AC/DC Let There Be Rock

Carry Me Home by AC/DC: Great B-Sides

It’s a long way to the top (if you wanna rock ‘n’ roll), and Australian hard rock band AC/DC spent much of the 1970s building their profile. They cracked the big time with 1979’s Highway to Hell, which peaked at #17 on the US charts after none of their previous records had made the top 100. As success beckoned, tragedy struck – vocalist Bon Scott passed out in a car on his way home from a night of carousing and was pronounced dead the next evening.

AC/DC hadn’t yet reached their commercial zenith when they recorded 1977’s Let There Be Rock, but it’s one of their most beloved albums. ‘Carry Me Home’ was a b-side from the era; initially released on the flip side to the Australian single of ‘Dog Eat Dog’, it was extremely rare until it was included on the 2000 compilation Backtracks.

‘Carry Me Home’ suits the b-side format – it’s a good song, but it’s looser than AC/DC’s usual taut riffing. This impression is amplified by Scott’s theatrical vocal – on a song about a night of drinking, his vocal becomes more slurred over the course of the song.

Distubingly, ‘Carry Me Home’ foretells the story of Scott’s 1980 demise. Recorded in 1976, it’s the story of a night of drinking – midway through, Scott sings “I’m bleary eyed and you’re waiting for the sunshine to come and kill me”. The song culminates with the line “And you’re getting up and leaving, you think I’m gonna drown”. This mirrors Scott’s conjectured cause of death as pulmonary aspiration of vomit; asphyxiating on vomit has been compared to drowning. Scott passed away after he was left in a car overnight – things may have worked out better if he’d actually been carried home.

AC/DC considered breaking up after losing Scott, but Scott’s parents encouraged them to continue and they carried on with Brian Johnson on lead vocals. The group enjoyed huge success with Johnson’s debut – 1980’s Back in Black was a sales phenomenon that went 22x platinum in the US. In hindsight, however, Bon Scott records like Let There Be Rock and Powerage are generally reckoned as among the band’s best.

Read More

16 Comments

  1. Good tune with a rather creepy background story.
    Bon Scott was a beast of a vocalist. Interestingly, AC/DC weren’t love at first sight when I first heard of them. I guess it must have been ‘Highway to Hell’, which I now view as one of the best ’70s rock songs with one of the ultimate guitar riffs.
    Oh, well, I was a teenager back then! 🙂

  2. Great call on the song foreshadowing Scott’s demise! Like Mikey, I got this due to Backtracks.
    Powerage is my fav Bon album while Flick of the Switch would have to be my fav Jonno album.
    Great post!

  3. I really admire them a lot. To be able to use three chords and come up with those great riffs over and over. They are hard rock while being catchy…
    I’ve never heard this one before…it didn’t disappoint. Not many bands can lose their lead singer and carry on…not to mention be more successful.

  4. Let There Be Rock was the first ACDC album I got after Highway to Hell and Back in Black. Great album and this song being on it might have made it better.

Leave a Reply

Read about the discographies of musical acts from the 1960s to the present day. Browse this site's review archives or enjoy these random selections:

More review pages

Steely Dan Album Reviews

Steely Dan were the quiet achievers of the 1970s, recording...

Vanessa Carlton Album Reviews

Vanessa Carlton is best known for the 2002 hit ‘A...

Crosby, Stills & Nash Album Reviews

David Crosby, Stephen Stills, and Graham Nash all started their...
Crosby, Stills & Nash 1969 Debut

Josh Rouse Album Reviews

Nebraskan-born singer-songwriter Josh Rouse grew up inspired by British bands...

The Weather Station Album Reviews

Tamara Lindeman, also known as Tamara Hope, was a notable...

Richard Dawson Album Reviews

Newcastle Upon Tyne’s errant folkie Richard Dawson is prolific, releasing...

I add new blog posts to this website every week. Browse the archives or enjoy these random selections:

More blog posts

The 10 Best Songs by The New Pornographers

Canadian power pop band The New Pornographers are often described...

10 Best Hüsker Dü Songs

Hüsker Dü are among the embarrassment of riches to emerge...
Husker Du Warehouse Songs and Stories

Child of the Moon by The Rolling Stones: Great B-Sides

In 1967, The Rolling Stones followed The Beatles into baroque...
Beggars Banquet The Rolling Stones

Yes Albums Ranked from Worst to Best

Progressive rock behemoths Yes emerged from London in the late 1960s. Starting...
Yes Tales from Topographic Oceans

10 Best Echo & the Bunnymen Songs

Liverpool’s second-most famous band, Echo & the Bunnymen arrived in...

Celebrate the News by The Beach Boys: Great B-Sides

The Beach Boys spent the first half of the 1960s...
The Beach Boys 20 20

Subscribe

Subscribe to receive new posts from Aphoristic Album Reviews.