
On this day, 45 ago, The Voice That Defined AC/DC left this world! (RIP)
Remembering Bon Scott: The Voice That Defined AC/DC
On February 19, 1980, 45 ago, the rock world lost one of its most charismatic frontmen—Bon Scott, the legendary lead singer of AC/DC. At just 33 years old, Scott’s untimely passing in London shocked fans and left a void in the band that seemed impossible to fill. Known for his raspy vocals, mischievous grin, and wild onstage energy, Scott embodied the rebellious spirit of rock ‘n’ roll like few others.
Born in Scotland in 1946 before moving to Australia, Scott joined AC/DC in 1974, bringing with him a raw, bluesy voice and a devil-may-care attitude. His tenure with the band saw the release of iconic albums such as High Voltage (1975), Let There Be Rock (1977), Powerage (1978), and the groundbreaking Highway to Hell (1979). Songs like T.N.T., Dirty Deeds Done Dirt Cheap, and Highway to Hell remain timeless rock anthems, fueled by Scott’s distinctive growl and irreverent lyrics.
On the night of his death, Scott was found unresponsive in a car after a night of heavy drinking. Though his passing was a tragic loss, his legacy lives on. Just months later, AC/DC honored him by pushing forward with Back in Black—one of the best-selling albums in history.
Bon Scott’s impact on rock music is immeasurable. His rebellious spirit and electric stage presence continue to inspire musicians and fans alike. Over four decades later, his voice still echoes through speakers worldwide, proving that true rock legends never die.
On the 18th-of February 1977 The Damned released their debut album ‘Damned, Damned, Damned’. The most important album of the late seventies punk movement, though when it comes to The Damned they are the architects of the revolution, what punk was and the direction it was heading.
Indeed, with The Damned there was a lot of firsts, they were the first band from the United Kingdom to release and chart a punk single in ‘New Rose’ in October 1976. The first UK punk band to tour America and play the blank generations ground-zero in New York’s CBGB’s. But it is that album ‘Damned, Damned, Damned’ which is the true-milestone, it was the first album released by a UK band from the surge of punk. Eight months before The Sex Pistols released ‘Never Mind The Bollocks..”, though a more fully formed debut than the Pistols, and released while The Clash were only starting to record their self-titled debut.
Without doubt both the influence and quality contained with ‘Damned, Damned, Damned’ made this the most important album release of the nineteen-seventies.
Produced by the Stiff Records maestro-Nick Lowe (Elvis Costello, Wreckless Eric), this was old-school rock and roll fused with teenage angst and layered with escapism, atomic art aimed at the heart of the British establishment and the pretentious state with the rock music circus of the day.
Raw-energy, the essential ingredient injected into the albums twelve-tracks by Dave Vanian, Brian James(London SS), Captain Sensible, and drummer Rat Scabies. Opening with the single-‘Neat Neat Neat’, the incendiary slice of punk, released simultaneously with the album. And closing with the nod to their heroes, a cover of The Stooges ‘1970’-renamed ‘I Feel Alright’, the adventure The Damned brings the listener on is one which resonates strongly within modern society today.
The bulk of the songwriting for the release was done by guitarist Brian James, the man who many feel responsible for punk, although after the follow-up-‘Music For Pleasues’ this original incarnation would break up as Jones departed towards the end of seventy-seven. This makes ‘Damned, Damned, Damned’ that bit more special as it the original sound captured of a band hungry and striving forward.
The only moment the band slow down is the terrifying-'Feel The Pain', the rest is an all-out attack on the senses as James is turning the guitar-sound into a noise-generator than an instrument. Tracks like- 'Stab Your Back’ is perhaps too moronic a track for even The Ramones, the collection is still the finest time-capsule from a moment in time where music had possibilities regardless of how it was executed.
New Rose (lyrics);
Is she really going out with him?
Ah!
I got a feeling inside of me
It's kind of strange like a stormy sea
I don't know why, I don't know why
I guess these things have got to be
I gotta new rose, I got it good
Guess I knew that I always would
I can't stop to mess around
I got a brand new rose in town
See the sun, see the sun, it shines
Don't get too close or it'll burn your eyes
Don't you run away that way
You can come back another day
I got a new rose, I got it good
Guess I knew that I always would
I can't stop to mess around
I got a brand new rose in town
I never thought this could happen to me
I feel strange, why should it be?
I don't deserve somebody this great, oh, oh
I'd better go or it'll be too late
Ah!
I got a feeling inside of me
It's kind of strange like a stormy sea
I don't know why, I don't know why
I guess these things have got to be
I got a new rose, I got her good
Guess I knew that I always would
I can't stop to mess around
I got a brand new rose in town, uh
Oh!
Na-na-no!
The Damned (Track List; Original 1977 LP)
Neat, Neat, Neat
Fan Club
I Fall
Born to Kill
Stab Your Back
Feel the Pain
New Rose
Fish
See Her Tonight
1 of the 2
So Messed Up
I Feel Alright
-All tracks written by Brian James, except ‘Stab Your Back’ and ‘I Feel Alright’.
[Kevin Burke-Feb 2019]
'Animositisomina' is the eighth studio album by American industrial rock band Ministry, released on February 18, 2003, that's XXXYEARS ago! It marks a return to the band’s classic industrial-metal sound following the more experimental and groove-oriented albums of the late 1990s. The album’s title is a palindrome of "animosity" and "anima," reflecting themes of internal struggle, aggression, and personal demons.
This was the final album to feature bassist and longtime collaborator Paul Barker, whose departure marked the end of an era for Ministry. The record is dark, heavy, and raw, blending distorted guitars, mechanical drum loops, and Al Jourgensen’s signature snarling vocals. Tracks like 'Animosity', 'Unsung', and 'Piss' deliver punishing riffs and politically charged lyrics, while 'Leper' and 'The Light Pours Out of Me' (a cover of Magazine’s post-punk classic) add depth to the album’s sonic assault.
Though 'Animositisomina' was not a commercial success, it is often regarded as an underrated gem in Ministry’s catalog, bridging the gap between their 1990s output and their later Bush-era politically driven albums like 'Houses of the Molé' (2004). The album remains a testament to Ministry’s uncompromising intensity and their ability to evolve within the industrial metal genre.
DISCOGS

Today, exactly 22 years ago, American Industrial Metal band Ministry released Animositisomina!
Today, exactly 22 years ago, American Industrial Metal band Ministry released their eighth studio album Animositisomina (18.02.2003). It was the last Ministry album to feature Al Jourgensen’s longtime partner in crime and bass-player / composer / producer Paul Barker, ending the Luxa/Pan production era. Later, Jourgensen would reveal in an interview that this is one of his least-favourite Ministry albums saying “it was no fun to make” as he was forced to quit his heroin habits during the recording sessions.
Animositisomina Tracklist:
Animosity
Unsung
Piss
Lockbox
Broken
The Light Pours Out Of Me
Shove
Impossible
Stolen
Leper
On February 17, 2014, Bob Casale died at the age of 61, in Los Angeles, California, due to heart failure. As with most musicians their legacy is both the influence and the music they leave behind, in the case of Casale what he accomplished with Devo is astounding.
The debut full-length album by Devo-“Q: Are We Not Men? A: We Are Devo!” broke into the UK charts reaching a high of number-twelve, that set the chain reaction of legend.
Although released to mixed reviews, since then Rolling Stone has listed in amongst the 500 Greatest Albums of All Time, it is also listed in the book 1001 Albums You Must Hear Before You Die-for a reason. It is the punk-electronic crossover, somewhere balancing between all-out rage and novelty recording. Produced by Brian Eno and David Bowie on the back of their experimental Berlin-trilogy, Devo became the perfect project.
“This is the band of the future”-David Bowie on Devo.
The strangest album-title comes from the lead single, released this month in 1978-“Jocko Homo" introduced the call-and-response "Are we not men?-We are Devo!". Indeed that single charted in the UK’s top-100.
“Q: Are We Not Men? A: We Are Devo!” broke down barriers as it reflected perfectly the state of rock-music. The death of glam, the cliches which were already falling into the punk movement and the heavyweight stadium acts who played for the money and not the audience is meshed into every inch of the album. It flung back the pretentious notions of the old-guard with a cover of The Rolling Stones “Satisfaction”, became spokespeople for the hippy-drug generation with “Too Much Paranoias”. In time Devo could be perceived as journalists, highlighting their perception of what the music business had become.
Bob Casale was intricate in the Devo sound, providing back vocals, keyboards and that sixties-based rhythm guitar sound. Though his later years was spent in the field of soundtracks to movies such as - Four Rooms, Rushmore and The Royal Tenenbaums, the past would always reach for him in the form of reunion shows from 1996 until 2007.
Along with bands like Kraftwerk, Talking Heads, and Pere Ubu, Devo hailed a new era of electronic based compositions that set the trajectory for much of modern music. Looking deep with the modern framework of music points directly in the sound of LCD Soundsystem, Radiohead, even in Arcade Fire, you frequently find strong traces of Devo.
[KB]