Wednesday (November 12), saw AC/DC kick off their first hometown tour in 10 years, performing at the Melbourne Cricket Ground in Australia. The show – which was a long time coming for fans – proved to ...
Add articles to your saved list and come back to them any time. A decade after they last performed in Australia, AC/DC delivered a rock’n’roll masterclass spearheaded by Angus Young’s virtuosic, ...
AC/DC returned to their home country for the first time in a decade tonight, kicking off the latest leg of their Power Up tour in front of 80,000 fans at the Melbourne Cricket Ground. They celebrated ...
Aussie rock ’n’ roll legends AC/DC have already (thunder)struck lucky Sydneysiders in their first Accor Stadium 2025 show – and now they're about to come back in black to shake another Sydney audience ...
Hundreds of bagpipers in Australia broke a world record on Wednesday by putting on an enormous performance of AC/DC’s “It’s a Long Way to the Top.” Thousands of spectators crammed to see the 374 ...
Update Friday, November 14: Did you happen to feel the ground shake on Wednesday night? No, it wasn't an earthquake – it was just Acca Dacca on stage at the MCG. The Seismology Research Centre ...
The Australian leg of AC/DC‘s Power Up tour kicked off Wednesday evening at the Melbourne Cricket Ground, marking the band’s first live appearance in their home country since 2015. To reward fans for ...
Jo Coghlan does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organization that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their ...
If you purchase an independently reviewed product or service through a link on our website, Rolling Stone may receive an affiliate commission. If you’re looking to catch the band as they swing through ...
Before they head to North and South America for more than 20 stadium shows in 2026, Australian hard rock legends AC/DC are getting things started in their homeland. The band kicked off their Power Up ...
Melbourne was literally thunderstruck last night, as AC/DC’s first Australian show at the MCG didn’t just shake the stadium, it registered on the fkn Richter scale. The Seismology Research Centre ...
CHRISTO VAN EGMOND, AC/DC PROMOTOR: We've got about 300 tonnes of steel for the stage. We've got 28 tonnes of audio. The sound of this concert is as loud as a 747 at full thrust at the end of the ...