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BLACK ICE | 
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| Category: Music
Buy New: $7.71
New (26) Used (7) Collectible (1) from $7.38
Rating: 123 reviews Sales Rank: 187
Media: Audio CD Discs: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2 Dimensions (in): 5.6 x 5 x 0.5
UPC: 886973923825 EAN: 0886973923825 ASIN: B001F2W4Y2
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Album Description Black Ice is the first full-length studio album of all-new material from AC/DC since the release of "Stiff Upper Lip" in 2000. Produced by Brendan O'Brien at the Warehouse Studio in Vancouver, BC, Black Ice premieres 15 new AC/DC compositions and performances including the album's first single, "Rock 'N' Roll Train".
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| Customer Reviews: Read 118 more reviews...
best rock band ever!!!!!! January 4, 2009 Flal (Manhattan) No feminim, cheesy ballads. No politcal stuff jammed down your throat. Just fun hard rock. Powerage will always be my favorite Cd by them, but Black Ice rocks. Fav songs: Rock N Roll Train Big Jack War Machine Smash Grab Stormy May Day She Likes Rock N Roll Money Made Rock N Roll Dream
Awesome Album January 1, 2009 Sandra McDonald (Marin County, CA) This is a great album and a long time coming. Great songs with the unmistakable sound of AC/DC that will make you rock.
BLACK ICE IS RED HOT ! January 1, 2009 Thomas M. Whiteneck I really like this CD more than I thought I would. All the songs are very good and there are 15 at that. I especially like War Machine, Stormy May Day, and the heavily radio-played Rock N' Roll Train.
very good December 28, 2008 Barbara Hiatt (usa) i got the product very fast and in good condition am very satisfy with it
Really solid return from AC/DC December 26, 2008 Craig Clarke (New England) There are few things in this crazy world that you can really depend on, but the sound of an AC/DC song is one of them. Since their beginnings in the early 1970s, their sound has changed very little -- even through a change of frontmen that, in retrospect, was more drastic than it seemed at the time -- except that more modern producers have removed the tinny sound of their early records and replaced it with a deeper one that truly does their music justice. Now, I'm not saying that AC/DC are the best band ever, but they're certainly one of the most consistent, and Black Ice is just one more example of this. Of the fifteen songs on this, their first studio album since 2000's Stiff Upper Lip (and the first to feature lyrics by vocalist Brian Johnson since 1988's Blow Up Your Video), only a couple are not up to the level of their brethren. The rest of the album is a solid lineup of concert anthems, the kind of rock n roll at which the boys from Australia have always excelled. Johnson's comment that "we found out what we were good at, and that was rock n roll" may have been what inspired the group this time around, given that there are three songs on Black Ice with "Rock n Roll" in the title (and one called "Rocking All the Way"), including the first single, "Rock n Roll Train," whose chorus actually says "Runaway Train." (But God forbid someone confuse them with Soul Asylum!) The lyrics have never been the high point on any AC/DC album (except, as stated above, when it comes to their consistency). This time, if anything, they are a bit tamer than usual, with what seems to be much less innuendo (possibly something to do with the album being primarily available through Wal-Mart in the U.S.). But arena-rock songs aren't about intelligent words, anyway, to wit this verse from "Rock n Roll Train": One hot Southern belle Son of a devil A schoolboy spelling bee A schoolgirl with a fantasy Those words don't mean anything, but when Johnson wails them, well, you just want to wail right along with him. Luckily, the musicianship on Black Ice is strong enough to carry the album. Though it's the heavy-metal/hard-rock listenership that most fully embraces them, AC/DC has always been, at its heart, a blues-rock band, and several songs bring this right to the front. Witness the riff on "Decibel" that sounds lifted right from Beale Street, with Johnson surprisingly deft at using his lower register vocals in accompaniment. In fact, most of the second half of Black Ice is saturated in blues rock, and it's so far my favorite portion. Don't get me wrong: I love a good fist-pumping riot as much as the next guy, but there's just something about that white-boy blues that brings it on home for me. There's not enough "Stormy May Day" to go around in my opinion -- Angus uses a slide(!) and reminds me of Led Zeppelin's "In My Time of Dying." (Incidentally, "Skies on Fire" reminds me of another Jimmy Page track from his best solo album, Outrider.) But whatever you think of the band's style, if you're a fan, you'll be enthralled by Black Ice. Even my three-year-old son is already a fan of "the train song" and "Big Jack" (which he thinks is actually about Big Jet from Little Einsteins, and I don't correct him because I think it's cute), so there's another potential fan on the way up. Luckily, the odds are that, by the time he's old enough to pay money for his own albums (in whatever form they're available by then), AC/DC will still be playing the same kind of hard rock grounded by Phil Rudd's journeyman 4/4 beat, Chris Williams's unwavering bass, and Malcolm Young's invisible rhythm -- and I'm really glad they are.
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