The old saying 'you can't keep a good dog down' is none more relevant then when talking of rock n rolls most famous hounds AC/DC.
After selling well over 150 million albums worldwide they are one of the m
ost commercially successful hard rock acts ever. Their 1982 album, 'Back in Black' remains the second highest selling album of all time and is the largest selling album by any band and singer Brian Johnson has revealed that the band have no intentions of slowing down, especially when there are people who still want to see them play.
The band were in London last Friday to attend the premiere of their new live movie 'Live at River Plate' which was recorded at the end of their two-year tour. The 'Black Ice' tour is officially the third-biggest grossing tour of all time and in 2010 one in every 15 major concert tickets on the planet were sold by the Aussie rock giants.
Guitarist Angus Young said: "We’re already planning another one. We’re thinking, ‘How can we ever better the Black Ice world tour?’ We don’t know how yet – but we will.
"We’ll go out again once we get a new album out, which will hopefully be within the next couple of years."
And Johnson tells Rolling Stone: "We’ll stop when the beast doesn’t need feeding any more – when it doesn’t feel amazing any more."
The singer says watching the movie has inspired him all over again: "If anyone can walk out on a stage like that and tell you they aren’t excited by thousands of fans singing at you, they’re lying.
"It never gets old – those fans are as crazy as they’ve ever been. Even if you’re tired coming on, you get there and it all happens. My rule is that if you’re not sweating when you come off, there’s something wrong.
"I fucking love this film. It was like I’d never seen our show before. I’ve seen other films of us, but never one as good as this."