AC/DC: Live At Donington (1992)
In August of 1991, AC/DC headlined their third "Monsters Of Rock" festival at Castle Donington. One for the ages, the two hour set is loaded with classics and awesome visuals including firing cannons, the hells bell and a giant inflatable Rosie.
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Sick Product of a Sick System
Pretty Good
Highly Overrated But Still Good
A movie that not only functions as a solid scarefest but a razor-sharp satire.
I have the deluxe Live Album of the same concert and I watched this and was greatly saddened to see that the Live version of Razor's Edge was NOT included on the DVD.I was crushed but overall, one of the best concerts I have ever seen. You can feel the audience's reactions the best during the opening of Thunderstruck.Anghus Young plays the true axe-man role here and you can just see his seemingly endless energy here over and over again during every song! Amazing performance overall!10/10
I've had the DVD for awhile and watched it several times on a 46" screen, and it was great. Now, I have a 70" Sony and with the accompanying Bose system, it's as if I were at Donington. The live version of "High Voltage" is one of the truly underrated hard rock songs of all time. "Hells Bells," "Thunderstruck," "Highway to Hell" are awesome.The movie shows how dynamic Brian Johnson's voice was in 1991.Angus puts on a great show, and Chris Slade's drum work is as good as it gets. This should be a must for any AC DC fan.
This is a great portrayal of what a good rock concert should be like. Full of energy, lots of good tunes, and filmed on 35mm film, it is truly inspiring. I wish all shows could be this good. Long live AC/DC!
That is the best explanation for this video and the band themselves. The camera goes back and forth. It zooms in and out. This is not very exciting, except for that classic cannon fire, but the band makes up for it. AC/DC plays a variety of older material and tracks from their newer album, The Razor's Edge. Brian Johnson prowls the stage doing his best to make up for the absence of Bon Scott, while Angus Young works his Chuck Berry homage as only he can. All nineteen songs fly by, played with the power that makes several of them classics and the rest giddy confections. This is either a fine treat for lovers of this recent inductee into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame or a fine introduction to one of the greatest of the last quarter century.