LOS ANGELES — Through decades, deaths and disasters, AC/DC keeps thundering on.
Forty-seven years along, and with the closest thing possible to their original lineup, the rockers on Friday are releasing "Power Up," their first album in six years.
It's also the first since the 2017 death of Malcolm Young, who founded the band in Sydney, Australia in 1973 with his little brother, Angus. "Power Up" is dedicated to the elder brother and is shot through with his spirit and songwriting.
"We all felt Malcolm around us, he was there. We're not spiritual type people, but, boy, oh boy," lead singer Brian Johnson, 73, told The Associated Press in an interview via Zoom from his home in Sarasota, Florida. "Malcolm was a very strong character in real life, and him passing away wasn't gonna stop that. He was there, everywhere, and I think you can tell it on the record."
All 12 tracks are co-written by Malcolm and Angus Young, selected by the younger Young from a trove of unused songs that piled up during the band's long life.
"Malcolm and myself over the years, whenever we'd come to an album we always walked in with a lot of A-grade songs," the 65-year-old Angus Young said via Zoom from his home in Sydney. "We always had a stack full more left that were all great, great tracks."
Most of the songs came from a fruitful writing period in a long gap between albums from 2000 to 2008, and Angus Young chose those that most evoked his big brother.
"I concentrated on the ones I knew were Mal's favorites," Young said. "It's a fitting project for him. He always liked being simple and direct, so I felt, what better than his music?"