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The Youngs: The Brothers Who Built AC/DC Kindle Edition
- Publishers Weekly "This thought-provoking book definitely breaks some new ground. Arrangement by chapters dedicated to specific songs is a satisfying way of telling the AC/DC story while providing music criticism. Scholarly fans will appreciate the bibliography. This one's a must-read for fans."
- Library Journal"A great narrative... it has one very simple, very powerful message for those who would like to dismiss AC/DC as childish hacks: 'Stop being so bloody pretentious!' Thank you, Jesse Fink, for talking some sense into me. 'No matter how hard you try not to react to their music, it's impossible. You cannot listen to an album like Back in Black and not move,' Fink tells me. 'That's what I wanted to celebrate with this book -- the idea that it's okay to rock.' Damn straight, it's about time somebody said it."
- Clark Boyd, PRI's The World
"A rare, raw look at a band who strove, in many ways very successfully, to keep its business dealings behind closed doors. That is until now."
- BJ Lisko, The Canton Repository, Ohio
"A fantastic new AC/DC book... Fink did a great job. Essential for an AC/DC fan to read."
- Carter Alan, 100.7 WZLX, Massachusetts
"The latest, greatest 'rock read'... an awesome book."
- Buck McWilliams, Gater 98.7 FM, Florida
"An astounding - astounding - book."
- Bill Meyer, KMED, Oregon
"An excellent read."
- Ryan Gatenby, WBIG, Illinois
"The best book on AC/DC ever written."
- Dan Rivers, WKBN, Ohio
"I loved this book."
- Arroe Collins, WRFX, North Carolina
"Outstanding."
- Mark Mayfield, KSLX, Arizona
Customers who bought this item also bought
Editorial Reviews
Review
- Publishers Weekly
"A great narrative... it has one very simple, very powerful message for those who would like to dismiss AC/DC as childish hacks: 'Stop being so bloody pretentious!' Thank you, Jesse Fink, for talking some sense into me. 'No matter how hard you try not to react to their music, it's impossible. You cannot listen to an album like Back in Black and not move,' Fink tells me. 'That's what I wanted to celebrate with this book -- the idea that it's okay to rock.' Damn straight, it's about time somebody said it."
- Clark Boyd, PRI's The World
"A rare, raw look at a band who strove, in many ways very successfully, to keep its business dealings behind closed doors. That is until now."
- BJ Lisko, The Canton Repository, Ohio
"A fantastic new AC/DC book... Fink did a great job. Essential for an AC/DC fan to read."
- Carter Alan, 100.7 WZLX, Massachusetts
"The latest, greatest 'rock read'... an awesome book."
- Buck McWilliams, Gater 98.7 FM, Florida
"An astounding - astounding - book."
- Bill Meyer, KMED, Oregon
"An excellent read."
- Ryan Gatenby, WBIG, Illinois
"The best book on AC/DC ever written."
- Dan Rivers, WKBN, Ohio
"I loved this book."
- Arroe Collins, WRFX, North Carolina
"Outstanding."
- Mark Mayfield, KSLX, Arizona
From the Author
Furthermore, surprisingly little had been written about AC/DC's songs and the three Young brothers (George, Angus, Malcolm), who are very private people, almost recluses. I chose 11 songs by the Youngs spanning the years 1968 to 1990; it's a critical appreciation rather than a standard, linear, join-the-dots biography. Through writing about the songs, and interviewing people who were involved in their creation or inspired by hearing them, so many untold stories about the band and the brothers fell into my lap. By the same token, I also had to dig very deep. It was above all else an investigative exercise. I had started out not wanting to write a biography but there are biographical elements to the book.
Lastly, there was a need for it. What I think The Youngs proves is there's so much to the AC/DC story that hasn't been told yet. My motivation was not to write just another AC/DC book that retells the same anecdotes or rehashes the information we've all heard before. There were existing stories about AC/DC that required tackling and debunking, which I think I've done.
About the Author
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
Youngs
By Jesse FinkSt. Martin's Press
Copyright © 2015 Jesse FinkAll rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-1-250-06872-9
1
THE EASYBEATS
“Good Times” (1968)
It took a teenage vampire movie and nearly two decades for “Good Times,” The Easybeats’ maracas-driven thunderclap off 1968’s Vigil album, to break into the charts, reaching #2 in Australia, #18 in the United Kingdom and #47 in the United States. The only other song by the band to break the top 50 in all three markets was “Friday on My Mind,” and that had happened round about the time it was supposed to: in 1967, not 1987.
There has never been any rhyme or reason to success in the music business, especially the fortunes of The Easybeats, and this confirmed it. The movie was The Lost Boys, starring Kiefer Sutherland and directed by Joel Schumacher, and easily the best thing about it was the Australian song, a duet for Jimmy Barnes, former lead singer of beer-soaked pub giants Cold Chisel, and the late Michael Hutchence of INXS, featuring the backing of his five bandmates.
Containing three talented Australian brothers of its own—Andrew, Jon and Tim Farriss—INXS was on its way to becoming an arena act with 1987’s megaplatinum Kick, while Barnes was pushing hard to do the same thing with the self-titled and radio-geared Jimmy Barnes, a repackaged version of the For the Working Class Man album that had gone to #1 in Australia.
But unlike INXS, he had failed to fire in the States. Now, though, the Glaswegian shrieker had an accidental American smash on his hands. A hit no one involved with the recording saw coming, “Good Times” having been initially covered to promote Australian Made, a loss-making Australia-only summer concert series conceived by Barnes’s manager, Mark Pope, and INXS manager Chris Murphy as a means of showing that a homegrown festival featuring homegrown acts could compete with big international tours for bums on seats.
That all changed when Ahmet Ertegun got personally involved, as he had with AC/DC in the late 1970s. With his elder brother Nesuhi, the urbane Turkish-American co-founder of Atlantic Records came to belatedly get behind AC/DC, even after the band’s second US album, Dirty Deeds Done Dirt Cheap, had been rejected by his own artists and repertoire (A&R) department.
Ertegun heard the INXS-Barnes cover by chance in February 1987 and was bowled over. “They don’t make rock records like this any more,” he said. Accordingly a “softened up” US radio–friendly remix was put on The Lost Boys soundtrack and went on to sell a couple of million units.
“Good Times” was a shrewd choice by Pope and Murphy: a four-on-the-floor ripsnorter begging for the sweat and spittle of Barnes but which also managed the feat of transforming the normally effete, slightly soft Hutchence into a figure so ballsy and cocksure with the microphone it was like the ghost of Jim Morrison or Bon Scott had entered his body. Mark Opitz, who produced the single, could see similarities with AC/DC’s late figurehead, at the time only seven years dead: “Like Bon, Michael was a real gypsy. A singer in a band that wasn’t necessarily the same as the rest of the band.”
But beyond the two impressive lead singers, then at the height of their powers, and the not-too-shabby group of musicians behind them, the choppy guitar riff was the star. It felt familiar, almost AC/DC like. For good reason, hinted at by the mysterious credit. This remake of a forgotten Easybeats song was the first time much of the MTV generation on both sides of the Pacific had heard something composed by George Young, the Jor-El of AC/DC.
* * *
When it was released as a single in 1968 under the US title of “Gonna Have a Good Time,” having been recorded and produced the year before by Englishman Glyn Johns, “Good Times” sank without a trace, not even the backing vocals of Steve Marriott of Small Faces or the piano of Rolling Stones session pianist Nicky Hopkins able to cut the Australian band some chart slack. The only love it got in the States was an obscure but totally rocking, organ-scorched 1969 cover by a group of previously uncorrupted Mormon sisters from Utah, The Clingers, a cleancut rival act to The Osmonds. Looking for an image buster, they recruited Michael Lloyd and Kim Fowley as producers and released it under its US title.
“Michael and I found it on an Easybeats album,” says Fowley, a notable songwriter for Kiss, Alice Cooper and Warren Zevon, among others, who went on to create, manage and produce the greatest female rock band of all time, The Runaways, and would guide Guns N’ Roses before they exploded on the rock scene in 1987. “We played The Clingers the song and they learned it and we recorded it.”
Like so many bands, The Easybeats were just too far ahead of their time. The spate of covers of the song—some 40 of them and counting—was mostly to come in later years. Before 1970 had rolled around they broke up, “Friday on My Mind” both their biggest hit and their albatross.
“The good thing about that Easybeats version is the high backing vocals,” says Mark Opitz. “Marriott just happened to be in the next studio. I was a schoolkid when I first heard The Easybeats’ ‘She’s So Fine’ on the radio. I just thought, ‘Fuck, what’s this? This is great. That’s just brilliant.’ I was blown away.”
Doug Thaler, keyboardist/guitarist for Ronnie Dio and the Prophets and later AC/DC’s first American booking agent, heard “Good Times” in 1967 while on the same bill as The Easybeats in upstate New York on the Gene Pitney Cavalcade of Stars roadshow. Thaler went on to record the Vanda & Young tune but couldn’t replicate the same swing.
“It really grooved,” he says. “I thought it was pretty funny that 20 years after The Easybeats played that song every night on tour over here somebody finally had a hit with it.”
Now intoxicated kids around Australia, England and America were throwing up on front lawns, down stairwells and in sand dunes as it shook the walls of house parties or reverberated from parked cars in makeout spots. “Good Times” was exactly as its title suggested: the kind of song you played on a Friday or Saturday night as a gee-up before you went out on the town. An unapologetic boozing and shagging song: exactly what it was intended to be in 1968.
But back then it couldn’t resurrect The Easybeats’ toxic career. There were rumors of drug use—heroin, no less—by one member (and it wasn’t lead singer Stevie Wright) tearing the band apart. This and the band’s failure to write another hit of the caliber of “Friday on My Mind” and the fact that for all their success they couldn’t rub two pennies together cut George Young deep. He went off cursing under his breath about managers and record-company swindlers, hung around in London playing and recording music with Harry Vanda and older brother Alex Young, then returned to Sydney in 1973 from a “four-year binge” of creativity that his two pimply younger brothers were fortunate to absorb by osmosis and which ignited the beginnings of AC/DC.
Some of the best work of this “binge,” as George called it, is found on Marcus Hook Roll Band’s Tales of Old Grand-Daddy, a 1973 album he started in London with Alex then finished in Sydney with the help of Malcolm and Angus. “Quick Reaction” and “Natural Man” are steeped in the sound of AC/DC. The bass line and power chords on “Natural Man,” especially, are replicated almost note-for-note two years later on TNT’s “Live Wire.”
Martin Cerf, reviewing “Natural Man” for the Los Angeles–published Phonograph Record Magazine in 1973 when it was just an import on the Regal Zonophone label from England, described it perfectly as a natural progression from “Good Times” and saw the revolution that was coming when no one else did, not least a bunch of record companies in the United States that didn’t know what to do with Marcus Hook.
“If you can imagine what The Easybeats would have sounded like four years on should they have stayed together, then you know what ‘Natural Man’ is all about,” he raved. “It’s got a snare that tears speakers. It’s got protest lyrics. It demands you dance. It’s got Beatle harmonies. It’s got a riff the best this side of The Hollies’ ‘Long Cool Woman’ and ‘Heaven Knows’ by The Grass Roots, and a hook, well, now I know the reason for the group’s name.”
Marcus Hook, incidentally, is a town outside Philadelphia.
Declared John Tait in Vanda & Young: Inside Australia’s Hit Factory: “The album is pure power rock—a prototype for the sound that was to become the signature of AC/DC.”
* * *
In Why AC/DC Matters, Anthony Bozza writes that nothing in The Easybeats’ catalog “touches the musicality of ‘Friday on My Mind.’ It is their most innovative track, and the only one relevant to a discussion of AC/DC.” Which is wildly wrong and underscores just how little some American critics really know about the music of The Easybeats, outside of AC/DC the most important Australian band of all time.
Wrong because three other songs—“Sorry” (1966), “Good Times” (1968) and especially “St. Louis” (1969)—set the tone for and laid the musical path of AC/DC. You can hear AC/DC in George’s rhythm guitar in all of them, the violent swipe of a claw across the strings. The same riffs that have become the signature sound of Malcolm Young and the bedrock of everything AC/DC does.
The Australian music website Milesago describes the “killer hook” in “Sorry” as emblematic of “George’s innovative (and much-imitated) guitar technique, in which he scratched the pick across the stopped strings to create an arresting percussive effect” while “St. Louis,” The Easybeats’ last single and which scraped into the Billboard Hot 100 in the United States, is “an unmistakable signpost of the direction AC/DC would take a few years later.”
“I was pissed off it didn’t do well chartwise,” says Ray Singer, who produced it.
The riff of “St. Louis,” a true companion piece to “Good Times,” was so infectious it got the attention of Motown’s creator, Berry Gordy Jr.
“The following year I went to the States with my then–business partner [future Marc Bolan and Wham! manager] Simon Napier-Bell. We were invited to Motown, which was still in Detroit in those days, and introduced to Berry, who had just launched a subsidiary label called Rare Earth Records. They were releasing white rock music—quite something for an all-black label like Motown. One of their first releases was ‘St. Louis.’”
Stevie Wright, who lived for a period with the Youngs, remembers 4 Burleigh Street being a hive of creativity.
“I can remember seeing Angus practicing and I said, ‘Jeez, he’s dedicated. He’ll be a great guitarist one day.’ And he sure enough is. [Angus and Malcolm] started getting it together early when The Easybeats were chasing women and drinking. I thought the Youngs would do okay. I didn’t know just how well.
“I’ve never had such a good time as I did living with them. They spoiled me. It wasn’t long after I met George that I was over there at Burwood writing songs with him. I was just too tired to go home one day and George said, ‘Stay here’ and I never left. George was the first to invent the chooga chooga chooga chooga choo. That was in ‘Sorry.’ Since then there’s been many imitators. The Easybeats were a rock band as much as we were a pop band. I’m really proud AC/DC continued the job we set out to do.”
American producer Shel Talmy, the man behind The Who’s “My Generation,” The Kinks’ “You Really Got Me” and The Easybeats’ “Friday on My Mind,” agrees: “I always considered The Easybeats as a rock band and not a pop band with all those negative connotations attached to being one. So with all those [Young] connections, I hear some of The Easybeats in AC/DC.”
But it was a sound that was also rooted way back further: to the music of Chuck Berry and piano player Winifred Atwell.
“I’ve said it for years and people have said it to me for years: AC/DC got our recipe and stayed with it,” says The Easybeats’ first drummer, Snowy Fleet. “It’s that basic 12-bar boogie rhythm that they come down on and then they work around it. They don’t deviate from it.”
* * *
Enigmatic producer Glyn Johns, renowned for his work with The Faces, The Who, Eric Clapton and Eagles, wouldn’t be drawn on “Good Times” for this book, saying he didn’t recall anything about the 1967 sessions that ended up on 1968’s Vigil and offered only this: “The Easybeats were a great band and I enjoyed the sessions I did with them enormously. ‘Friday on My Mind’ was easily the best track I cut with them.”
But Shel Talmy, who actually gets the producing credit for that timeless song (Johns was his engineer), is more generous: “The Easybeats were very important and should have been more recognized for their contributions and should have achieved a much higher status. I thought when we were doing ‘Friday on My Mind’ that it was a natural and knew it was going to be an instant hit.”
But he has nothing kind to say about the boss of Alberts, Ted Albert, and in actual fact blames him for sowing the seeds for the demise of The Easybeats. According to Talmy, suggestions that there was a falling out between himself and the band over “musical direction”—alleged in the Stevie Wright biography Hard Road by Glenn Goldsmith—are a crock. It was about money.
“I hope Ted Albert brought some sunblock with him. He’s gonna need it where he went,” he says. “I was young, naive and stupid enough to think the person I was dealing with was honest and trustworthy. He wasn’t, as I discovered to my chagrin. Unfortunately, I signed a contract to produce The Easybeats directly with Ted, one of the biggest mistakes I ever made, and one I never repeated, albeit that most everybody else I dealt with was not like Ted, but he sure as hell permanently soured my attitude toward trusting so-called managers or any others purporting to rep a band.
“Ted screwed me. He refused to pay me and I have never received one penny in the royalties I’m due for ‘Friday on My Mind’ or any of the other tracks I produced. The fact that he’d pissed off back to Australia [from England] made it financially impossible to sue him and his company as I also knew what a big man he was there, so I realized I stood a snowball’s chance in hell of succeeding and decided not to spend a fortune proving how right I was.
“Ted could get away with it as he rightly concluded I wasn’t going to go to the expense of trying to collect what was owed to me on the other side of the world. History was on his side as other scumbags like [Beatles and Rolling Stones accountant] Allen Klein, [Roulette Records founder] Morris Levy and [Small Faces manager] Don Arden had been getting away with it forever.
“I’m guessing [he did it] because of a massive ego and jealousy because when he came to London and started producing The Easybeats, [their record company] United Artists told him to stop as it sucked: the reason why I was approached. So my producing an international hit first time out of the box had to be a huge blow to his ego. That’s my pop-psychology take on it.
“After he kicked off [in 1990], none of his associates jumped up to declare, ‘I’ll make it right.’ [Easybeats manager] Mike Vaughan was just a stooge who was no help, as he was more interested in covering his butt. Bottom line is lots of my bread is sitting in Australia with Alberts and I hope they’ve been choking on it, as obviously none of the legatees had the decency to redress an egregious wrong.”
It’s an extraordinary outburst and casts the history of The Easybeats and Australian rock music in a whole new light. It also jars with the reverence in which Ted Albert is generally held in the Australian music industry.
As former Alberts A&R vice-president Chris Gilbey says: “I always thought that Ted was a real gentleman in his business dealings. If anything, far too generous, and willing to take things on trust.”
But Talmy’s is not an isolated sentiment among people I spoke to for this book—Alberts is not held in universal high regard—and it prompts a question that begs asking: Had Ted Albert actually set in motion the demise of The Easybeats and unwittingly created the incendiary, us-against-the-world atmosphere that would give rise to AC/DC?
* * *
How did George Young, a Scottish-Australian multi-instrumentalist who could bridge musical and social barriers enough that one of his songs was picked up by the founder of Motown, not get the recognition and material success he deserved while he was still a young man?
“You could put any kind of instrument in front of George and he had that kind of determination that he could play it within half an hour,” says Mark Opitz.
Mark Evans was equally mesmerized by George’s talent. His own bass playing couldn’t compare to that of AC/DC’s producer: “They’re night and day. While George can play straight, he’s capable of being quite busy on the bass. Which is something you wouldn’t necessarily relate to the AC/DC style. The single ‘High Voltage’—that’s George playing. You listen to that; it’s very notey. He’s a little bit similar to how Ronnie Lane was with The Small Faces. Very loopy and very notey, but he always picks the great lines. My style is based on how he nurtured me.”
Not only was George versatile and talented. He was crafty.
Anthony O’Grady relates a bizarre story about Bon Scott that involved George: early in AC/DC’s recording career Scott had laid down a vocal track and gone on tour with the band for a couple of weeks only to return to Alberts to listen to the finished product and find lyrics had been added by George to songs he’d already recorded.
“Bon said [putting on his best impression], ‘You know what? They changed some of the lyrics … and it really worked!’ And I went, ‘Bon, that means they would have had to change the vocal as well.’ And he said, ‘Yeah!’ I took that to mean Bon was saying George would actually replace Bon’s original line.”
How would he do that?
“Punching in’s no problem. It’s the imitation. Bon was saying George could sing just like him.”
Says Mark Gable: “When I first heard The Easybeats I was astonished at the songwriting standard; George was largely responsible for this material. I knew at an early age that this guy was world class and if this band had been from England they would have been much more successful than they were. The Youngs’ complete understanding of pop, blues, soul and rock is beyond compare. I remember sitting down and playing a couple of tunes with George on one occasion while he was playing bass and it was without a doubt one of the most magical moments of my life. All three know how to swing, how to take their time and when to beat the living shit out of things.”
Indeed, George was “every bit as talented as John Lennon,” according to Liverpudlian emigrant Snowy Fleet, but didn’t get the same exposure because he was Australian. Like the Youngs, Fleet comes from a big family. Six sisters, four brothers. He met George in the Villawood migrant hostel in Sydney.
“The connection was straight away; it was right there. George is a very deep sort of bloke, a nice guy. He was always a quiet, shy loner but he was a little fireball. I didn’t realize how talented he was back then until recently. The guy has written over 300 songs. Malcolm Young used to say to me, ‘George is a frustrated Beatle.’”
Fleet hasn’t seen George since 1986, when The Easybeats came together for a reunion tour. But even back in the 1960s George was loath to do any publicity; Fleet and Stevie Wright would go to radio stations to do interviews. Since then, he’s more or less shut up shop completely.
“These days George is what I’ve heard is an ‘angel,’” says Opitz. “The Youngs have made a lot of money and what George likes to do is look at projects that need funding and come out of nowhere and help fund them as a silent partner. I believe he lives in Sydney and London a lot.
“When we were mixing ‘Love Is in the Air,’ both Harry and George told me how much they hated mixing. They basically hated music. They were just over it. I couldn’t believe it. And they said, ‘One day you’ll understand.’
“I think it was significant when Alberts held their 100th birthday party—when AC/DC were in Sydney—that George didn’t go. AC/DC didn’t go. I didn’t go. I wasn’t invited. It probably said a lot about what they thought, even if Alberts is still their publishing company. But [the Youngs] weren’t ever ones for bullshit. It was arranged as a photo opportunity rather than as a genuine family reunion; as it should have been, because Alberts was always a family company from day one. You always felt that when you were in there. It was us against the world.”
A mentality George took straight into AC/DC.
* * *
Mark Opitz made a pretty penny off Ahmet Ertegun’s executive decision to plant “Good Times” on The Lost Boys soundtrack. The first time he got a royalties check for the single from Atlantic, he saw more zeros than he was expecting. He still gets payments to this day. He’d visit the record company’s headquarters in New York to be “treated like fucking royalty” and was offered all sorts of projects—some balm for turning down Guns N’ Roses’ Appetite for Destruction, one of his enduring regrets.
But relations were tested between INXS and Jimmy Barnes, who’d come to a deal for a 50:50 split of royalties (Barnes: 50 percent; INXS with its half-dozen members: 50 percent) in Australia, having thought “Good Times” was only ever going to be released there and not anywhere else. But when Ertegun went nuts over it, the split arrangement was farcical. This, remember, was 1987. INXS, who’d gone to #1 with “Need You Tonight,” was huge in America. Barnes didn’t even register on the radar.
In Barnes’s authorized biography, Too Much Ain’t Enough, there’s a brief and cryptic mention about the behind-the-scenes horse trading that went on over royalties: “Difficult negotiations took place as a song recorded for fun made its way into the international arena.”
“It didn’t end well,” laughs Mark Pope, who managed Barnes from 1984 to 1987 and says those were “the most interesting eight years of my life, the four years of managing him.”
What is most extraordinary, though, about this resuscitated and re-energized Easybeats classic is that it almost didn’t happen, even before Ertegun heard it.
“INXS wanted to do ‘Turn Up Your Radio’ by The Masters Apprentices, which wasn’t a bad song, and we’d go up on a weekend to Rhinoceros [Studios] and record it,” says Opitz. “Jimmy and I lived in Bowral [in the Southern Highlands outside Sydney]. I remember the night before, Mark Pope came down and he’d got [Australian rock historian] Glenn A. Baker to put together a bunch of songs to listen to, and of course Baker being a sycophant for The Easybeats had of stack of them on there.”
When Pope heard “Good Times” he knew it was a no-brainer: “I thought to myself, ‘Well, that’s a fucking killer.’ A standout. It evoked the whole feeling of what [Australian Made] was about. Nothing serious. Just a song of fucking celebration, I guess. There was something about ‘Good Times’ that was calling it.”
“So by the time we got to the studio,” continues Opitz, “there’s INXS, with Jim Keays from The Masters Apprentices, and as the producer I called a meeting with both camps and said, ‘We should do “Good Times.” “Turn Up Your Radio” is a good song but it’s a bit too awkward. It doesn’t flow as well as “Good Times.” And a good time is what we want to have at this fucking thing.’
“Mark, Jimmy and I felt it was better. We were able to convince Michael Hutchence pretty quickly. And once we had Hutch the rest followed on. Jim Keays sat out there for hours and finally went home. I had the unfortunate task of telling him that we weren’t doing it. That we’d give it a shot if we got around to it. But we didn’t.”
What Opitz had learned working on Powerage with AC/DC he brought to bear on “Good Times.”
“I hadn’t lost the Vanda & Young ideology. Feel and rhythm are so important to me. I used tons of acoustic guitars, just thrashing it, distorted acoustic guitars—chunka chunk chunk—and I still play the ‘Good Times’ version without Jimmy’s and Michael’s vocal in the studio, all the time, just to listen to it. The way Jon Farriss comes out of that drum fill in that first verse, it’s unfuckingbelievable.”
The best result, though, for Opitz, INXS and Barnes, beyond making a damn fine record and reaping the royalties that would flow from it, was getting a seal of approval from the notoriously po-faced George Young himself.
“At the time I was recording Hoodoo Gurus’ Blow Your Cool at Alberts, and with great dread and trepidation I took an acetate over in the morning before I started the sessions to play it to George and Harry,” remembers Opitz. “In the past I’d played them David Bowie’s cover version or Rod Stewart’s cover version or whoever’s cover version of Easybeats songs, and they’d go, ‘Nah, that’s crap, that’s crap, that’s crap. No, it’s crap. That’s fucking shit.’ So I took my cover version to them and both of them were sitting in Fifa Riccobono’s office and they said, ‘Oh, g’day, mate.’ And I’m very sheepish. So they’re treating me as such, lounging back, looking at me. ‘Yeah, what do you want?’ I said: ‘I’ve got this cover version of INXS and Jimmy Barnes.’ I played it to George and Harry and I sat with them, played it once, and they went, as if they were unimpressed, ‘Mnnn mnnn.’ And I said, ‘Well, I’ll just leave my copy with you.’
“At eight o’clock that night, I was doing a guitar overdub with my engineer, Allan Wright, and in through the door stumbles a very drunken George. I never saw George pissed, at all, ever in my life before that time. He goes past Allan and shoves his hand in my face. ‘I just want to shake your hand. It’s the best fucking recording of any of our covers. Ever!’”
* * *
Nearly 50 years after laying down the song’s original vocals for The Easybeats, Stevie Wright remains nonplussed.
“I liked our version,” he wheezes, his body and voice, if not his mind, paying a heavy price for all those years lost to heroin and alcohol addiction. “It’s now become a standard rock ’n’ roll song. If you can’t cut your teeth on that, you shouldn’t be playing rock ’n’ roll.”
Ahmet Ertegun is dead. Mark Opitz continues to produce music and get checks in the mail but his heyday is behind him. Jimmy Barnes is still performing, though his voice has diminished. INXS, the greatest band to come out of Australia since AC/DC, is no more, having called it a day in late 2012 after conspicuously failing to quickly record an album of new songs with a new singer when their charismatic frontman unexpectedly passed away.
George Young, of course, made sure his two younger brothers didn’t make that mistake. As always, he was far too clever by half.
Copyright © 2013 by Jesse Fink
(Continues...)Excerpted from Youngs by Jesse Fink. Copyright © 2015 Jesse Fink. Excerpted by permission of St. Martin's Press.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.
Product details
- ASIN : B00HY09XG6
- Publisher : St. Martin's Press (August 5, 2014)
- Publication date : August 5, 2014
- Language : English
- File size : 5.5 MB
- Text-to-Speech : Enabled
- Screen Reader : Supported
- Enhanced typesetting : Enabled
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- Word Wise : Enabled
- Print length : 321 pages
- Page numbers source ISBN : 1250053838
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- #81 in Biographies of Rock Bands
- #88 in Biographies of Punk Rock Musician
- #660 in Rock Music (Kindle Store)
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Jesse Fink was born in London in 1973. He is the author of six books including THE EAGLE IN THE MIRROR, PURE NARCO, BON: THE LAST HIGHWAY and THE YOUNGS: THE BROTHERS WHO BUILT AC/DC. To celebrate 50 years since Bon Scott joined AC/DC, he is releasing BON: NOTES FROM THE HIGHWAY on October 5, 2024.
Customer reviews
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Customers find this book to be a satisfying read that provides brilliant insights into AC/DC's history. Moreover, the book receives positive feedback for its coverage of the rock band and music content. However, the writing quality receives mixed reviews, with some finding it very well written while others say it's all over the place. Similarly, the story quality is also mixed, with some finding it great while others find it boring.
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Customers find the book interesting and satisfying to read, with one describing it as a real page turner.
"...Is it the best ACDC book? I don't know, I haven't read them all. But, it's very good. Fans of the band should read it! Highly recommended!" Read more
"...All in all, a satisfying read that will be enjoyable whether you're an AC/DC fan or not. Highly recommended." Read more
"...There are a lot of excellent things in this book. Having said that I wouldnt recommend this to just any AC/DC fan...." Read more
"...I've read 30+ rock biographies and autobiographies, this one is the WORST, the rock bottom, by the order of magnitude... It is too bad I started..." Read more
Customers find the book provides brilliant insights and lots of factual content, with one customer noting it offers an interesting in-depth look at AC/DC.
"...Digging up the drummer from High Voltage and hearing his perspective was also brilliant. There are a lot of excellent things in this book...." Read more
"...Interesting discussions about some controversial topics, such as how much Bon Scott may have written for Back in Black." Read more
"...Despite the title, there is little revealing information about the Youngs...." Read more
"...While the book is informative, it just seems to have a vicious streak about it." Read more
Customers appreciate the book's portrayal of the rock band, describing it as one of the greatest, with one customer highlighting the talent of the three brothers.
"...The Young brothers are great musicians who have ruled ACDC with an iron fist, and they've stepped on, and over, people to get to the top...." Read more
"I love the band. All incarnations. They all have a place in the landscape. I knew this book would make my heroes look ugly and it does...." Read more
"...captured the whole story of why AC/DC and why it became The Best Rock Band in the world.....The Youngs and the story of how they Built AC/DC is..." Read more
"Interesting book, great band." Read more
Customers appreciate the music content of the book, with one noting it's a huge force in music, while another mentions it includes easy-to-play tunes.
"...; this book is a must read to recapture why ACDC was such a huge force in music and why it meant so much to your youth and still takes you back when..." Read more
"...It introduced me to EVIE and Easybeat tunes. The book is hard on the Young Brothers demand for excellence over loyalty...." Read more
"Great read, less about music, more about the record company politics and the Riff Raff..." Read more
Customers have mixed opinions about the writing quality of the book, with some finding it very well written while others note that it is all over the place.
"...It is a well written book but is all about the promoters, managers, producers.......how they built ACDC. The book is not about "The Youngs...." Read more
"...fan, and I hate to see my heroes disparaged, Mr. Fink's writing seems very spiteful...." Read more
"...Fink is a good writer, who has written a good book but as many old former insiders he talks to, be never gets inside the Youngs...." Read more
"Garbage! Poorly written, arrogantly opinionated, repeating itself, boring. This book has no structure at all, it is a mix of boring facts(?)..." Read more
Customers have mixed opinions about the story quality of the book, with some finding it great while others find it boring.
"Garbage! Poorly written, arrogantly opinionated, repeating itself, boring. This book has no structure at all, it is a mix of boring facts(?)..." Read more
"...job of digging into the band's past and bringing new stories to light from unexpected places...." Read more
"...self centered, no interviews from any of the guys in the family, ended up boring. There are much better books on AC/DC on the market...." Read more
"...It is also full of the author's personal opinions, and repetitive information that has no appeal...." Read more
Reviews with images

Fantastic AC/DC book
Top reviews from the United States
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- Reviewed in the United States on October 4, 2014I'm a big fan of ACDC's music but I learned a lot about the inner workings of the band through this book. Jesse Fink obviously dug deep and did a lot of painstaking research to get his info. The band is notoriously private and that really complicates attempts at getting their history down on paper.
The thing I liked most is Jesse's attempts to bring to the forefront all of the people who helped ACDC get where they are today and who didn't get the credit they deserved. The Young brothers are great musicians who have ruled ACDC with an iron fist, and they've stepped on, and over, people to get to the top. Doesn't make them bad people. They're very driven, like most successful people. But it is legit to ask why certain people didn't get recognized, and to question band decisions. Doesn't make Fink, or any of us, bad fans for asking. We love the band, warts and all--and we just want to know ALL details. And Fink does great, considering how hard this band is to cover.
Learning about the very beginnings of the band and the influence of George Young's experience in The Easybeats was great for me as well.
In the end Jesse Fink has done a great job at trying to nail down a very private band. He's made me look at them from a different angle. Most importantly, his book made me want to get out the old ACDC vinyl and start cranking!
Is it the best ACDC book? I don't know, I haven't read them all. But, it's very good. Fans of the band should read it! Highly recommended!
- Reviewed in the United States on August 9, 2014You know the rock bios that are based on a pile of Rolling Stone profiles and whatever else can be cut-n-pasted from the internet? The ones that you turn the pages and mutter, "I know all of this information . . . I've heard all of these stories before; isn't there anything new here?"
This isn't that kind of rock bio. Jesse Fink has done a masterful job of digging into the band's past and bringing new stories to light from unexpected places. Anyone else expecting that we'd ever hear from the band's long lost drummer who played on "High Voltage"? I sure didn't, and he's got great stories to tell. That's just the tip of the iceberg here.
And let's face it: no one before Jesse had approached the AC/DC story by considering it as a family business, which it is and has been for many decades.
All in all, a satisfying read that will be enjoyable whether you're an AC/DC fan or not. Highly recommended.
- Reviewed in the United States on February 22, 2019I love the band. All incarnations. They all have a place in the landscape. I knew this book would make my heroes look ugly and it does. However, reading the book I can understand how and why many of the ties that they cut.
This book is a collection of long forgotten quotes from old AC/DC books, old interviews with the players involved, mixed with new interviews and commentary from the author. It paints a picture of the early musical influences that grew from Young and Vanda. Very organic in the evolution from all of their previous works. Discovering this music is worth the price of the book. While the music is taking shape so is the story of how to "break" the band.
The bulk of the book are record company executives, DJs and managers trying to jockey for position for taking the most credit possible. It is any wonder why Angus, Malcolm and George fire anyone and everyone that crosses them? One former manager pats himself on the back about how much money he still receives from Back In Black because he retained the rights because he is just so smart. The theme is that everyone wanted to bleed this band dry.
However, the Young brothers are notoriously ruthless in chopping people out of nowhere. Story after story, the body count rises. By the time the book gets around to Simon Wright it barely gets a sentence with a did-he-quit-or-Malcom-fire line. None of the people in this book are terribly likable and by the end of the book you come away feeling they all deserved some bad luck to come their way.
The best aspect of this book are snippets from Mark Evans, the engineers and others that were in the recording rooms watching everything unfold. Hearing first hand of the process is excellent. Digging up the drummer from High Voltage and hearing his perspective was also brilliant. There are a lot of excellent things in this book.
Having said that I wouldnt recommend this to just any AC/DC fan. If you want a walk down the path of going from nowhere to stardom via the record company then I would recommend this. If you want inside scoop or details about the music and the inspiration then move along because it's not in this book.
The mystery about who wrote the Back In Black lyrics is an excellent topic that isnt resolved and will never be resolved but having so many perspectives in one book is an excellent aspect of the music to be found in here.
The research done by the author is the most comprehensive I've ever come across in a book about the music industry. The photos that were used are gems. The book leaves no stone un-turned.
It's a long way to the top.
- Reviewed in the United States on April 14, 2015After reading the book based on other reviews, I found it rather disappointing. Lots if information on George, but not that much new about Malcolm and Angus. Interesting discussions about some controversial topics, such as how much Bon Scott may have written for Back in Black.
- Reviewed in the United States on January 28, 2018If you're like me (ardent fan whose teen years were supported by the ultimate soundtrack of ACDC from 78-82), you struggled to reconcile the lean music writing of 83-90, saw a glimmer of newfound hope with Razors Edge, and only kept a curious eye on all later releases and occasionally saying "That's interesting" to a handful of songs since; this book is a must read to recapture why ACDC was such a huge force in music and why it meant so much to your youth and still takes you back when you listen to their early stuff. I've always thought Powerage was their best, and now I know why.
Top reviews from other countries
- pwrightReviewed in the United Kingdom on November 9, 2014
5.0 out of 5 stars Very captivating read and the best serious book about AC/DC
I opened The Youngs (UK edition; I have read original Australian one, but bought the book again because of the updates) the other day and again, I was blown away by the quality and magnetism of the book. It is such a great read for AC/DC and Australian rock buffs like me. Very, very thorough research has been done by the author and interviews with many interesting folks.
There are some quality books on AC/DC out there which I really like, but as has been said before, The Youngs is the best serious book about the band, no doubt about it.
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SchubiReviewed in Germany on October 19, 2019
5.0 out of 5 stars Umtausch.
Die Umtauschaktion hat super geklappt! Bin beeindruckt!
- Sir StevenReviewed in Canada on May 4, 2018
3.0 out of 5 stars Not the same rehash but...
I think the difference between this book and others is the approach to the subject. While the author doesn't exactly rehash the history of the band itself, his focus is on characters who played different roles in the band's rise to fame; Radio personalities, record executives, tour managers, etc. While it is a different insight, I found the author dragged out certain stories in an attempt to connect individuals to the band. Too much time was spent on things like who began playing the band on the radio first and who championed the band at the record company etc. It's good to include such things but it was annoying having it dredged up more than once. Overall the book is ok but it definitely has a feel of an outsider looking in and not really sure what they are seeing, filing in the blanks with stories from others and drawing conclusions based on the same.
- John T ClarkReviewed in Australia on September 1, 2014
4.0 out of 5 stars Four Stars
Brilliant insight into the band and the rock and roll business.
- AndyReviewed in the United Kingdom on May 18, 2023
4.0 out of 5 stars Great book
Tells a great story behind the young brothers