AC/DC Rare Songs - Boom Boom video free download


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Duration: 04:10
Uploaded: 2008/10/29

Angus Young & Brian Johnson performed this song at Fun Radio during a radio program in France in 1995 during their promoting of the album Ballbreaker. This version they did was more or less the main riff here together with a mix of lyrics from John Lee Hookers "Boom Boom" and "Dimples".

Enjoy.

Comments

9 years ago

Darrell Rickles

It sounds as if Angus is playing a Strat or a Tele in this recording, which is odd. Very twangy.

9 years ago

Jerry Lee

i love brian voice

9 years ago

Keith Charles

Great cover of John Lee Hooker here by Angus Young and Brian Johnson of AC/DC...nice...AC/DC Rare Songs - Boom Boom

9 years ago

Keith Charles

Angus Young and Brian Johnson playing an old John Lee Hooker classic called Boom Boom Boom (yes, this is where the Black Eyed Peas got this song idea from)....amazing blues riffs on this one...go Angus...AC/DC Rare Songs - Boom Boom

10 years ago

Richard Militzer

johnny lee hooker has a huge smile from this

10 years ago

Harakudoshi904

Angus, have anything to say?Well urmm.. Muchas gracias. I think I'm in the wrong country, heheh.

10 years ago

Romuald Godbillon

acdc a fun radio france ballbreakerpromo

10 years ago

Cloud Strife

well they are blues/rock and roll. just with some hardrock sound guitars and a vocalist with a good range (back then though).

10 years ago

MaggaraMarine

Yeah, I guess so. I have always played the V-IV-I-V thing in the end. Neither of them is "more correct" of course.

10 years ago

Rip Steakface

Huh. Every time I would play blues, it more often than not this progression: I - IV - I - I - IV - IV - I - I - ii - V - I - V. I almost always hear ii - V - I progressions. Maybe we've just been listening to different artists. But yeah, AC/DC almost always use 3 or 4 chords, not arguing that. Oh well, I'm a drummer. I just need to know when the progression repeats or when the phrase ends :P

10 years ago

MaggaraMarine

Standard 12 bar blues only has three chords. You can add the ii chord before the V chord though. But the blues progression I hear the most often being used is I x4 - IV x2 - I x2 - V - IV - I - V (or I when the song ends). This is used in You Shook Me by Led Zeppelin. IV chord in the second bar is also usual - this is used in I Can't Quit You Baby by Led Zeppelin. Also, AC/DC songs mostly use three or four chords in their songs (most usually I-bVII-IV progressions). For example Highway to Hell.

10 years ago

Jakob Methner

wow. ♥

10 years ago

James Hardy

If done properly then it would be like sex.

10 years ago

themegaultradude

Schools days is more Rock 'n' Roll swing...

11 years ago

Vinny D. Littlejohn

music today should have more blues influence, thats whay made the 80s... and the 80s were epic!

11 years ago

southfieldspotter

How dare you forget Ride On!

11 years ago

acdcheaven

John Lee Hooka Guys !!!!! Mckinnon Influenced by Chuck Obviously Long Live Accadacca Guys !! Rock N Roll Will Never,Never Die !!

11 years ago

Paul Barrantes

true! for example "whole lotta rosie" has a bluesy sound! so it's "school days" ACDC got the blues!!

11 years ago

acdc126

too much theory you are loosing me, but I trust you ;)

11 years ago

Rip Steakface

It's a pretty simple matter of music theory. A standard 12 bar blues progression is I-IV-I-I-IV-IV-I-I-II-V-I-V (usually broken up into about 4 to 6 phrases). Obviously, this song uses this sort of progression. Trust me, I'm a jazz musician and music student.

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