AC/DC announce first Scottish show in a decade

Angus Young - man wearing a red jacket, black and red striped tie and a black cap with the letter "A" in red on the front, pointing his right hand in the air and holding a black guitar with his left, performing on stage in Scotland in 2015
AC/DC last performed at Hampden Park, Glasgow in 2015 [Getty Images]

Rock legends AC/DC have announced they will play their first Scottish concert in a decade this summer.

The group will play 12 dates across 10 countries before concluding their at Murrayfield stadium in Edinburgh on 21 August.

Formed in Australia in 1973, the band have a loyal Scottish fanbase through Scottish-born members Bon Scott and Angus and Malcolm Young.

Fans last saw the band on Scottish soil in 2015 at Hampden Stadium but the group continue to be celebrated annually at BonFest in Kirriemuir.

ADVERTISEMENT

The Edinburgh show is the only performance the band will give in the UK with other dates across Europe starting in June.

The Power Up tour, named after the band's latest studio album, kicks off in the Czech Republic on 26 June.

The album is the band's first since the death of Malcolm Young in 2017.

Lead singer Brian Johnson previously told the BBC the band still has a "big connection" with Scotland.

He said when the band got together again to work on the album, they "really wanted to do something for Malcolm - just to make him proud.

"He was the band," he said. "Him and Angus started it, but it was Malcolm's idea. He was our spiritual leader."

Malcolm and Angus Young were born and raised in Glasgow, moving to Australia in 1963.

A decade later, the first iteration of AC/DC was formed.

ADVERTISEMENT

The line up went through many permutations, but stabilised around the Young brothers, singer Bon Scott - who was born in Angus and also moved to Australia - drummer Phil Rudd, and bassist Mark Evans.

When Bon Scott died of alcohol poisoning in 1980, he was replaced as lead singer by Brian Johnson.

AC/DC IN 1979 - from L-R Malcolm Young, Bon Scott, Angus Young, Cliff Williams and Phil Rudd. The group pose in a black and white promotional photo, all looking into the camera and smiling or making faces.
Malcolm and Angus Young co-founded the group after moving from Glasgow to Australia [Getty Images]

The concert adds to an already busy line-up at Murrayfield this summer with Oasis set to perform three nights in August.

AC/DC have sold more than 200 million albums worldwide and were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2003.

Tickets for the band's European shows will be available from 10:00 on 7 February.