Guitar Tricks Insider November / December Issue | Page 28

COVER STORY being in a club at a big show. But that’s a load of bull! You just have to remember you’re on a stage, and you have to entertain. Don’t forget what you’re doing. I was always told if you want to show the people what the guitar is all about, you get out there and show them.” Making his guitar do its thing both onstage and on record has been Angus’ stock in trade in AC/DC for five decades and counting, having discovered his calling when he was a budding teenager. “I didn’t get my hands on an electric guitar until I was 14,” Young reveals. “Just to have one at that time was a big thing. But I was never that patient to play along with records. I was fortunate that, when I was a kid, I could sit down and pick out bits of tunes or a 12-bar blues. It was just there. I don’t know how I did it; I just picked it up. I enjoy any music that I can rock to, as long as I find it exciting. I remember seeing The Who and thinking, ‘If they can do it, so can I.’” Once AC/DC got together in the early ’70s, the band found its footing while playing to many a rough-and-tumble down-under crowd. “There was one night where it came more out of anger than anything. We were playing to a tough audience and trying our hardest, but they were looking at us like dumb cold fish,” Young recalls. “I picked up my guitar and, in sheer frustration, before you knew it, I was all 28 GUITAR TRICKS INSIDER DIGITAL EDITION That merger of professionalism and showmanship was instilled in Angus at an early age by his older brother, the noted record producer/songwriter George Young, who was also a member of The Easybeats and the co-author of “Friday on My Mind,” a monster international hit in 1966. “George was probably the biggest one for saying that,” confirms Young. “He told me when you put your hand in the air, you f-- -in’ mean it. You don’t get up there and look like a weasel — you stick that arm in the air, and you make the guitar do its thing.” over the place. I was on the floor, kicking into the amplifiers, and they responded. The fish comes alive!” Garnering that kind of reaction inspired Young to further evolve his onstage persona into the energetic schoolboy that persists to this day, albeit via much trial and error. “A lot of it came from anger and accidents. I’d fall over a lot, which was pretty easy to do because there was a lot of stuff onstage,” he confirms. “I didn’t have to practice moving since the music has always motivated me. Even when I started playing, my head was always going 100 MPH. It’s like a form of timing. Some people keep time with their feet, but I keep time with my head and my feet.” NOVEMBER / DECEMBER