Ac Dc Dirty Deeds Done Dirt Cheap Review

Album by Air-conditioning/DC

1976 studio anthology by Air conditioning/DC

Muddied Deeds Done Clay Cheap
In a motel parking lot, various people dressed in clothing for different job roles with their eyes covered with a black bar. A black dog stands behind a veterinarian. The band's name (labeled as "AC/DC") is on the top in pink text with the album title placed in a white box with black text.

International cover, designed by Hipgnosis

Studio anthology by

Air-conditioning/DC

Released twenty September 1976
Recorded December 1975 – March 1976
Studio Albert, Sydney
Genre
  • Hard rock
  • blues rock
  • rock and roll
Length 42:24 (Australia)
39:59 (International)
Characterization Albert
Producer
  • Harry Vanda
  • George Young
Air-conditioning/DC chronology
High Voltage
(1976)
Dirty Deeds Done Dirt Cheap
(1976)
Let There Be Stone
(1977)
Culling cover art
Original Australian cover

Original Australian cover

Singles from Dirty Deeds Done Dirt Inexpensive
  1. "Jailbreak"
    Released: fourteen June 1976 (Aus)
  2. "Dingy Deeds Done Dirt Cheap"
    Released: 5 October 1976 (Aus)

Dirty Deeds Done Clay Cheap is the third studio album past Australian hard rock band Air-conditioning/DC, originally released just in Europe and Australia in 1976. The album was not released in the United states of america until 1981, more than one year later pb vocaliser Bon Scott's decease.

Background [edit]

Air conditioning/DC began recording Muddied Deeds Washed Dirt Cheap in December 1975 at Albert Studios with Harry Vanda and George Immature (elder brother of guitarists Malcolm and Angus) producing. In Apr 1976, the ring went on their first tour of the UK, where "It'due south a Long Way to the Summit (If You Wanna Rock 'due north' Roll)" was released as a single. According to the book AC/DC: Maximum Rock & Roll, Vanda and Young travelled to the U.k. to record several songs with the band at Vineland Studios for a scheduled EP, which was eventually scrapped. "Carry Me Home" later appeared in 1977 as a B-side to Canis familiaris Eat Domestic dog, while "Dirty Eyes" remained unreleased and was later reworked into "Whole Lotta Rosie" for 1977's Let There Exist Rock. Simply "Love at First Feel" was used for Dirty Deeds, but not for the Australian release. A vocal titled "I'm a Rebel" was recorded at Maschener Studios equally well, with music and lyrics written by another elder Young brother, Alex Immature.[i] [2] This song was never released by Air conditioning/DC, and remains in Albert Productions' vaults. German band Take later released it every bit a unmarried, and named their second album after it. High Voltage was released in the Usa in 1976. Notwithstanding, hampered past visa problems and a lack of interest from Atlantic Records in the U.s., the band returned to Australia to end their third album.

Also according to AC/DC: Maximum Rock & Curlicue, years later, Stephen King convinced the band to exercise the soundtrack for his motion-picture show Maximum Overdrive (the soundtrack released as Who Made Who) by putting "Ain't No Fun" on the record player and singing forth to the entire song line-for-line in club to prove how much of a fan he was of their music.[ citation needed ]

Composition [edit]

The title track would become i of the band'southward most famous songs. Its narrator invites people experiencing problems to either phone call him on 36-24-36, an actual phone number in Commonwealth of australia in the 1960s (so properly formatted every bit FM 2436 - 36 translated to FM on the rotary punch or keypad), or visit him at his home, at which indicate he will perform assorted unsavoury acts to resolve said problems. Situations in which he offers help include those involving lewd high schoolhouse headmasters, and pregnant others who are either adulterous or who persistently discover fault with their partners. The term "Muddied Deeds Done Dirt Inexpensive" is an homage to the cartoon Beany and Cecil, which Angus watched when he was a child. One of the cartoon's characters was named Quack John, and carried a concern card that read, "Dingy deeds done dirt cheap. Special rates for Sundays and holidays." On the Live on Donington DVD, Malcolm and Angus explained that the concept of the album was to base it as a Bogartian mystery scenario. This was also backed by author Dave Rubin, who stated in his book Inside Rock Guitar: Four Decades of the Greatest Electric Rock Guitarists that Bogart'due south movies served equally the ground for the album.[3]

In 1981, later the album was released in the U.South., Norman and Marilyn White of Libertyville, Illinois filed a $250,000 lawsuit in Lake County, Illinois Circuit Courtroom against Atlantic Records and its distributors because, they alleged, their telephone number was included in the song, resulting in hundreds of prank phone calls. Their chaser told the Chicago Tribune that the vocal's 36-24-36 digits were followed by what to his clients sounded like an "8", thus creating the couple's phone number.[4]

Some other fan-favorite from the album is "Ride On". Atypically for an Air-conditioning/DC song, it has a pitiful, slow blues feel and features Bon Scott'due south reflective lyrics and restrained, soulful commitment. The lyrics business organisation a man ruminating on the mistakes he has made in a human relationship while drinking. It has frequently been cited every bit i of AC/DC's best songs.[five] [6] [7] The track is too significant for Angus Young'due south guitar solo. Air-conditioning/DC biographer Murray Engleheart observes in his 2006 ring memoir: "Overall, Dirty Deeds Washed Dirt Cheap was rougher than T.North.T. and highlighted the difficulties of recording between increasingly demanding touring commitments. Songs similar 'Ain't No Fun,' 'RIP,' 'Jailbreak,' and peculiarly the solitary resignation of 'Ride On,' were nigh character studies of Bon and had a sense of impatience...breaking complimentary and just evidently loneliness." "Ride On" was covered by the French band Trust on their self-titled 1979 debut album, after they supported Ac/DC alive in Paris in the autumn of 1978. Scott jammed the song with Trust at Scorpio Sound Studios in London on thirteen February 1980, six days before his death in that metropolis. A recording of this later surfaced on the Bon Scott Forever Volume 1 bootleg. In an interview with Anthony O'Grady of RAM in Baronial 1976, Scott stated that "Ride On" was "about a guy who gets pissed around by chicks...can't find what he wants." In the aforementioned 1976 RAM interview, Scott revealed that "Pig" was about a sexual run into with a virgin. In concert, Scott would ofttimes introduce "Problem Kid" every bit being nearly Angus. "Ain't No Fun (Waiting 'Round to exist a Millionaire)" is ane of the few Air conditioning/DC songs that has cursing, with Scott shouting on the fade, "Hey Howard, how ya doin' friend, my adjacent door neighbour? Oh yep, get your fuckin' jumbo jet off my airport!" The rhythm of "In that location's Gonna Be Some Rockin'" is very similar to that of "The 7th Son" by Willie Dixon.

International releases [edit]

A modified international edition was released on Atlantic on 17 December 1976, although the characterization was unhappy with its vocals and production. (According to bassist Marking Evans, band managing director Michael Browning told him he assumed Bon Scott would be fired as a outcome.)[viii] The band even teetered on the brink of existence dropped. "The Atlantic A&R department [in the U.s.a.] said, 'Nosotros're sorry, but this album really doesn't make information technology,'" recalled Phil Carson, who had signed the ring. "'We're not gonna put it out and nosotros're dropping the band'… Then I went to [Atlantic executive] Nesuhi (Ertegun) and showed him the sales figures that we'd got for High Voltage. They were not awe-inspiring but, considering we'd just paid $25,000 for the album, this was not and so bad… Nesuhi backed me upwardly and I re-signed the band at that point. I managed to claw information technology back in. Thank God."[9]

As biographer Murray Engleheart observes in his book AC/DC: Maximum Stone & Roll, the band had non even toured the States notwithstanding, a market the ring longed to conquer:

The tough rock acts only got what little airwave attending they did because they'd congenital up a fanbase through years on the route. AC/DC hadn't had the opportunity to marshal troops through touring the U.S., and at the time there was no way something equally raw and gritty as Dirty Deeds was going to arrive onto American radio playlists by itself. It was a brutally simple grab-22...Americans were said to have trouble understanding Bon, and if the people working with the band couldn't make out the lyrics, how was his voice going to work on the all-important U.S. radio networks?

Post-obit the American success of Highway to Hell in tardily 1979, copies of the album began to appear equally imports in the US. Some of these were the original Australian edition on Albert Productions; however, Atlantic also pressed the international version in Australia, and many of these were also exported to the US. Strong demand for both versions (in the wake of the even greater success of Dorsum in Black) led the The states division of Atlantic to finally qualify an official US release in March 1981. It went direct to No. 3 on the Billboard album charts.

However, the release was likewise poorly timed, because that Ac/DC had successfully reinvented itself with a new singer, Brian Johnson. The band was working on a new album, which would ultimately become For Those Near to Rock We Salute Yous, released later that same year; the The states release of Dirty Deeds was widely seen as damaging the momentum for that album, which information technology outsold. The band was forced to add together songs from Dirty Deeds to its setlist on its subsequent tour, likewise taking the focus away from their new album.

In the book The Youngs: The Brothers Who Built Air-conditioning/DC, author Jesse Fink quotes Phil Carson as saying that the release of Muddy Deeds was "ane of the almost crass decisions always fabricated past a record-company executive",[10] blaming A&R man Doug Morris and his New York cohorts:

At the fourth dimension, Doug's statement was purely financial. Back in Blackness had already sold over five million copies. Because of those numbers, Doug told me Muddied Deeds would sell at least ii 1000000. I told him he was right about that, merely that information technology would also create a new sales plateau for Air conditioning/DC...God knows how many albums For Those Well-nigh to Rock would take sold had Doug waited for that to come up out.[10]

The international release had meaning variations from the original anthology. "Jailbreak" (which had preceded the LP's release in Australia and the United kingdom) and "R.I.P. (Rock in Peace)" were jettisoned in favor of "Rocker" (from the 1975 Australian album T.N.T.) and "Beloved at Kickoff Feel". "Jailbreak" did non see a release in the United States, Canada, and Japan until October 1984 as function of the international '74 Jailbreak EP. A promo-only single, with "Show Business" every bit its B-side, was released to radio stations in the United states at the time. "Honey at First Feel" is one of only two tracks from international AC/DC albums non to be available on the band's Australian albums (the other is "Common cold Hearted Human", released on European pressings of Powerage); yet, "Love at First Experience" was released in Commonwealth of australia as a single in January 1977, with "Problem Child" equally its B-side, which peaked in the Kent Music Study Singles Chart Summit 100.[11] The international release of Dirty Deeds likewise contains "Big Balls", one of the band's nearly infamous compositions, that finds Scott, a deceptively clever lyricist, using double entendres by using ballroom and costume parties to obviously reference his ain testicles. Air conditioning/DC had mined this territory before on "The Jack" and would again later on on songs like "Given the Dog a Bone", just "Big Balls" could exist their funniest attempt at sexual allusion, although the song was controversial in its twenty-four hour period and drew the ire of some critics who mistook the band's sense of humour for crude perversity. Dirty Deeds Done Dirt Cheap also led to more AC/DC appearances on Australia's Countdown music programme, post-obit those in support of High Voltage and T.N.T. These appearances included a live performance of the album'south title track, every bit well as a music video for "Jailbreak".[12]

Two songs on the international album were edited from the full-length versions on the original Australian album. The full-length "Muddy Deeds Washed Clay Cheap" has the title of the song chanted iv times, starting at 3:09, merely on the edited version the chant is heard only twice. "Ain't No Fun (Waiting Round to Be a Millionaire)" lasted 7:29 on the Australian album only was faded out early to 6:57 on the international version. This means they trim off the Chuck Berry licks and championship chanting to the cease; still, both these total-length versions were restored on the 1994 Atco Records remastered CD of the international album. The most recent 2003 CD edition by Epic Records goes back to the edited versions, equally originally on the 1976 and 1981 international vinyl editions. The uncut versions of both songs were released on the 2009 box set Backtracks. On the original version of "Rocker", included on the Australian T.N.T. album, the song lasts 2:55 and cuts out abruptly as the guitar riff hits its meridian. Conversely, all international editions of the "Dirty Deeds Done Dirt Cheap" album take a slightly shorter version where the vocal fades out at ii:50 earlier the cut. "Hog" appears to be longer past thirteen seconds on the international version; this is due to it having a bumper of silence at the end, as it is the final track on the tape. "Ride On" has a four-second difference (longer on the international version) which appears to exist from a minor speed issue, although the concluding guitar slide tin can be heard amend on the shorter Australian version.

Commercial performance and reception [edit]

Professional ratings
Review scores
Source Rating
AllMusic [14]
Blender [15]
Christgau'due south Record Guide C+[16]
Classic Rock [17]
The Encyclopedia of Popular Music [18]
Rolling Stone [xix]
Spin Alternative Tape Guide 6/10[20]

Muddy Deeds Done Dirt Inexpensive has been certified 6x platinum both in Australia and in the US, selling at least vi million copies, becoming the 3rd-highest-selling album by Air conditioning/DC in the The states later Highway to Hell (7x platinum) and Back in Black (25x platinum). Allmusic gives the album five out of five stars and proclaims "it captured the seething malevolence of Bon Scott...encouraged by the maniacal riffs of Angus and Malcolm Young" and that there was a "real sense of danger to this record."[21] Greg Kot of Rolling Stone only gives the album iii out of five stars, only states: "The guitars of brothers Angus and Malcolm Young bawl at each other, Phil Rudd swings the beat even as he's pulverizing his kick pulsate, and Scott brings the raunch 'north' wail. The subject matter is standard-issue stone rebellion; Scott pauses only in one case to briefly contemplate the consequences of his nighttime stalking in 'Ride On.'"

Track listing [edit]

Australian [edit]

All tracks are written by Angus Immature, Malcolm Young, Bon Scott.

Side 1
No. Title Length
1. "Dirty Deeds Done Dirt Cheap" 4:12
ii. "Ain't No Fun (Waiting 'Round to Exist a Millionaire)" 7:31
3. "There'due south Gonna Be Some Rockin'" iii:18
iv. "Trouble Kid" 5:47
Side two
No. Title Length
1. "Hog" 5:15
two. "Large Balls" ii:38
3. "R.I.P. (Rock in Peace)" 3:35
4. "Ride On" 5:54
v. "Jailbreak" iv:41

International [edit]

All tracks are written by Angus Immature, Malcolm Young, Bon Scott.

Side one
No. Title Length
1. "Dirty Deeds Washed Dirt Inexpensive" 3:52
2. "Love at First Experience" 3:13
3. "Large Balls" 2:38
four. "Rocker" ii:52
5. "Problem Child" 5:47
Side two
No. Title Length
1. "There's Gonna Exist Some Rockin'" iii:18
2. "Ain't No Fun (Waiting 'Round to Exist a Millionaire)" 6:58
3. "Ride On" v:54
four. "Squealer" 5:15
  • "Dingy Deeds Washed Dirt Cheap" was shortened from its original length on the Australian version of the album for the international release.
  • "Beloved at Kickoff Experience" was a new rails not previously bachelor in Commonwealth of australia. It was later released there as a single.
  • "Big Balls" faded out on the original international LP release.
  • "Rocker" originally appeared on the Australian T.N.T. in a slightly longer version without the fade out.
  • "Trouble Child" was included on the international release in its original Australian grade, whereas the international version of Permit In that location Be Rock contained a shortened version of the song without the extended catastrophe.
  • "Own't No Fun (Waiting Round to Be a Millionaire)" was also shortened from its original length on the Australian version of the anthology for the international release.

The 1994 remastered international Atco CD release of the album included the full length Australian versions of "Dirty Deeds Done Clay Inexpensive", "Big Balls", "Rocker", and "Ain't No Fun (Waiting Round to Be a Millionaire)". They were later reverted to the shortened versions for the 2003 Epic remastered versions of the album with "Big Assurance" remaining in its longer version. The 2009 boxed set Backtracks Deluxe Edition featured the total-length original Australian versions of "Dirty Deeds Washed Dirt Cheap" and "Own't No Fun (Waiting Round to Be a Millionaire)", but not "Rocker", which is nonetheless billed as the original Australian version.

Personnel [edit]

Air conditioning/DC

  • Bon Scott – atomic number 82 vocals
  • Angus Young – lead guitar
  • Malcolm Young – rhythm guitar, backing vocals
  • Marking Evans – bass guitar
  • Phil Rudd – drums

Product

  • George Young – production, bass guitar on track 3[22]
  • Harry Vanda - production

Charts [edit]

Weekly charts [edit]

Year-stop charts [edit]

Certifications [edit]

References [edit]

  1. ^ Air-conditioning/DC crabsodyinblue.com Archived 27 September 2011 at the Wayback Car
  2. ^ NO NONSENSE Air conditioning/DC – I'M A REBEL
  3. ^ Rubin, Dave (November 2015). Inside Rock Guitar: Four Decades of the Greatest Electric Rock Guitarists. ISBN9781495056390.
  4. ^ Hirsley, Michael (10 October 1981). "'Muddied Deeds' bring suit". Chicago Tribune. p. W3.
  5. ^ "Peak ten Bon Scott Air conditioning/DC Songs".
  6. ^ "Australian anthems: AC/DC – Information technology'due south a Long Way to the Top (If Yous Wanna Rock'north'Roll)". TheGuardian.com. 25 March 2014.
  7. ^ "Readers' Poll: The 10 Best Ac/DC Songs". Rolling Rock. 15 October 2014.
  8. ^ Marker Evans Discusses Life In and Out of Ac/DC http://ultimateclassicrock.com/air-conditioning-dc-mark-evans-interview/
  9. ^ Wall, Mick (May 2012). "Permit there be light! Let there exist audio! Let there exist stone!". Classic Rock #170. p. 36.
  10. ^ a b Fink, Jesse (2013). The Youngs: The Brothers Who Built Ac/DC. Australia: Ebury. p. 126. ISBN9781742759791.
  11. ^ Kent, David (1993). Australian Chart Book 1970–1992. St Ives, NSW: Australian Chart Book Ltd. ISBN0-646-11917-half-dozen. Notation: Used for Australian singles and albums charting from 1974 until Australian Recording Industry Clan (ARIA) created their ain charts in mid-1988. In 1992, Kent back-calculated nautical chart positions for the period 1970–1974.
  12. ^ Video Footage and Liner Notes, Family Jewels two-Disc DVD Set 2005
  13. ^ Weber, Barry. "Muddied Deeds Washed Dirt Cheap". AllMusic. Retrieved 29 Nov 2009.
  14. ^ Twist, Carlo. "Muddy Deeds Done Dirt Cheap". Blender. Archived from the original on 13 May 2009. Retrieved half-dozen August 2009.
  15. ^ Christgau, Robert (1990). "A". Christgau's Record Guide: The '80s. Pantheon Books. ISBN0-679-73015-X . Retrieved 16 August 2020 – via robertchristgau.com.
  16. ^ Rock, Archetype (21 Baronial 2017). "Air-conditioning/DC Dirty Deeds Done Dirt Inexpensive Anthology Review". Loudersound. Retrieved 3 October 2019.
  17. ^ Larkin, Colin (2007). The Encyclopedia of Popular Music (5th Curtailed ed.). United Kingdom: Omnibus Press. p. 34. ISBN978-1-84609-856-7.
  18. ^ Kot, Greg (25 February 2003). "Dirty Deeds Done Clay Inexpensive". Rolling Rock . Retrieved 29 Nov 2009.
  19. ^ Weisbard, Eric; Marks, Craig (1995). Spin Culling Record Guide. Vintage Books. ISBN1841955515.
  20. ^ Erlewine, Stephen Thomas. "Dirty Deeds Washed Dirt Inexpensive (International Version)". Allmusic. Retrieved 29 Nov 2009.
  21. ^ Engleheart, Murray & Arnaud Durieux (2006). Air-conditioning/DC: Maximum Rock N Curlicue. p. 142. ISBN0-7322-8383-3.
  22. ^ Kent, David (1993). Australian Nautical chart Book 1970–1992 (illustrated ed.). St Ives, North.S.W.: Australian Chart Book. p. 11. ISBN0-646-11917-6.
  23. ^ "Top 100 Metal Albums of 2002". Jam!. Archived from the original on 12 August 2004. Retrieved 23 March 2022.
  24. ^ "ARIA Charts – Accreditations – 2013 Albums" (PDF). Australian Recording Industry Clan.
  25. ^ "Gilt-/Platin-Datenbank (AC/DC;'Dirty Deeds Done Dirt Cheap')" (in German). Bundesverband Musikindustrie.
  26. ^ Salaverrie, Fernando (September 2005). Sólo éxitos: año a año, 1959–2002 (PDF) (in Spanish) (1st ed.). Madrid: Fundación Autor/SGAE. p. 953. ISBN84-8048-639-2 . Retrieved 23 August 2019.
  27. ^ "The Official Swiss Charts and Music Community: Awards (Air-conditioning/DC;'Muddy Deeds Done Dirt Inexpensive')". IFPI Switzerland. Hung Medien.
  28. ^ "British album certifications – Ac/DC – Dirty Deeds Done Dirt Cheap". British Phonographic Manufacture. Retrieved 19 January 2022.
  29. ^ "American album certifications – AC/DC – Dirty Deeds Done Dirt Cheap". Recording Industry Clan of America.

External links [edit]

  • Dingy Deeds Done Dirt Cheap at Discogs (list of releases)
  • Lyrics on Ac/DC'south official website

larkinscaughts.blogspot.com

Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dirty_Deeds_Done_Dirt_Cheap

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