AC/DC: Live At Donington
AC/DC: Live At Donington
| 27 October 1992 (USA)
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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.

Reviews
Kattiera Nana

I think this is a new genre that they're all sort of working their way through it and haven't got all the kinks worked out yet but it's a genre that works for me.

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IslandGuru

Who payed the critics

Janis

One of the most extraordinary films you will see this year. Take that as you want.

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Darin

One of the film's great tricks is that, for a time, you think it will go down a rabbit hole of unrealistic glorification.

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roulexe

This is good snapshot of the band in that era, but definitely not the best example of ACDC live.It's entertaining and the band still had plenty of energy, with Brian becoming more of a stage performer - later on of course he became even more comfortable up there.Slade was a fine drummer but regularly played the songs too fast, spoiling the stomping feel somewhat.On that tour Angus deviated strangely to a more distorted sound which was not typical of his previous sound. Subsequently the twin guitars are not quite the classic sound which you can hear on Youtube before or after this era. Brian sounds great, even though his voice sounded quite churned up and ragged in that era, it suited the raw power of the music, and in reality it was his last tour as a real balls-out power singer, though he has certainly showed flashes of that here and there in each tour since. His best live work and quality of voice can be found in the 80s stuff - there's no shame in admitting that.Overall it's great stuff, but the most representative Brian-eras are with Rudd on drums. It's a '7' by their standards but an '8' or '9' compared to what else is out there.

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annaeliese

When you saw the huge crowd, screaming down below the stage, you knew this was gonna be a good show! They rocked long and hard, getting better all the time. AC/DC are the best, but this is showing them in their true colours. A great DVD to get and the tracks on the CD are even better. Just get this, you'll be impressed and rocked.Even though I had to watch this with only half the volume up, it was one of the best live concerts on DVD I've ever seen, apart from Placebo in Paris of course,.I definitely recommend to any AC/DC fan or any lover of heavy metal music, I will give this *****/*****

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eshmo2002

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.

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Son_of_Mansfield

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.

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