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This winter, WNIJ continues to curate the best literature from northern Illinois and southern Wisconsin. Morning Edition host and Book Series editor Dan Klefstad invited five authors to our studios to discuss their fiction, poetry and memoirs.New for this series was a community read of the novel Snakewoman of Little Egypt by Robert Hellenga. WNIJ invited listeners to obtain a copy and on Nov. 16 they tweeted questions and comments to the author. We encourage you to follow WNIJ on Twitter (@wnijnews) and on Facebook and use #readwithWNIJ on both sites.The other books in our December series are: Troy, Unincorporated by Francesca Abbate; Cabin Fever by Tom Montgomery Fate; And Then She Kissed El Paco's Lips Now! Or April in DeKalb, by Ricardo Mario Amezquita; and Cloudbreak, California by Kelly Daniels.We hope you enjoy reading all the books in our Winter Series!

Rock author: AC/DC better with Bon Scott

JoeBonomo.mp3
Morning Edition interview with Dan Klefstad (June 29, 2012)

AC/DC was better with Bon Scott? For many AC/DCfans, those are fightin' words.

After all, the band released the best-selling hard rock album of all time, Back in Black, with Brian Johnson as the singer and lyricist. But NIU professor Joe Bonomo says Bon Scott helped put the band on the path toward stardom. Bonomo makes the case in his book AC/DC's Highway to Hell, the final installment of our Summer Book Series.

Bonomo says the Aussie rockers were becoming a legend when they released their sixth album, Highway to Hell, in August of 1979. With Highway, Bonomo says, they finally got on American radio, reaching #17 on the Billboard charts. "Their long tours and all the hard work during the past decade had begun to pay off," he says, "which is part of the tragedy of Scott dying." Bon Scott died in February 1980 of alcohol poisoning.

Bonomo says Scott brought something to the band that no singer before him, or after, could bring. "It was a ridiculously larger-than-life personality and a sense of humor," Bonomo says. He notes Scott had trouble with youth detention services and arrests for petty offenses, but Scott didn't have a chip on his shoulder: "He brought a half-grin, a real love of life and a really funny way of looking at things." Bonomo adds Scott had a knack for a turn of phrase, which he used to great effect in his lyrics.

And Scott wasn't afraid to be the butt of a joke. In the song "Shot Down in Flames," he tries to pick up different women but fails. Bonomo writes:

The story's simple enough: the singer's at his second home looking for love when he sees a girl up against the jukebox looking "like she's something to sell." He asks her rate. She tells him to go to hell. Repeat self-mocking tale of a night striking out.

Bonomo insists AC/DC was a better band with Scott than with his successor, Brian Johnson. "Having lost Bon Scott, they lost that crazy, off-the-wall sense of humor that Brian Johnson could ape a little bit. But," Bonomo says, "he wasn't a naturally funny guy the way Bon Scott was."

Another detriment, Bonomo says, was the band's success in the 1980s. "When they moved to the stadiums, when they moved to the arenas, something essential was lost," he says.

Bonomo admits he's biased against bands that achieve great success, believing they "fall away from their better instincts." He believes that's the case with AC/DC. "They got a little lazy," he says. "Their albums became less powerful and less dynamic after Back in Black which is absolutely a great album."

For Bonomo, the arena-sized bookings, combined with the loss of Bon Scott, completed AC/DC's transformation to a worldwide institution instead of, he laments, "a great, funny, tight bar band."

BonomoExcerpt.MP3
Joe Bonomo reads an excerpt from "AC/DC's Highway to Hell."

Good morning, Early Riser! Since 1997 I've been waking WNIJ listeners with the latest news, weather, and program information with the goal of seamlessly weaving this content into NPR's Morning Edition.
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