and had enjoyed his own success in the group the Easybeats. T.N.T. marked a change in direction from AC/DC's debut album, High Voltage, which was released on 17 February 1975; whereas High Voltage featured some experimentation with the styles of its songs and had a variety of personnel filling multiple roles, T.N.T. saw the band fully embrace the formula for which they would become famous: hard-edged, rhythm and blues-based rock and roll. They also simplified their personnel system and would use it from then on out, which was Angus strictly playing lead guitar, Malcolm Young playing rhythm guitar, and the drummer and bassist being the only ones to play drums and bass guitar respectively on the albums. In Murray Engleheart's book AC/DC: Maximum Rock & Roll, producer Harry Vanda states, "I suppose there might have been one or two tracks on the first album, a few things that they were experimenting with, which probably later on they wouldn't have done anymore. So I suppose you could say that T.N.T was the one that really pulled the identity; like, this is AC/DC, there's no doubt about it, that's who it's going to be and that's how it's going to stay."

In Clifton Walker's 1994 book Highway to Hell: The Life and Times of AC/DC Legend Bon Scott, bassist Mark Evans speaks about the band's creative process during this period:

Malcolm and Angus would come up with riffs and all that, and then we'd go into the studio. Malcolm and George would sit down at the piano and work it out. Malcolm and Angus would have the barest bones of a song, the riff and different bits, and George would hammer it into a tune. Bon would be in and out when the band was recording backing tracks. Once the backing track was done, he would literally be locked in the kitchen there at Alberts, and come out with a finished song.

"It's a Long Way to the Top (If You Wanna Rock 'n' Roll)" was edited down from an extended jam by producer George Young and the inclusion of the bagpipes was his idea to add an extra dynamic to the track. Singer Bon Scott had played in a pipe band in his teens, so George suggested he play bagpipes on the song, not realizing that Scott had been a drummer, not a piper. Regardless, Scott – who knew how to play the recorder – learned the instrument and went on to play them on stage with the band up until 1976, when he set the bagpipes down on the corner of the stage and they were destroyed by fans. For the next three years, whenever they played the song live, Angus would play an extended guitar solo. Chanting in "T.N.T." was also George Young's idea, added after he heard Angus ad-libbing the "oi" chant to himself, and suggested he record it.[1]

Composition edit

T.N.T. contains some of the band's best-known songs, including the title track, "It's a Long Way to the Top", "The Jack", and "Rocker." Seven of the album's nine songs were written by the Young brothers and Scott, while "Can I Sit Next to You Girl" predated Scott's involvement in the band, having been recorded as a single with former vocalist Dave Evans. It features a different arrangement and slightly different lyrics from the original version. It also runs almost a minute longer. "School Days" is a cover version of a Chuck Berry song,[2] a major influence on both Young brothers. "High Voltage" was the first song written and recorded for the album, the title inspired by that of the previous album. In 1993, Angus Young shared the origins of the title track with Vic Garbarini of Guitar For the Practicing Musician: "I remember sitting home one night before going into the studio and playing around with some chords, and I suddenly thought, let's try playing...A...C...D...C. Sounded good. And then I thought AC/DC...power..."High Voltage"! I sang the chorus part to my brother in the studio and he thought it sounded great." Issued as the first single before the T.N.T. sessions began, many fans thought it was from High Voltage. Chris Gilbey of Albert Productions later claimed this caused a late surge in that album's sales.[1] Lyrically, the LP features Bon Scott chronicling both the good and the bad about the rock and roll lifestyle, warning aspiring musicians that "it's harder than it looks" ("It's a Long Way to the Top") but also defiantly telling the moral majority to "stick your moral standards 'cause it's all a dirty lie" ("Rock 'n' Roll Singer"). In 1994, biographer Clifton Walker observed that Bon was "virtually encapsulating his entire life" in both songs. The lyrics of "The Jack," sometimes titled "(She's Got) The Jack," were developed by Scott, who was inspired by a letter Malcolm Young received during a tour of Adelaide. The letter, from a woman in Melbourne, implied that Malcolm had given her a venereal disease, although he claims that when he got tested, he was clean.[1] Scott's original lyrics were far more explicit than those heard on the album, which he deliberately toned down in case the song got played on radio. The bravado-driven "Live Wire," which was also sexually suggestive, would be the band's show-opener for several years. Almost right from the beginning, the band was taken to task in some quarters for their "smutty" lyrics, as Angus acknowledged to Guitar World's Tom Beaujour in 1998:

I believe that the politically correct term is "sexist." Intellectuals like to put a tag on it and say, "these guys are out-and-out sexist." I've always found there's a two-sided thing when it comes to lyrics: someone can call a song "Sexy Motherfucker," and be accepted, and yet we've been writing all songs all these years, and while there may be the rare "fuck" in the lyrics there somewhere, it's all been quite clean cut. Still, people just make the assumption that we're five guys who've just got our dicks in mind. People have frequently commented that for all the notoriety and things we got involved in, we could have capitalized on our reputation and said, "Oh yeah, we're a piece of nasty work." But why bother?

T.N.T. also led to more AC/DC appearances on Australia's Countdown music programme, following those in support of the Australian High Voltage album. These appearances included a live performance of the song "T.N.T.", as well as a music video for "It's a Long Way to the Top (If You Wanna Rock 'n' Roll)". Filmed on 23 February 1976, the video featured the band's then-current lineup, along with members of the Rats of Tobruk Pipe Band, on the back of a flat-bed truck travelling on Swanston Street in Melbourne.[3] On 1 October 2004, Melbourne's Corporation Lane was renamed AC/DC Lane as a tribute to AC/DC, with the decision being based in part on this video.[4]

Releases edit

T.N.T. was originally released by Albert Productions, and has never been reissued by another label. Furthermore, it is the only Australian AC/DC studio album for which there is no international counterpart. However, seven of its nine songs comprise the international version of High Voltage, released in May 1976. The other two, "Rocker" and "School Days", saw worldwide release as part of Dirty Deeds Done Dirt Cheap's international version (1976/1981) and the Bonfire box set (1997) respectively.

Two singles were released from the album – "It's a Long Way to the Top (If You Wanna Rock 'n' Roll)" (December 1975) and "T.N.T." (March 1976). T.N.T. was released in a gatefold sleeve, with the inside depicting the various members on mock-ups of police identification cards, listing apparent aliases and partially obscured personal details including birthdates (only Bon Scott's is readily visible and Angus Young's birth year is incorrectly shown as 1959, not 1955, in keeping with his schoolboy persona as this made him appear 16 instead of his real age of 20).

The original 1975 LP release featured longer versions of "Can I Sit Next to You Girl", "High Voltage" and "Rocker" compared to the versions heard on later CD releases:

  • "Rocker" originally cut out abruptly at 2:55 as the riff hits its peak (possibly due to the recording tape running out before the song was originally supposed to end), but on the 1986 CD release and the 1995 remastered CD release the song fades out at 2:52 before the cut.
  • "High Voltage" originally finished with a sustained guitar note followed by a single hit of the snare drum which also serves as a segue that leads directly into "School Days". This version was retained for the 1986 CD release, however the 1995 remastered CD release contains the version heard on the international High Voltage album release, which has the song fade out before hitting the sustained note. This was how the original single release ended.
  • The versions of these songs included on the Deluxe Edition of the 2009 box set Backtracks are credited as being the original Australian versions. However, the songs still fade out albeit later than their international counterparts instead of keeping the original edits. When AC/DC's catalog (except the Australian releases) became available on iTunes in November 2012, the original uncut versions of "Rocker" and "High Voltage" finally saw worldwide release on the digital version of Backtracks.

Critical reception edit

Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic     [5]
The Encyclopedia of Popular Music     [6]

Eduardo Rivadavia of AllMusic calls T.N.T. "a stellar album in its own right, and especially crucial in that it marked AC/DC's definitive break with their now seemingly heretical glam rock inclinations, in order to embrace the blue collar hard rock that would forever after be their trademark."

Track listing edit

All tracks are written by Angus Young, Malcolm Young and Bon Scott except where noted.

Side one
No.TitleLength
1."It's a Long Way to the Top (If You Wanna Rock 'n' Roll)"5:14
2."Rock 'n' Roll Singer"5:04
3."The Jack"5:53
4."Live Wire"5:49
Side two
No.TitleLength
5."T.N.T."3:35
6."Rocker"2:55
7."Can I Sit Next to You, Girl" (Angus Young, Malcolm Young)4:12
8."High Voltage"4:20
9."School Days" (Chuck Berry cover)5:22
Total length:41:55

Personnel edit

AC/DC

Session musicians

Production

Charts edit

Weekly charts edit

Chart (1975–1981) Peak
position
Australian Albums (Kent Music Report)[8] 2
New Zealand Albums (RMNZ)[9] 35

Year-end charts edit

Chart (1976) Position
Australia (Kent Music Report)[8]: 428  15

Certifications edit

Region Certification Certified units/sales
Australia (ARIA)[10] 9× Platinum 630,000^
Mexico (AMPROFON)[11] Platinum+Gold 90,000

^ Shipments figures based on certification alone.
Sales+streaming figures based on certification alone.

Notes edit

  1. ^ Tracks 8 and 9
  2. ^ Tracks 1–7

References edit

  1. ^ a b c Engleheart, Murray and Arnaud Durieux (2006). AC/DC: Maximum Rock N Roll. ISBN 0-7322-8383-3.
  2. ^ Saulnier, Jason (30 September 2011). . Music Legends. Archived from the original on 7 November 2012. Retrieved 6 May 2013.
  3. ^ Video Footage and Liner Notes, Family Jewels 2-Disc DVD Set 2005
  4. ^ Boulton, Martin, "Lane way to the top for AC/DC", The Age, 10 September 2004. Retrieved on 2007-02-15.
  5. ^ Rivadavia, Eduardo. "T.N.T. – AC/DC". AllMusic. Retrieved 20 June 2012.
  6. ^ Larkin, Colin (2007). The Encyclopedia of Popular Music (5th Concise ed.). United Kingdom: Omnibus Press. p. 34. ISBN 978-1-84609-856-7.
  7. ^ Fink, Jesse (1 November 2013). The Youngs: The Brothers Who Built AC/DC. Ebury Australia. ISBN 9781742759791.
  8. ^ a b Kent, David (1993). Australian Chart Book 1970–1992 (illustrated ed.). St Ives, N.S.W.: Australian Chart Book. ISBN 0-646-11917-6.
  9. ^ "Charts.nz – AC/DC – T.N.T.". Hung Medien. Retrieved 23 February 2022.
  10. ^ "ARIA Charts – Accreditations – 2013 Albums" (PDF). Australian Recording Industry Association.
  11. ^ "Certificaciones" (in Spanish). Asociación Mexicana de Productores de Fonogramas y Videogramas. Retrieved 10 October 2020. Type AC/DC in the box under the ARTISTA column heading and T.N.T. in the box under the TÍTULO column heading.

External links edit

  • AC/DC's official website

album, other, albums, with, same, name, disambiguation, jack, redirects, here, other, uses, jack, disambiguation, second, studio, album, australian, hard, rock, band, released, only, australia, december, 1975, this, band, first, release, with, bassist, mark, e. For other albums with the same name see TNT disambiguation The Jack redirects here For other uses see Jack disambiguation T N T is the second studio album by Australian hard rock band AC DC released only in Australia on 1 December 1975 This was the band s first release with bassist Mark Evans and drummer Phil Rudd although the last two tracks feature George Young and Tony Currenti both of whom previously appeared on High Voltage T N T Studio album by AC DCReleased1 December 1975 1975 12 01 RecordedMarch 1975 a July 1975 b StudioAlbert Sydney GenreHard rock blues rock rock and rollLength41 55LabelAlbertProducerHarry Vanda George YoungAC DC chronologyHigh Voltage Australia Only 1975 T N T 1975 High Voltage International 1976 Singles from T N T High Voltage Released 23 June 1975 It s a Long Way to the Top If You Wanna Rock n Roll Released 8 December 1975 T N T Released 1 March 1976Contents 1 Recording 2 Composition 3 Releases 4 Critical reception 5 Track listing 6 Personnel 7 Charts 7 1 Weekly charts 7 2 Year end charts 8 Certifications 9 Notes 10 References 11 External linksRecording editAfter the success of the single Baby Please Don t Go and the album High Voltage AC DC returned to Albert Studios in Sydney to record their second LP with producers George Young and Harry Vanda George was the older brother of guitarists Malcolm Young and Angus Young and had enjoyed his own success in the group the Easybeats T N T marked a change in direction from AC DC s debut album High Voltage which was released on 17 February 1975 whereas High Voltage featured some experimentation with the styles of its songs and had a variety of personnel filling multiple roles T N T saw the band fully embrace the formula for which they would become famous hard edged rhythm and blues based rock and roll They also simplified their personnel system and would use it from then on out which was Angus strictly playing lead guitar Malcolm Young playing rhythm guitar and the drummer and bassist being the only ones to play drums and bass guitar respectively on the albums In Murray Engleheart s book AC DC Maximum Rock amp Roll producer Harry Vanda states I suppose there might have been one or two tracks on the first album a few things that they were experimenting with which probably later on they wouldn t have done anymore So I suppose you could say that T N T was the one that really pulled the identity like this is AC DC there s no doubt about it that s who it s going to be and that s how it s going to stay In Clifton Walker s 1994 book Highway to Hell The Life and Times of AC DC Legend Bon Scott bassist Mark Evans speaks about the band s creative process during this period Malcolm and Angus would come up with riffs and all that and then we d go into the studio Malcolm and George would sit down at the piano and work it out Malcolm and Angus would have the barest bones of a song the riff and different bits and George would hammer it into a tune Bon would be in and out when the band was recording backing tracks Once the backing track was done he would literally be locked in the kitchen there at Alberts and come out with a finished song It s a Long Way to the Top If You Wanna Rock n Roll was edited down from an extended jam by producer George Young and the inclusion of the bagpipes was his idea to add an extra dynamic to the track Singer Bon Scott had played in a pipe band in his teens so George suggested he play bagpipes on the song not realizing that Scott had been a drummer not a piper Regardless Scott who knew how to play the recorder learned the instrument and went on to play them on stage with the band up until 1976 when he set the bagpipes down on the corner of the stage and they were destroyed by fans For the next three years whenever they played the song live Angus would play an extended guitar solo Chanting in T N T was also George Young s idea added after he heard Angus ad libbing the oi chant to himself and suggested he record it 1 Composition editT N T contains some of the band s best known songs including the title track It s a Long Way to the Top The Jack and Rocker Seven of the album s nine songs were written by the Young brothers and Scott while Can I Sit Next to You Girl predated Scott s involvement in the band having been recorded as a single with former vocalist Dave Evans It features a different arrangement and slightly different lyrics from the original version It also runs almost a minute longer School Days is a cover version of a Chuck Berry song 2 a major influence on both Young brothers High Voltage was the first song written and recorded for the album the title inspired by that of the previous album In 1993 Angus Young shared the origins of the title track with Vic Garbarini of Guitar For the Practicing Musician I remember sitting home one night before going into the studio and playing around with some chords and I suddenly thought let s try playing A C D C Sounded good And then I thought AC DC power High Voltage I sang the chorus part to my brother in the studio and he thought it sounded great Issued as the first single before the T N T sessions began many fans thought it was from High Voltage Chris Gilbey of Albert Productions later claimed this caused a late surge in that album s sales 1 Lyrically the LP features Bon Scott chronicling both the good and the bad about the rock and roll lifestyle warning aspiring musicians that it s harder than it looks It s a Long Way to the Top but also defiantly telling the moral majority to stick your moral standards cause it s all a dirty lie Rock n Roll Singer In 1994 biographer Clifton Walker observed that Bon was virtually encapsulating his entire life in both songs The lyrics of The Jack sometimes titled She s Got The Jack were developed by Scott who was inspired by a letter Malcolm Young received during a tour of Adelaide The letter from a woman in Melbourne implied that Malcolm had given her a venereal disease although he claims that when he got tested he was clean 1 Scott s original lyrics were far more explicit than those heard on the album which he deliberately toned down in case the song got played on radio The bravado driven Live Wire which was also sexually suggestive would be the band s show opener for several years Almost right from the beginning the band was taken to task in some quarters for their smutty lyrics as Angus acknowledged to Guitar World s Tom Beaujour in 1998 I believe that the politically correct term is sexist Intellectuals like to put a tag on it and say these guys are out and out sexist I ve always found there s a two sided thing when it comes to lyrics someone can call a song Sexy Motherfucker and be accepted and yet we ve been writing all songs all these years and while there may be the rare fuck in the lyrics there somewhere it s all been quite clean cut Still people just make the assumption that we re five guys who ve just got our dicks in mind People have frequently commented that for all the notoriety and things we got involved in we could have capitalized on our reputation and said Oh yeah we re a piece of nasty work But why bother T N T also led to more AC DC appearances on Australia s Countdown music programme following those in support of the Australian High Voltage album These appearances included a live performance of the song T N T as well as a music video for It s a Long Way to the Top If You Wanna Rock n Roll Filmed on 23 February 1976 the video featured the band s then current lineup along with members of the Rats of Tobruk Pipe Band on the back of a flat bed truck travelling on Swanston Street in Melbourne 3 On 1 October 2004 Melbourne s Corporation Lane was renamed AC DC Lane as a tribute to AC DC with the decision being based in part on this video 4 Releases editT N T was originally released by Albert Productions and has never been reissued by another label Furthermore it is the only Australian AC DC studio album for which there is no international counterpart However seven of its nine songs comprise the international version of High Voltage released in May 1976 The other two Rocker and School Days saw worldwide release as part of Dirty Deeds Done Dirt Cheap s international version 1976 1981 and the Bonfire box set 1997 respectively Two singles were released from the album It s a Long Way to the Top If You Wanna Rock n Roll December 1975 and T N T March 1976 T N T was released in a gatefold sleeve with the inside depicting the various members on mock ups of police identification cards listing apparent aliases and partially obscured personal details including birthdates only Bon Scott s is readily visible and Angus Young s birth year is incorrectly shown as 1959 not 1955 in keeping with his schoolboy persona as this made him appear 16 instead of his real age of 20 The original 1975 LP release featured longer versions of Can I Sit Next to You Girl High Voltage and Rocker compared to the versions heard on later CD releases Rocker originally cut out abruptly at 2 55 as the riff hits its peak possibly due to the recording tape running out before the song was originally supposed to end but on the 1986 CD release and the 1995 remastered CD release the song fades out at 2 52 before the cut High Voltage originally finished with a sustained guitar note followed by a single hit of the snare drum which also serves as a segue that leads directly into School Days This version was retained for the 1986 CD release however the 1995 remastered CD release contains the version heard on the international High Voltage album release which has the song fade out before hitting the sustained note This was how the original single release ended The versions of these songs included on the Deluxe Edition of the 2009 box set Backtracks are credited as being the original Australian versions However the songs still fade out albeit later than their international counterparts instead of keeping the original edits When AC DC s catalog except the Australian releases became available on iTunes in November 2012 the original uncut versions of Rocker and High Voltage finally saw worldwide release on the digital version of Backtracks Critical reception editProfessional ratingsReview scoresSourceRatingAllMusic nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 5 The Encyclopedia of Popular Music nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 6 Eduardo Rivadavia of AllMusic calls T N T a stellar album in its own right and especially crucial in that it marked AC DC s definitive break with their now seemingly heretical glam rock inclinations in order to embrace the blue collar hard rock that would forever after be their trademark Track listing editAll tracks are written by Angus Young Malcolm Young and Bon Scott except where noted Side oneNo TitleLength1 It s a Long Way to the Top If You Wanna Rock n Roll 5 142 Rock n Roll Singer 5 043 The Jack 5 534 Live Wire 5 49 Side twoNo TitleLength5 T N T 3 356 Rocker 2 557 Can I Sit Next to You Girl Angus Young Malcolm Young 4 128 High Voltage 4 209 School Days Chuck Berry cover 5 22Total length 41 55Personnel editAC DC Bon Scott lead vocals bagpipes on It s a Long Way to the Top Angus Young lead guitar Malcolm Young rhythm guitar backing vocals Mark Evans bass guitar 1 7 Phil Rudd drums percussion 1 7 Session musicians George Young bass guitar 8 9 production Tony Currenti drums 8 9 7 Production Harry Vanda production Richard Ford artworkCharts editWeekly charts edit Chart 1975 1981 PeakpositionAustralian Albums Kent Music Report 8 2New Zealand Albums RMNZ 9 35Year end charts edit Chart 1976 PositionAustralia Kent Music Report 8 428 15Certifications editRegion Certification Certified units salesAustralia ARIA 10 9 Platinum 630 000 Mexico AMPROFON 11 Platinum Gold 90 000 Shipments figures based on certification alone Sales streaming figures based on certification alone Notes edit Tracks 8 and 9 Tracks 1 7References edit a b c Engleheart Murray and Arnaud Durieux 2006 AC DC Maximum Rock N Roll ISBN 0 7322 8383 3 Saulnier Jason 30 September 2011 Mark Evans Interview Music Legends Archived from the original on 7 November 2012 Retrieved 6 May 2013 Video Footage and Liner Notes Family Jewels 2 Disc DVD Set 2005 Boulton Martin Lane way to the top for AC DC The Age 10 September 2004 Retrieved on 2007 02 15 Rivadavia Eduardo T N T AC DC AllMusic Retrieved 20 June 2012 Larkin Colin 2007 The Encyclopedia of Popular Music 5th Concise ed United Kingdom Omnibus Press p 34 ISBN 978 1 84609 856 7 Fink Jesse 1 November 2013 The Youngs The Brothers Who Built AC DC Ebury Australia ISBN 9781742759791 a b Kent David 1993 Australian Chart Book 1970 1992 illustrated ed St Ives N S W Australian Chart Book ISBN 0 646 11917 6 Charts nz AC DC T N T Hung Medien Retrieved 23 February 2022 ARIA Charts Accreditations 2013 Albums PDF Australian Recording Industry Association Certificaciones in Spanish Asociacion Mexicana de Productores de Fonogramas y Videogramas Retrieved 10 October 2020 TypeAC DCin the box under theARTISTAcolumn heading andT N T in the box under theTITULOcolumn heading External links editAC DC s official website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title T N T album amp oldid 1187972711, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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