Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The video which accompanied the single, directed by David Mallet, was filmed at London's Brixton Academy on 17 August 1990. The audience members were given free T-shirts with the words "AC/DC – I was Thunderstruck" on the front and the date on the back, and these T-shirts were worn by the entire audience throughout the filming of the video. [7]
In 2005, the music video, directed by Peter Sinclair, Brian Grant, and Jiff Morrison, [1] was released on Family Jewels. The video was shot at their show at the National Exhibition Centre in Birmingham and included fans carrying red cardboard Gibson SG guitars. Author Paul Stenning described the song as the strongest from the album. [2]
Blow Up Your Video is the eleventh studio album by Australian hard rock band AC/DC, released on 1 February 1988. [1] The album was re-released in 2003 as part of the AC/DC Remasters series. Recording
In February 2014, the duo published their rendition of AC/DC's "Thunderstruck" to YouTube. The video depicts the duo playing before a Baroque audience, which soon finds out that the song is anything but classical. The video went viral at the beginning of March, gathering 10 million views in the first two weeks. [29]
The Razors Edge is the twelfth studio album by Australian rock band AC/DC.Released on 24 September 1990, through Albert Productions/CBS Records International in Australasia and Atlantic Records in Europe, it was recorded in 1990 in Little Mountain Sound Studios in Vancouver, Canada, and was mixed and engineered by Mike Fraser and produced by Bruce Fairbairn.
The Blow Up Your Video World Tour was a concert tour played by the hard rock band AC/DC, which had 5 legs spreading over the course of 10 months starting on 1 February 1988 in Perth, Australia, finishing on 13 November 1988 in Inglewood, California.
Thunderstruck may refer to: "Thunderstruck" (song), a 1990 song by AC/DC; Thunderstruck, a 2004 Australian film; Thunderstruck, a 2006 book by Erik Larson;
Axel grew up in Fair Lawn, New Jersey. He graduated from Fair Lawn High School (Class of 2003). [1] He then moved to Manhattan, attending NYU. In 2006, Axel began performing publicly as a solo act. His song "This Is The New Year" became well-known originally when iTunes selected it as a Discovery Download and for its video on YouTube. [2]