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A Deep Dive Into AC/DC’s ‘Hells Bells’

In this series, we take a deep dive into a significant song from the past and get to the heart of what makes it so great. Today, we revisit AC/DC’s ‘Hells Bells’, a tribute to the late Bon Scott that’s also one of the most ambitious songs the band have ever penned. 

Picture this: the year is 1980, one of the biggest rock n’ roll bands in the world have tragically lost their lead singer, and just a few months later, you’re holding their new record, boldly titled Back in Black. Instead of the straightforward, no-frills riff you might have expected the record to open with, you’re treated with the slow, funereal sound of a church bell. It doesn’t take long to realize exactly where you are. It was only a year ago that the Australian rockers had released their commercial breakthrough, Highway to Hell, so it makes sense that their newest one would transport you right into the fiery pits of hell. But where ‘Highway to Hell’ immediately comes off like it’s all just in devilishly good fun, ‘Hells Bells’ sounds ominous and foreboding. Add to that the fact that the guy AC/DC have decided to replace Bon Scott with, Brian Johnson of the British glam band Geordie, was spitting out lines like “You’re only young, but you’re gonna die”, and you might feel a bit alarmed.

Except, not really. Sure, it takes a full one-and-a-half minute for guitarist Angus Young and company to break into their familiar, mid-tempo guitar rock schtick. And yes, there’s something grim and perhaps even menacing about opening your new record with a song sung from the perspective of Satan ready to take you to hell right after the beloved singer of your band has died. (Later on the record comes a song called ‘Have a Drink on Me’ that’s about exactly what the title implies, which seems harmless until you remember that Bon Scott died after a night of heavy drinking – the police ruled it “death by misadventure.”) But it’s also oddly fitting, a band making a statement simply by continuing to do what they do best: kicking ass. And whatever subtext you might want to attach to it, it becomes no less true that the band have once again managed to make eternal damnation sound like a hell lot of fun.

Still, it’d be unfair to dismiss just how ingenious of a move it was to include that church bell. For one thing, it was not an easy sound to reproduce: engineer Tony Platt was tasked with recording the 2000–pound bronze bell, manufactured by John Taylor Bellfounders in the Leicestershire town of Loughborough and ordered by AC/DC for their next tour; but when he arrived in the town, the bell hadn’t come out of the mould yet. Attempts at recording another bell from a nearby church were unsuccessful; in Platt’s own words, “the first thing we’d hear was this mad fluttering of wings as pigeons flew away” (I, for one, would love to hear that version of the recording.) So that idea was thrown at the window, and Platt had no choice but to go back to the studio and record the custom-made bell as soon as it was ready. As Platt recalls: “The bell itself weighed one ton because that was the largest feasible size to take on tour, but the pitch of the bell as you hear it on the record is an octave lower than the actual bell; it was slowed down to half–speed to replicate the sound of a two–ton bell that would have been impossible for the band to take on the road with them or to hang in the venues.”

Platt talks more about the technical details of capturing that sound here, but in short, it was an arduous process, though one that definitely paid off. Not only was it mournful enough to honour Bon Scott’s memory, but it also introduced an element of theatricality to the band’s subsequent live shows and became an essential part of their iconography – one that was replaced only a year later by the iconic cannon that came with ‘For Those About to Rock (We Salute You)’. But where the use of the cannon was more or less the product of coincidence, the church bell was imbued with at least some symbolic significance. Not only did act as a necessary sonic transition from Highway to Hell to Back in Black, but it also added a kind of dramatic weight to the track, especially coming from a band mindlessly devoted to the classic rock n’ roll formula. Sure, AC/DC were no strangers to an epic build-up; they would go on to master the technique with ‘For Those About the Rock’, and a decade later, ‘Thunderstruck’. But there’s something elegiac and perhaps even subtle about the way Angus’ guitar melody creeps into the mix, a quality that’s somewhat lost in the group’s sped-up live performances of the track (though the massive crowd’s phantom-like singalong normally makes up for it, especially during this 2009 show).

The dramatic shift indicated by the song’s intro is accompanied by a narrative one in the form of Brian Johnson’s lyrics, which seem to be in direct conversation with Bon Scott in ‘Highway to Hell’. “Hey, Satan, paid my dues/ Playing in a rocking band,” Scott sang on that track, and now Brian Johnson answers back: “I got my bell, I’m gonna take you to hell/ I’m gonna get you, Satan get you!” he howls, reaching into a register high enough to satisfy the demands of any AC/DC fan. But Johnson delivers his lines with a sort of wink, proving that the band still have a good amount of humour in them: “If you’re into evil, you’re a friend of mine,” he sneers, displaying a kind of playfulness that’s amplified in his later live performances (he stopped touring with the band in 2016 due to ongoing hearing difficulties.)

Adding even more heft to the track’s somber atmosphere are the multiple allusions to catastrophic weather phenomena of all kinds. As Johnson tells it, he was having difficulty writing the lyrics for the song until a tropical storm began – which he of course interpreted as a sign from Scott. As he recalled in an interview with Classic Rock: “Mutt said, ‘Listen, thunder!’ And I said, ‘That’s rolling thunder, that’s what they call it in England.’ He says, ‘Rolling thunder, write that down.’ And this is true, it went ‘Boom!’ The fucking rain came down in torrents, you couldn’t hear yourself … I was gone. The song was ready that night. I hadn’t even heard the track ‘cause they were busy doing it. It was whacked down in the greatest haste.” Johnson might humorously insist that he was just “literally giving a weather report!”, but he was also introducing himself as a force of nature to be reckoned with, and thus, worthy of his new gig as the singer of a band who literally used a high voltage symbol in their logo.

Needless to say, it worked: not only was Johnson immediately accepted by the band’s legions of fans, but he – along with his oversized flat cap – is also considered to be an integral part of the band’s legacy. But with a lot of rock n’ roll classics seemingly losing their relevance in a contemporary context, perhaps the real question isn’t so much whether it worked at the time, but whether ‘Hells Bells’ and the album as a whole still hold up after all these years.

I’ll admit that were it not for the 40th anniversary of Black in Black, I would have practically no reason to revisit the album or its opening track. It’s not so much because of the general lack of substance or repetitiveness that’s often associated with the band’s songwriting, but more so the fact that the music just doesn’t resonate with me in the same way. It also reminds of a time in my life when music was little more than a marker of ‘cool’: when I was as young as 10 or 12, I distinctly remember our music teacher asking us to bring a song to play at the end of class, and practically every boy chose a song by AC/DC (I was a fan, too, but thought I was edgier for having picked Three Days Grace, so joke’s on me). Whatever you think of the band’s music, there’s something unique about the way it’s managed to stand the test of time, even if it’s precisely because of how rudimentary and uncomplicated it can be. Just like Angus Young can still pull off that schoolboy uniform in his 60s, teenagers will continue to listen to AC/DC, because the qualities that render their music enjoyable will always stay the same. “Rock ‘n’ roll ain’t no riddle man,” Johnson declares later on the album.

There are a lot things to criticize AC/DC for – as The Observer’s Kitty Empire put it, Back in Black is “built on casual sexism, eye-rolling double entendres, a highly questionable attitude to sexual consent […] and a crass celebration of the unthinking macho hedonism that killed the band’s original singer.” She also named it her favourite album – like many critics reappraising the album decades later, she acknowledges just how much of a triumph the record was without ignoring some of its problematic lyrics, which are perhaps the only thing keeping it from not feeling dated. But ‘Hells Bells’ shares virtually none of these faults. Only a group like AC/DC could turn death into the butt of the joke while also respectfully paying tribute to their recently deceased frontman, a comeback most bands would probably need years – not mere months – to perfect. There was little doubt that AC/DC would keep on doing their thing and doing it well, but the opening seconds of ‘Hells Bells’ feel like a brief acceptance of the real darkness in the world, one whose echo persists long after that church bell is replaced by Angus Young’s killer riffs.

Watch The Killers Perform ‘Blowback’ on ‘Colbert’

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The Killers celebrated the release of their new album, Imploding the Mirage, with a performance of the track ‘Blowback’ on The Late Show with Stephen Colbert. Check it out below.

Originally scheduled for release back in May, Imploding the Mirage arrived this Friday (August 20) via Island. Following 2017’s Wonderful Wonderful, the record was co-produced by Shawn Everett and Foxygen’s Jonathan Rado and recorded in Los Angeles, Las Vegas, and Park City, Utah. It features guest appearances from the likes of Lindsey Buckingham, Weyes Blood, The War On Drugs’ Adam Granduciel, Blake Mills, and more.

Previously, the band performed early singles from the album in their own bathroom and recording studio, but on their latest performance, they played on an actual concert stage – albeit without an audience.

Listen to a Previously Unreleased Ella Fitzgerald Live Recording

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A rare Ella Fitzgerald live album is getting its first ever release. Recorded at Berlin’s Sportpalast in 1962, The Lost Berlin Tapes comes out October 2 via Verve. Below, you can hear one of the recordings, ‘Mack the Knife’, alongside an animated video, and scroll down for the album’s tracklist and cover artwork.

The concert took place just two years after Fitzgerald’s seminal release, Ella in Berlin: Mack the Knife, and sees the jazz singer performing alongside a trio consisting of pianist Paul Smith, bassist Wilfred Middlebrooks, and drummer Stan Levey. A recording of the concert was discovered unopened within the private collection of Norman Granz, Verve Records founder and Fitzgerald’s longtime manager, who regularly recorded her concerts.

The Lost Berlin Tapes will be available to purchase on vinyl, CD, and digitally. Pre-orders are ongoing.

The Lost Berlin Tapes Cover Artwork:

The Lost Berlin Tapes Tracklist:
1. Cheek To Cheek
2. He’s My Kind Of Boy
3. Cry Me A River
4. I Won’t Dance
5. Someone To Watch Over Me
6. Jersey Bounce
7. Angel Eyes
8. Clap Hands, Here Come Charlie
9. Taking A Chance On Love
10. C’est Magnifique
11. Good Morning Heartache
12. Hallelujah, I Love Him So
13. Hallelujah, I Love Him So (Reprise)
14. Summertime
15. Mr. Paganini
16. Mack The Knife
17. Wee Baby Blues

Former Red Hot Chili Peppers Guitarist Jack Sherman Dies at 64

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Former Red Hot Chili Peppers guitarist Jack Sherman has died at the age of 64. The band confirmed the news in a statement posted on social media, writing: “We of the RHCP family would like to wish Jack Sherman smooth sailing into the worlds beyond, for he has passed. Jack played on our debut album as well as our first tour of the USA. He was a unique dude and we thank him for all times good, bad and in between. Peace on the boogie platform.” No cause of death has been disclosed.

Sherman joined the alternative rock group in 1983, replacing founding member Hillel Slovak. He played on the band’s self-titled debut album and first US tour, and co-wrote a large part of their 1985 follow-up, Freaky Styley. Though he left when Slovak rejoined the group shortly after quitting his other band, What Is This?, Sherman went on to contribute backing vocals to their 1989 LP Mother’s Milk, including on the popular cover of Stevie Wonder’s ‘Higher Ground’ as well as ‘Good Time Boys’.

In 2012, when the Red Hot Chili Peppers were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame alongside the likes of Faces/Small Faces, Guns N’ Roses and Beastie Boys, neither Sherman nor Jane’s Addiction guitarist Dave Navarro were invited to attend the band’s induction. Though the Hall of Fame stated that this was because they weren’t eligible for induction due to only being part of the band for a short amount of time, Sherman criticised the members of the band, telling Billboard: “It’s a politically correct way of omitting Dave Navarro and I for whatever reasons they have – that are probably the band’s and not the Hall [of Fame]. It’s really painful to see all this celebrating going on, and be excluded.”

Despite his difficult time in the band, he believed he “soldiered on under arduous conditions to try to make the thing work – that’s what you do in a job. That’s being dishonoured. I’m being dishonoured, and it sucks.”

Later in his career, Sherman’s credits included Bob Dylan’s 1986 album Knocked Out Loaded as well as collaborations with the Undertones’ Feargal Sharkey, singer-songwriter Peter Case, George Clinton, Tonio K, and more.

Fantasia 2020 Review: Hunted (2020)

A magical-realist genre mash-up that draws on influences from The Most Dangerous Game (1932) to Wolf Creek (2005) via I Spit on Your Grave (1978) and The Company of Wolves (1984), French/Belgian co-production Hunted is the new horror feature from Persepolis (2007) co-director Vincent Paronnaud, which pits a new-age Red Riding Hood against a personification of the Big Bad Wolf in an isolated forest. Our Culture reviews the film here for its selection as part of the 2020 Fantasia International Film Festival.

Éve (Lucie Debay) is a French woman working in Belgium. One night, tired of climbing the walls in her hotel room, she decides to hit a bar – where she is promptly harassed by a sleazy pick-up artist. She is rescued by a charismatic American stranger (Arieh Warthalter) who claims to be on a mission to cheer up his brother (Ciaran O’Brien). But her saviour is not who he says he is. He is, in fact, a deeply misogynistic rapist and murderer, and his ‘brother’ is his reluctant accomplice. They intend to make Éve their next victim, but a twist of fate allows her to escape their clutches and run deep into dense woodland. As she tries to make her way back to civilisation, a hunt begins. But there is something very old swirling about the trees, and nature itself will play a part in the tale.

While its basic premise is recognisable from the decades of revenge cinema that have preceded it, Hunted immediately declares an intention to do something innovative by introducing fantasy elements into a narrative otherwise told with a horrific realism. Its cold open sees a mother (Simone Milsdochter) sitting around a campfire with her son (Vladimir Ryelandt) in the woods where much of the film’s action will later take place. There, she regales him with a folktale set during the Crusades, in which a young woman is saved from a group of predatory men by a valiant pack of wolves. This story informs everything that we will see throughout the rest of the film, as Paronnaud comes to blur very real patriarchal violence with fairytale logic.

Éve, as played by Lucie Debay.

Driven by admirable central performances from Debay and Warthalter, Hunted is a celebration of one woman’s refusal to become a victim that slowly transitions from a grounded nightmare into a fantastical tale of bloody retribution. Its fantasy elements are subtly on display even early in the narrative; for example, the film is littered with beautiful, otherworldly images of prey animals (including wild hogs, deer, rabbits and birds), while costume designer Catherine Marchand has dressed Éve in a red-hooded coat, her aggressor in shades of lupine grey and black. But it is only in the film’s final act that Joachim Phillipe’s cinematography truly takes a turn into the realms of fantasy and the woods seem to come alive.

To acknowledge the film’s fairytale leanings is not to say, of course, that it shies away from horror. While never exploitative, it contains some utterly brutal violence and is at times deeply uncomfortable to watch. Hunted‘s villain is perhaps the most despicable killer since Wolf Creek‘s Mick Taylor: a personification of toxic masculinity who manipulates, abuses and tortures men, women and – as subtly suggested only by the sound of a baby crying on a video recording of one of his crimes – even children. He is the embodiment of patriarchy, a man who believes that everyone and anyone is his to use and abuse. Warthalter’s performance is at once captivating and repelling in a way that recalls Benoît Poelvoorde’s chilling turn in what remains Belgium’s most infamous horror film: Man Bites Dog (1992).

Hunted is, essentially, a story that has been told many times before, in which a woman – tortured and brutalised – exacts her righteous vengeance against heartless tormentors. In fact, it was only a few years ago that another French horror film, Revenge (2017), took the festival circuit by storm as it reclaimed the rape and revenge formula at the beginning of the Me Too era. What makes Hunted equally special, though, is that it recognises that this is a tale as old as time. As it weaves elements of folktales and fairy stories into its own narrative, it astutely reflects on the fact that women are not just suffering patriarchal abuse in our current moment but have been continually suffering it for many hundreds, even thousands of years – and asks just when, exactly, that suffering will stop.

Chief Keef and Mike WiLL Made-It Announce New Album, Drop New Song ‘Bang Bang’

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Chief Keef and Mike WiLL Made-It have announced a new collaborative album. The title of the project has not yet been revealed, but the two artists have previewed it with a new single titled ‘Bang Bang’. Check it out below.

The influential Chicago rapper and Atlana producer have collaborated multiple times in the past, the first being on ‘No Tomorrow’ from Keef’s 2012 debut LP Finally Rich, which Mike WiLL produced. Later that year, Keef made an appearance on ‘Chief Keef Speak / On It’ from Mike Will’s Est in 1989, Pt. 2.5two years later, Keef featured on Mike WiLL’s ‘Stop-Start’ from Ransom.

Earlier this year, Chief Keef dropped The GloFiles (Pt. 4). Mike WiLL Made-It released his debut studio album Ransom 2 in 2017.

Carly Rae Jepsen Officially Unveils ‘Emotion’ Bonus Tracks for 5th Anniversary

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Carly Rae Jepsen‘s E•MO•TION, which we named one of the top 10 pop albums of the past decade, has turned five years old. To celebrate its anniversary, Jepsen has come out with a deluxe expanded edition featuring two bonus tracks, ‘Never Get To Hold You’ and ‘Love Again’. Both songs previously existed exclusively as part of the physical Japanese edition of the album, but are now officially available in the rest of the world as well as on streaming services. Take a listen below.

A year after its release, Jepsen released E•MO•TION Side B, a collection of outtakes from that album. She followed it up last year with Dedicated, and just a few months ago came out with another collection of B-sides, Dedicated Side B. She’s reportedly already made an album’s worth of quarantine tunes, and a few days ago, she put out a new single called ‘Me and the Boys in the Band’.

Miles from Kinshasa Presents ‘Motionz’

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Miles From Kinshasa, a Congo-born, London-based artist, alongside Murkage Dave have released their new single ear-pleasing single Motionz. The single comes after Miles from Kinshasa’s two singles Lookin’ 4 U and Wearing Smiles, both of which were released earlier this year. All of the three singles are bound to feature on the forthcoming EP Beloved.

Motionz is now available to be streamed via Spotify.

Listen to Travis Scott’s New Song ‘The Plan’ From Christopher Nolan’s New Movie ‘Tenet’

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Travis Scott has shared a new song called ‘The Plan’. It’s taken from the soundtrack to Christopher Nolan’s new film Tenet. Check it out below.

In an interview with GQ’s Gerrick D. Kennedy, Scott said of the film: “I can’t even explain it. You literally just have to watch it. It’s very fire.” In that same article, Nolan talked about Scott’s involvement in the film, saying: “His voice became the final piece of a yearlong puzzle. His insights into the musical and narrative mechanism [composer] Ludwig Göransson and I were building were immediate, insightful, and profound.”

Starring Robert Pattinson, John David Washington, and Elizabeth Debicki, Tenet will open in select theaters worldwide on August 26. Travis Scott recently collaborated with Kanye West for his single ‘Wash Us in the Blood’ and Rosalía for the track ‘TKN’. His most recent studio album was 2018’s ASTROWORLD.

Look at Peaky Blinders Season 5

One of the main television hits of 2019, of course, was the fifth season of Peaky Blinders. And it ended with a shameless cliffhanger – with a bunch of questions and possible answers, indicated only by a couple of vague hints. Managed to shock – including someone absolutely illogical (and indeed pleasant) return. And most importantly – even more clearly than the previous, fourth, season – outlined the development path of the cult series.

True, at first glance, everything is pretty standard. The same Nick Cave sings an amazing Red Right Hand in credits. The same color scheme: a hazy gray industrial background – plus red bloodstains, yellow headlights, juicy brown mud, and orange cigar light, blue cocaine ampules, black pistols, piercing blue eyes of Cillian Murphy. In the end, the same plot twists and turns – which allows you to combine the real historical context with the fictional – even “based on real events” – dramatic story of a single criminal clan.

And here, perhaps, it’s finally worth noting that the mentioned “separate taking” – both in terms of form and in terms of content – finally finished off the permanent showrunner Stephen Knight with tightness. Moreover, this can be seen from the very first shots: the start of the first episode – and to a large extent the plot of all six – determines Black Tuesday of 1929. A grand American stock market crash, on the one hand, is forcing the Shelby clan to abandon plans to legalize the business and return to the old paths. On the other hand, it intensifies the struggle for power, fuels ambition, splashes gasoline into the already decently so bonfire of family discord.

The latter is indicated by especially thick, broad strokes – first, in the context of the confrontation between the young “progressive” guys and the carriers of “traditional values”. The ranks of the former are replenished with the archetypal thin-boned American blonde (the usual wonderful Anya Taylor-Joy) staring at old people in caps with poorly concealed contempt. The second – in fact, old men in caps – fiercely dismiss changes, not having the slightest opportunity to ignore them. In general, again – the theme of “fathers and children.” Eternal, not to say – hackneyed.

When talking about Peaky Blinders and the atmosphere in the movie, we cannot skip mentioning that “casino-environment” haunting and existing in the bleak streets of Great Britain. While the series is not centered around gambling, we can immediately feel the nature of it throughout the whole series. Even if it is not shown we are sure that people indeed are engaged in this activity. What’s more the main thing in the series is the fact that the group owns a horse racing system, which in fact was the first thing people placed their bets on. Because of that and due to the high popularity of the TV show, Peaky Blinders has become a basis for online casino slots for real money where Tom Shelby and other characters, with their feature caps, could be seen as playable characters.

However, you don’t have to yawn and get bored, because the semitones and dull reflection here – even more actively than before – prefer noise, din, and extreme passions, and even loud music – of course, matched with manic thoroughness exactly to a particular scene. Accordingly, Peaky Blinders’ signature clip style is nowadays screwed up to deliberately straightforward associativity: the one who is overcast and ill paces along the pavement under Joy Division; another incendiary conflict announced by Black Sabbath; Anna Calvi sings about the “last dying wish” – and so on.

And even further – down to the mass of colorful explosions, indiscriminate firing from a machine gun in the spirit of Predator, an unfolded duel of UFC looks, a high concentration of cruel reprisals…The toolkit beats in the forehead, promptly leading away from the “Peaks” from their original, purely Birmingham locality in the direction of the Hollywood sweeping movie comic strip. Here, by the way, is the appearance of Oswald Mosley, the founder of the British Union of Fascists: he zealously rants, intrigues, destroys everyone and everything – and, in general, is indicated by a sort of caricatured black and red vicious blot. Or – entering the stage of the equally lurid Scottish Billy Boys, which, in fact, is needed mainly so that we can admire the play of Brian Gleeson – and we saw several more spectacular scenes.

The season itself is also aimed at spectacular scenes. A minimum of chewing motivation – with a maximum of short, stylish pieces, shot, probably, specifically to applause. Here, for example, Aidan Gillen’s Aberama Gold recklessly, with the help of a red-hot tar, takes revenge for the crucifixion of his son – and charmingly glances at the camera. And here you have Arthur – old Arthur, whose bloody tantrums are now redundant beyond any measure imaginable – and beyond measure are delightful. Well, even there – even the performer of the title role does not shy from a frantic replay, so Tommy Shelby heart-rending yells and pounds the walls: they say that no one ever listens.

Moreover – in some places, Knight and his comrades are no longer embarrassed by outright theatricality. They are mixing a dynamic ballet number with the frantic escalation of suspense as if they had seen enough of the third John Wick. They set on the protagonist the ghosts of the past in the person of Annabelle Wallis, literally pacing out of the fog – in the manner of American psychological thrillers. Here and there, ringing pauses are inserted into the story – forcing the audience to squeeze into chairs. After a minute, on the contrary, the pace up the tempo with a ragged installation. They easily justify dashing scenario twists with unimaginable coincidences.

In short, they are approaching a dangerous border with dramatic vulgarity. But still, they don’t cross the line, masterfully balancing between a noticeable simplification of ideas and the highest mastery of implementation. Yes, Peaky Blinders have become more frivolous and lightweight. However, this was more than compensated for by increased dynamism, an increase in the entertainment component and blockbuster entertainment – to the displeasure of perhaps the primmest conservatives.