DToTheJ said:Steve N. said:You Shook Me All Night Long - AC/DC - when Kiss 108 plays this one constantly as if it was a pop hit - and it WASN'T (outside of rock anyway) - then there's a problem - when the hell did this one cross over outside of rock anyway? Not the 1980s anyway!
I think I can - the song was on the soundtrack of the 1987 movie "Maximum Overdrive" (soundtrack entirely by AC/DC btw). It got some airplay on some "pop" stations around the time the film was released; I think it even charted - kinda experiencing the same second wind "Bohemian Rhapsody" did when "Wayne's World" was released...
As far as overplayed songs, I've got two words for you... "Hot Blooded". (cue Les Nessman getting ready for his big date)
Even during Back in Black, "You Shook Me All Night Long" got HEAVY airplay on mainstream radio. It charted in the Top 40 (usually in the 30s, but regardless).
I remember, as a pre-teen, hearing "You Shook Me" on "American Top 40," and taping it off a transistor radio. It led to AC/DC's next album, "For Those About to Rock (We Salute You)," to chart at No. 1 and produce even a Top 10 American single- "Let's Get It Up," which hit No. 9.
"You Shook Me" was, in fact, then re-released in 1986 on "Who Made Who," and the video- in which Brian Johnson takes his lone role as the star of the band (usually it's Angus Young)- features then-drummer Simon Wright and not Phil Rudd.
"You Shook Me," is, in my opinion, the greatest rock song ever. Some may say it is now too mainstream- I have heard marching bands play it and it is a staple at weddings.
But it is the song everyone knows. It is the song that makes the crossover and gets played at the dance clubs- and gets more people dancing to it than any other song, usually with the girls reciting all of the lyrics.
When AC/DC played Saturday Night Live in support of "Stiff Upper Lip," they played "You Shook Me."
And unlike Stairway to Heaven, it doesn't take seven minutes and mess around with slow stuff. It isn't country-pone like "Sweet Home Alabama" and it isn't all moody like "Carry on My Wayward Son."
It is a rocker, both gritty and sexy and even hilarious. It is what a rock song should be- thumbing its nose at the cultural elite instead of catering to it and eventually winning over the cultural elite regardless.
It also is the song that took AC/DC from opening up for UFO (as they did in the states for much of the "Highway to Hell" tour) to iconic rock status and headlining arenas overnight.
It is the greatest rock song of all time and it's popularity was apparent since day one- let alone my snickering because I just thought at that early age I heard the rowdy and rough voice of Johnson say "You SUCKED me all night long!"