Free Music Notes for Ballbreaker

AC, DC - Ballbreaker

Ballbreaker List Price: $11.98
Category: Music CD
See more new music releases


Buy Ballbreaker at Amazon.com
(Click here)
Buy this Music CD at online store in your country
Canadian Music Store

Free Music Notes for Ballbreaker

Free Music Review: Good, fun album
Hit: 3 Stars

No matter what you can say about this album, it's fun and rocking, and has catchy choruses. The production is different to what you'd usually expect from Classic rock, but that doesn't stop it from being quality rock music. There's plenty of amsuing stories like 'Ballbreaker' and the vocals are gruff and playful.

Free Music Review: Hard Evil Blues Masterwork
Hit: 5 Stars

Thank god Bruce Fairburn died and Rick Rubin stepped in as producer. Thank god Chris Slade, the human (?) drum-machine, was replaced by TRUE AC/DC drummer, Phil Rudd. Thank god the boys got their balls back on Ballbreaker, making it their best album since 1983's Flick of the Switch. Anyone that says that gutless slick pop album, The Razor's Edge, is AC/DC's "comeback" doesn't know what AC/DC is about. True fans love raw, no nonsense albums like Powerage and Flick of the Switch. Ballbreaker is such an album. When songs like "Hard As A Rock" and "Cover You In Oil" are the singles, you know the boys aren't giving a *@#! about moving units (the album broke the Top-Ten despite their efforts). Ballbreaker is so many things. First, it's a big demonic tongue stuck out to those pop-kids that were expecting another "Moneytalks". This album is the antithesis of pop. That's why so many people, even so-called rock fans, put it down. Yeah, Ballbreaker doesn't get much love. That's because there are a lot of watered-down punks who don't keep it real and don't know soul/power from a snappy tune. They knock Ballbreaker for being juvenile and gross. That's what's so great about it! AC/DC prove on Ballbreaker that just because they were now middle-aged, it didn't mean they were going to get all tasteful and *@#!. God, I HATE taste! Nothing can spoil rock & roll more than taste. AC/DC understands this. They also understand the blues, which is the heart of rock & roll. So many people have a misconception about the blues because of these cornyass crackers like Eric Clapton or pick your pseudoass "blues-guitarist" that does a little 12-bar and bottleneck and suddenly thinks he's in the Delta. They want to canonize the blues, make it respectable and put it in a museum. The blues isn't just African-American folk music that expressed hardship; the blues is raw, lascivious and diabolical music. It's Howlin' Wolf growling about "evil". It's Muddy Waters, with some jagged nasty hooks, telling you he's your "hoochie-coochie man". It's John Lee Hooker rumbling about "whiskey and wimmen" over a dirty, funky groove. AC/DC know this and Ballbreaker doesn't just imitate this sprit; it emulates it. Ballbreaker is an EVIL album. Just listen to that breakdown in "Hail Caesar" when Brian Johnson starts singing really low and evil like (similar to the "ladder and snakes" breakdown in "Sin City"). More than any other AC/DC album, Ballbreaker is like their hard blues masterwork, Powerage. Producer Rick Rubin (a true fan) and the return of drummer Phil Rudd help bring that Powerage sound back. The songs aren't as distinct as the ones on Powerage (or as any of the songs from their peak year 1977-1983 albums). But the power and atmosphere is there. Some people knock Ballbreaker for being too mid-tempo; again, they don't get that this is primarily dark evil blues. It's creeping, like. I don't even think of Ballbreaker so much in terms of "songs"; it's more like one giant song that keeps kicking your ass. And finally, the main criticism of Ballbreaker, there's Brian Johnson's voice. Oh man, people are so wrong on this. His voice is AMAZING on Ballbreaker! I don't mean "amazing" as in "good". Brian's voice is like a shrapnel laden limb on this album. It's hardly a voice; it's more of a sound, like another instrument. And that's just the way to go with it. Brian's not trying to fool anyone on Ballbreaker. He's not trying to "sing" per say. Most of those old blues guys didn't either. They did what Brian does on this album: Growl and spit. He just sounds like a bad, grizzly-mouth mofo. You can smell the cigarettes and whiskey on his voice; you can hear the history of rocking out perhaps too hard on Flick of the Switch. You hear a MAN. Yes, a MAN. A primitive, rocking MAN that's squinting and bending over. And he rather implode than not give 100% of his machismo. He totally embraces his ruined voice and uses it for all its ragged worth. Somehow it just makes the album sound meaner, more kick ass. This is the closest AC/DC ever came to sounding like an underground act. There's no pretense here. There's no nonsense. When you hear that primeval riff in "Ballbreaker" you can't help thinking of Angus Young riding a Thunder Lizard. Yeah, a Thunder Lizard right over YOU! And Brian is showing a minister's wife some sinful business in a back alley. Ballbreaker, the album, the song, is the dark monkey pit of Man. And yes, it's a masterwork.

Free Music Review: Awesome Songs With A Little Filler
Hit: 4 Stars

As a whole, I'd rate this as one of the weakest AC/DC albums, if not the weakest. However, this is despite containing a few of AC/DC's best songs. The standouts are clearly Hard As A Rock and The Furor, which is one of my favorite songs of all time. I would pick The Furor over most other AC/DC songs. Ballbreaker, Hail Caesar and Love Bomb are also great songs, but other than that there just isnt a whole lot here. Cover You In Oil and The Honey Roll are just annoying to me. But I would definitely recommend this to everyone who likes powerful rock and roll.

Free Music Review: 1983 Original Line Up+Rick Rubin Producing=Gotta get it!
Hit: 4 Stars

This is a solid record that I found remastered as a digipak! The songs are great and the sound is great blues rock N roll. Rick Rubin quiets things down a little (think ride on) and the songs are raunchy and great.

Free Music Review: Breakin' Balls All Over Again
Hit: 4 Stars

This '95 album was AC/DC's glorious return 5 years after the amazing Razor's Edge. Sadly though, this album never really took off and in my opinion, is AC/DC worst album. But even when AC/DC fails, they succeed. This album has 3 really good tracks, Hard as a Rock, The Furor, and Whiskey on the Rocks. Hail Ceasar, Burnin' Alive, and Ballbreaker are all pretty good tracks, but they're nothing you'll wanna listen to 5 times in a row. Boogie Man and Hail Ceasar are oddly catchy too. The rest of this album is pretty disappointing. I think this album would've benefitted had they put on the track Big Gun from the movie Last Action Hero which they recorded two or three years earlier. If you truly want this album i suggest getting all their other stuff first and save this one for last. It's not bad it's just not up to AC/DC's standards.
More Free Music Notes:
First Review 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
Compare prices and find music notes for more than one million Music CD titles