Malcolm Young, AC/DC Guitarist and Co-Founder, Dead at 64
He was not on the list.
Malcolm Young, guitarist and co-founder of AC/DC, died
Saturday at the age of 64. Young had been suffering with dementia for the past
three years, an illness that forced his retirement from the Rock and Roll Hall
of Fame-inducted band he founded with his brother Angus Young in 1973.
"Today it is with deep heartfelt sadness that AC/DC has
to announce the passing of Malcolm Young," AC/DC wrote in a statement.
"Malcolm, along with Angus, was the founder and creator
of AC/DC. With enormous dedication and commitment he was the driving force
behind the band. As a guitarist, songwriter and visionary he was a
perfectionist and a unique man. He always stuck to his guns and did and said
exactly what he wanted. He took great pride in all that he endeavored. His
loyalty to the fans was unsurpassed."
Angus Young added, "As his brother it is hard to
express in words what he has meant to me during my life, the bond we had was
unique and very special. He leaves behind an enormous legacy that will live on
forever. Malcolm, job well done."
The Young brothers lost their older brother George Young,
the Easybeats guitarist and AC/DC's longtime producer, in October at the age of
70.
In an additional statement from Malcolm Young's family, the
band said that Malcolm Young died peacefully Saturday with his family by his
side.
"Renowned for his musical prowess, Malcolm was a
songwriter, guitarist, performer, producer and visionary who inspired
many," the statement said. "From the outset, he knew what he wanted
to achieve and, along with his younger brother, took to the world stage giving
their all at every show. Nothing less would do for their fans."
As rhythm guitarist for the legendary rock band, Malcolm
Young served as an indispensable foil to Angus Young's arena-stuffing riffs.
After forming AC/DC in 1973, the Young brothers would be credited as co-writers
on every song the band recorded from their 1975 debut High Voltage through
2014's Rock or Bust. That final album marked AC/DC's first without Malcolm, who
announced in September 2014 that he would permanently leave the band due to
dementia.
"We miss Malcolm, obviously," AC/DC singer Brian
Johnson said in July 2014. "He's a fighter. He's in [the] hospital, but
he's a fighter. We've got our fingers crossed that he'll get strong again...
Stevie, Malcolm's nephew, was magnificent, but when you're recording with this
thing hanging over you and your work mate isn't well, it's difficult. But I'm
sure [Malcolm] was rooting for us."
Malcolm Young last performed live with AC/DC when their tour
for 2008's Black Ice concluded in June 2010 with a concert in Bilbao, Spain.
Malcolm Young, like his older brother George and younger
brother Angus, was born in Glasgow, Scotland before the whole Young family
emigrated to Sydney, Australia in the early Sixties.
Malcolm and Angus' first brush with rock stardom came
courtesy of their brother George, who found global fame thanks to his band the
Easybeats and their song "Friday on My Mind." Although Malcolm's two
older brothers found success in the music industry, their father still made
Malcolm work as a mechanic in a bra factory after leaving school at 15.
"I've never felt like a pop star – this is a
nine-to-five sort of gig," Malcolm told Rolling Stone in 2008. "It
comes from working in the factories, that world. You don't forget it."
In 1973, Malcolm recruited Angus to form a new band, which
the brothers named after the "AC/DC" electrical current marker they
spotted on their sister's sewing machine. After a few lineup changes, the Young
brothers were introduced to singer Bon Scott by their brother George, who would
serve as AC/DC's producer on their early albums.
Thirty-four years after he first put on the schoolboy
uniform, Angus Young and his blue-collar bandmates return with their best album
since 'Back in Black'
Throughout AC/DC's tenure, Malcolm and Angus Young served as
the band's main creative force, crafting the unmistakable riffs that would make
AC/DC one of the biggest bands in music. Together, the brothers would create
the music for hits like "Back in Black," "Hells Bells,"
"Highway to Hell," "Thunderstruck," "For Those About
to Rock (We Salute You)," "You Shook Me All Night Long" and
dozens more rock staples.
However, Malcolm's time in AC/DC was not without strife: A
heavy drinker, he briefly left AC/DC in 1988 during the Blow Up Your Video Tour
– his only absence from the band up to and until his dementia diagnosis – to go
to rehab to curb his drinking problem. After a few months, Malcolm returned to
the band and remained sober ever since. "I was not surprised," George
Young said of his younger brother's sobriety. "When Malcolm puts his mind
to something, he does it."
E Street Band guitarist Steven Van Zandt said in a statement
to Rolling Stone, "Malcolm was the essential rhythm guitarist of the
world’s greatest working class Hard Rock band. An irreplaceable loss."
Guns N' Roses' Slash told Rolling Stone, "Malcolm Young
was one of the best ever rhythm guitarists in Rock n Roll. He was a fantastic
songwriter and he had a great work ethic too. I toured with AC/DC on their
'Stiff Upper Lip' tour. I found Malcolm to be a really cool, down to earth fellow.
The entire rock n roll community is heartbroken by his passing."
Heart's Nancy Wilson told Rolling Stone, "Malcom Young
was the embodiment of rock itself. His rhythm guitar style needed no
embellishment. He laid down the simple solid guitar truth that taught us all
about the 'less is more ethic.' The wild power of simplicity and the head
banging hair flipping joys of turning it up really loud and dancing with the
vibrations. Thank you, Malcom for being the real deal. We are all going to miss
that shredding music that only you and your brother could make together."
Eddie Van Halen wrote following Young's death, "It is a
sad day in rock and roll. Malcolm Young was my friend and the heart and soul of
AC/DC. I had some of the best times of my life with him on our 1984 European
tour. He will be missed and my deepest condolences to his family, bandmates and
friends."
Megadeth's Dave Mustaine, who regarded Malcolm as one of
rock's greatest rhythm guitarists, tweeted Saturday following Young's death,
"I have to go...I am losing it that Malcolm is gone. I hate this..."
Kiss' Paul Stanley added, "The driving engine of AC/DC has died. A tragic
end for a sometimes unsung icon. One of the true greats. RIP." Tom Morello
praised Young as "#1 greatest rhythm guitarist in the entire history of
rock n roll."
Foo Fighters' leader Dave Grohl honored Young by writing
about how, at age 11, watching a live AC/DC performance from Paris in 1979 in
the movie theater was life-changing. "That film ... was the first time I
lost control to music. The first time I wanted to be in a band. I didn't want
to play my guitar anymore, I wanted to smash it," Grohl wrote. "Thank
you, Malcolm for the songs, and the feel and the cool and the years of losing
control to your rock and roll."
The Young brothers and AC/DC were inducted into the Rock and
Roll Hall of Fame in 2003. With over 110 million albums sold, AC/DC is also the
best-selling Australian act of all time.
When Rolling Stone asked the Young brothers in 2008, Who
runs AC/DC?," Malcolm replied, "We both do, because we were there
from the start."
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