10 Things You Might Not Know About Angus Young

It’s been nearly four decades since Malcolm Young invited his kid brother, Angus, to join a new band he was putting together. Who could have imagined, at that time, that all these years later AC/DC would still be churning out some of the world’s greatest riff-rock?

Through the years, legions of guitar players and fans have delved deeply into Angus’ background, perhaps looking for the secrets behind his artful riff-making. Still, we managed to uncover some biographical facts that might have escaped all but the most diehard followers.

He still owns the very first Gibson SG he bought – 42 years ago.

Young purchased a late ’60s Gibson SG from a music shop located within walking distance of his family’s home in Sydney, Australia, when he was just 16 years old. To this day, it remains one of his main go-to guitars. “I think it was the little devil horns [that sold me],” he told the New Zealand Herald, in 2010. “I’ve still got it and it’s still my favorite guitar of them all.”

His main pre-AC/DC job prepared him well for the band’s bawdy lyrical content.

Young left school before his 15th birthday. Not long afterwards, he took a job working as a typesetter at a “men’s” magazine that sported the title, Ribald. Malcolm, incidentally, had by then put in a couple of years doing sewing machine maintenance for a company that manufactured bras.

His older sister, Margaret, suggested something even more important than Angus’ trademark schoolboy uniform.

Most AC/DC fans know that it was the Young brothers’ sister, Margaret, who encouraged Angus to wear his schoolboy get-up on-stage. But fewer fans realize that it was also Margaret who christened her siblings’ band “AC/DC” after noticing the letters on a vacuum cleaner. According to biographer Susan Masino, Angus and Malcolm liked the fact that the letters denoted power and electricity.

He’s a closet fan of jazz great Louis Armstrong.

In a 1992 interview with Guitar magazine, Young hailed Louis Armstrong as “one of the greatest musicians of all time.” He went on to explain: “I went to see [Armstrong] perform when I was a kid, and that’s always stuck with me. It’s amazing to listen to his old records and hear the musicianship and emotion, especially when you consider that technology, in those days, was almost nonexistent. There was an aura about him.”

He regards solos as the easiest part of what he does.

Young once told Guitar Player that, while he couldn’t fill Malcolm’s shoes as a guitarist, Malcolm could likely fill his, at least with regard to solos. “That’s the easy part,” he said. “There’s no great thing in being a soloist. I think the hardest thing is to play together with a lot of people, and do that right. I mean, when four guys hit one note all at once – very few people can do that.”

He was “totally shocked” when Malcolm asked him to join the band.

“In the beginning, we never used to play together, even at home,” Angus told Guitar, in 1992. “Malcolm would be in one room with his tape recorder putting tunes together, and I would be in the other room pretending I was Jimi Hendrix. When I’d walk in to see what he was up to, he’d go, ‘Get out!’ I was amazed when he asked me to come down to a rehearsal and play.”

His riffs helped oust former Panamanian dictator Manuel Noriega from power.

In 1989, American government officials bombarded Manuel Noriega’s embassy refuge in Panama with “Hells Bells,” “Highway to Hell” and other choice riff-rockers. The tactic worked so well with Noriega, who was known to be an opera lover, that it’s since been employed by U.S. officials in other similar situations.

He’s always been a teetotaler.

Bon Scott was known for his prodigious consumption of alcohol. Through the years, Malcolm Young has imbibed his share of booze as well. Not so with Angus. “Angus was always drinking a big glass of chocolate milk or coffee,” Nantucket guitarist Tommy Redd once recalled, years after touring with AC/DC. “Malcolm, however, used to walk around with Jack Daniels in a bottle that was as big as he was.”

One of his closest friends during the making of the Back in Black album was … ELP’s Keith Emerson.

In the wake of Bon Scott’s death, AC/DC traveled to the Bahamas to recover from the shock, and to record Back in Black. Especially therapeutic were the afternoons when Emerson, Lake and Palmer keyboardist Keith Emerson, who lived in Nassau at the time, took Angus and the other band members out on his fishing boat. “I think it was great excitement for them, and kind of introduced them to my way of the Bahamian life,” Emerson later said. “I think they grew to like it and it [helped them] settle into recording.”

He expects he’ll still be wearing his schoolboy outfit on-stage well into his 60s.

When asked by Guitar if he would still be donning his trademark “get-up” at age 64, Angus described his attire as distinguished and “classic.” “Have you seen what some of the younger [artists] are wearing nowadays?” he asked. “They look like they’ve stolen their mothers’ skirts! If that’s fashionable, then you could say I’ve maintained a distinctively classic look.”

What Does Barnes and Noble Do Next-Publisher’s Weekly

With Barnes & Noble completing a difficult fiscal 2013 with a bad fourth quarter, publishers are continuing to wonder what is next for the nation’s largest bookstore chain and second largest source of book purchases behind Amazon. While B&N’s results for the full fiscal year were down, what seemed to worry publishers and investors the most was the fourth quarter, when sales in the trade retail and Nook segments were noticeably worse than for the full year.

In the trade stores, total sales fell 10.0% in the fourth quarter with comps down 8.8%, while Nook sales tumbled 34%, including an 8.9% decline in content sales, which still finished up 16.2% for the year. For the full year, retail sales were down 5.9% and Nook sales off 16.8%. The major fourth-quarter sales trends—declining device sales and difficult book comparisons—will continue well into fiscal 2014.

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The biggest problem for B&N at the moment, of course, is Nook Media, which in the course of 15 months has gone from the savior of the company to an albatross. Created with much fanfare, with more than $600 million in financial support from Microsoft in April 2012, Nook Media once again dragged down results at B&N. While one half of Nook Media—the college stores—had a solid fiscal year, the Nook division had a terrible year, reporting an EBITDA loss of $475 million, much higher than the company expected. Even the retail trade stores were hurt by Nook as declining sales of Nook devices were a major contributor to the decline in sales at the stores. Comparable store sales in the year were down 3.6%, but excluding the sale of Nook devices, comps were essentially flat with fiscal 2012.

With executives declining to discuss the status of B&N chairman Len Riggio’s offer to buy the retail trade stores or offer a time frame for when a decision on the deal might be reached, executives did say that they are considering various ways to use the cash the retail stores are expected to generate in fiscal 2014. B&N has fenced in Nook Media’s balance sheet, CEO William Lynch noted, and in any case he expects Nook to continue to be “self financing” by cutting costs, converting existing Nook device inventory into cash, and including cash flow from Barnes & Noble College and cash payments from Microsoft. The $475 million Nook loss includes $222 million in inventory charges, and B&N will continue to sell all existing devices through the holidays, but will look for a partner to manufacture its color tablets, while continuing to develop the Simple Touch and Glowlight readers in-house. The Simple Touch and Glowlight, Lynch noted, drive the majority of content sales that come from devices. In the fourth quarter of fiscal 2013, B&N cut Nook expenses from $78 million to $52 million in part by reducing marketing costs and cutting headcount. More cuts along those lines are expected in the current year.

B&N said it will invest about $33 million in the Nook unit this year and will put more money into its retail trade stores, devoting $75 million in 2014 to cover opening as many as five new stores and to cover upgrades in its existing outlets. The company has 675 trade stores after closing 18 and opening two in fiscal 2013; it will close 15 to 20 in the current year. EBITDA increased at the trade stores despite the decline in sales because of higher sales of higher margin products and “increased vendor allowances,” something that helps explain its still ongoing fight with Simon & Schuster over terms and co-op.

While the outlook for the retail stores is far better than for Nook, that division has its own worries, with the company saying it expects comparable store sales at the stores to decline in high single digits in fiscal 2014 due to difficult comps with Fifty Shades in the first two quarters, “secular industry challenges,” and continued sales declines of devices.

Barnes & Noble Segment Results, Fiscal 2012–2013 (in millions)

Sales
Segment 2012 2013 % Chge
Retail $4,852.9 $4,568.2 -5.9%
College 1,743.7 1,763.3 1.1
Nook 933.5 776.2 -16.8
Total 7,129.2 6,839.0 -4.1
EBITDA
Segment 2012 2013 % Chge
Retail $322.5 $374.2 16.0%
College 115.9 111.4 -3.9
Nook (261.7) (475.4) –
Total 176.7 10.3 -94.2
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Publisher’s Weekly Bestsellers: July 1, 2013

The Magic of Memory

As an author, Neil Gaiman has been prolific but never predictable in a career that spans novels, short stories, comics, screenplays, Doctor Who episodes, and unclassifiable multimedia projects like his recent Blackberry-sponsored A Calendar of Tales, which was inspired by readers tweets. With The Ocean at the End of the Lane—debuting at #3 this week on our Hardcover Fiction list—Gaiman is back with a traditional novel that explores the lines between adulthood and childhood, reality and magic. The 40-something unnamed narrator returns to his childhood home and recalls a strange family named the Hempstocks, and their daughter Lettie—and his own, bewildered seven-year-old self encountering a world of magic. The multiple levels of memory give Gaiman the chance to explore how the way we remember things makes them magic. The theme of the stranger in an enchanted world informs most of Gaiman’s work—Neverwhere, Coraline, and the Newbery Award–winning The Graveyard Book all contain similar themes. But it also recalls Gaiman’s very first sustained work, a 1987 graphic novel called Violent Cases, which reimagined his own childhood encounter with an osteopath who used to work for Al Capone.

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Given Gaiman’s huge following, the book’s strong debut is no surprise—nor is the sold-out, multicontinent tour he’s currently engaged in. (This week he appears in Seattle; Santa Rosa, Calif.; and Ann Arbor, Mich.) Gaiman’s next few projects return to multimedia: the picture book Fortunately, the Milk (illus. by Skottie Young in the U.S. edition), a Sandman prequel, and a stint co-writing Marvel’s Guardians of the Galaxy comic with Brian Michael Bendis.—Heidi MacDonald

Evanovich, Accomplice Work ‘Heist’

Bestselling Janet Evanovich (100 million copies in print is not an unbelievable number) signed an eight-book deal with Random House’s Ballantine Bantam Dell in June 2012, as reported in PW, and there’s little doubt that she’s worth the astronomical paycheck that won her over from St. Martin’s in 2010. The contract was for four more books in the Stephanie Plum series—Plum being the lingerie buyer from Trenton, N.J., who loses her job and becomes a bounty hunter—and four books in a new series written with Lee Goldberg, a bestselling author and a television writer for the series Monk. The debut title in the series with Goldberg, The Heist, hits our Hardcover Fiction list this week at #2 with 35,000 copies for its first week. Evanovich kicked off publication with an appearance on the CBS Early Show and, according to v-p and director of publicity Susan Corcoran, there are more than 500,000 copies in print. Quite a send-off to introduce the team of FBI Special Agent Kate O’Hare and con man Nicholas Fox, who, the jacket copy tells us, O’Hare “wants in more ways than one.” —Louisa Ermelino

No Place Like Dome

The King rules again—this time on the tube. CBS reports that the first episode of Stephen King’s Under the Dome miniseries drew a hefty audience of 13.1 million on June 24. According to a New York Times prediction, that number, from preliminary overnight ratings, is likely to grow, especially when delayed viewing is included. The premiere also played well with the audience that counts for many advertisers—viewers between 18 and 49—where it registered a 3.2 rating. That would count as a hit rating any time of year, noted the Times: “in the summer, when networks have a hard time eclipsing a 1 rating in that category, the numbers for Dome represent a breakout performance.”

Entertainment Weekly, too, noted King’s video success, scoring it B and calling the series “the most-watched summer debut on any network since NBC’s The Singing Bee in 2007.” The article also added that Under the Dome “continued the apocalyptic-TV winning streak: AMC’s The Walking Dead, Revolution and now Dome—which isn’t about the end of the whole world, obviously, but tells an apocalypse story on a small-town scale.”

According to the New York Daily News TV critic, “As usual, CBS shows a good eye for action drama, airs of vague mystery and psychological setups that upset the characters’ equilibrium. It’s really just classic drama executed well, and it has propelled CBS to the top of the heap. By those criteria, Under the Dome hits its marks.”

Given the TV series’ acclaim, it’s no surprise that Gallery’s trade paper edition lands on our list in 10th place with 13,869 year-to-date sales. Originally published by Scribner in 2009, Dome’s hardcover and trade paper editions (the first paper version came out in 2010) total a whopping 907,217 copies, according to Nielsen BookScan. —Dick Donahue

The ‘Peregrine’-ations Of Ransom Riggs

For a title that originally pubbed two summers ago, there’s a pretty sizable amount of current activity surrounding the bestselling novel Miss Peregrine’s Home for Peculiar Children. A trade paperback edition has just been released, with a 175,000-copy first printing; the author, Ransom Riggs, went on a two-week, nine-city tour earlier this month; and the new edition has landed at #2 on our Children’s Fiction list. Miss Peregrine, a YA fantasy illustrated with black-and-white vintage photographs, was described by PW as “an enjoyable, eccentric read, distinguished by well-developed characters, a believable Welsh setting, and some very creepy monsters.” Nielsen BookScan charts sales for the hardcover version at just under 450,000 copies, and Quirk Books reports total sales across all formats at 1.3 million. On the horizon: a graphic novel edition from Yen Press, due in October; a sequel, Hollow City: The Second Novel of Miss Peregrine’s Children, scheduled for next January; and a film, to be made by Fox (the slightly retitled Peregrine’s Home for Peculiars), which has a July 31, 2015, release date. The movie is bound to get even wider attention for the novel: Tim Burton has just been announced as director. —Diane Roback

Animal Origins

Stephen C. Meyer enters the Hardcover Nonfiction list at #10 with his latest book, Darwin’s Doubt: The Explosive Origin of Animal Life and the Case for Intelligent Design. As Meyer notes, when Charles Darwin finished writing On the Origin of the Species, there remained a significant and controversial puzzle in his theory of evolution: the “Cambrian Explosion,” which refers to the rapid appearance of animal life 530 million years ago. Darwin acknowledged that this appearance of animal life was confounding, since there was no evidence of similar ancestral forms in earlier geologic history. Meyer, who directs the Center for Science and Culture at the Discovery Institute in Seattle, expands upon arguments about the origin of life in his previous book, Signature in the Cell, to suggest that the Cambrian animal forms might have arisen from intelligent design. According to the theory of Intelligent Design (, certain features of the universe and of living things are best explained by an intelligent cause, rather than undirected processes such as natural selection. To launch the book, Meyer has appeared on numerous radio shows, including Moody Radio’s In the Market with Janet Parshall, several programs on Salem Radio, DialGlobal Radio’s Denis Miller Show, and Premiere Radio’s Coast to Coast. The book has also been excerpted online in World magazine. —Jessamine Chan

New Davis Imprint Named 37 Ink

The new Atria Publishing Group imprint formed by recently hired Dawn Davis will be called 37 Ink. According to Atria, the imprint name was inspired by the 37th parallel north, which intersects California, Africa, and Italy, three geographic touchstones of Davis’s life, “and is reflective of the breadth of voices and viewpoints that the imprint will publish.” In addition to unveiling the name, Atria announced that 37 Ink’s first book will be released this July. The Butler: A Witness to History is by Wil Haygood, a Guggenheim and National Humanities fellow and prize-winning journalist,will be a companion to the Weinstein Company movie starring Forest Whitaker, Oprah Winfrey, Robin Williams, and Vanessa Redgrave.

The former publisher of Amistad, Davis joined Atria April 1 and will do about 10 books annually with the 37 Ink imprint.

Big Brother Fears Reignite A Classic

George Orwell may need to prep a thank you note to Edward Snowden. The author’s classic novel, 1984, about a future world with a government that too closely watches its citizens, was the most talked-about book on social media last month. Jeff Costello, v-p of CoverCake, said this was “obviously driven by the revelation that the NSA has been monitoring U.S. citizens, and the efforts to extradite Edward Snowden.” Costello also believes booksellers took a cue from the news cycle and gave 1984 “prominent placement on their stores’ home pages.” According to Nielsen BookScan, sales of 1984 rose from about 3,000 in the last week in May to about 7,000 in the week ended June 16, and the title sold 6,600 in the week ended June 23.

Neil Gaiman joined the list this month, at #6, with The Ocean at the End of the Lane, which Costello noted has been getting positive buzz: “People are really singing this book’s praises.” Also new to the list, at #8, is Rick Riordan’s fourth title in the Percy Jackson series, House of Hades, which does not come out until October. Costello said the chatter is likely thanks to the “hardcore fans” who “can’t wait for the next installment.”

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The other surprise Costello saw this month was Happy, Happy, Happy, the autobiography of Phil Robertson, star of the A&E reality show Duck Dynasty. Costello thinks the title “snuck” onto the list, at #10, thanks to fans of the TV show.

Men were more active than usual on social media in June. Happy, Happy, Happy was one of four titles that drew more comments from men than women in June; in most months men account for the most comments on one or two titles.

CoverCake’s Top 10 Books in Social Media, June 2013

Rank Title Author Scale* Male Female
1 1984 George Orwell 10 61% 39%
2 World War Z Max Brooks 9 51 49
3 Inferno Dan Brown 8 47 53
4 Joyland Stephen King 7 42 58
5 Catching Fire Suzanne Collins 5 40 60
6 The Ocean at the End of the Lane Neil Gaiman 4 41 59
7 Control Glenn Beck 3 53 47
8 House of Hades Rick Riordan 3 32 68
9 Lean In Sheryl Sandberg 2 31 69
10 Happy, Happy, Happy Phil Robertson 1 68 32

 

*How many conversations took place about the book in question for every 10 comments about book #1

Stephen King and his compulsion to write

This is the first page of this story. There are three pages and several videos. I’m only publishing a part of the first page.

http://www.cbsnews.com/8301-3445_162-57591492/stephen-king-and-his-compulsion-to-write/

 

Bridgton, Maine, was home for writer Stephen King in the 1970s, and it inspired the fictional town of Chester’s Mill, which, in his 2009 novel, is trapped “Under the Dome.”

“When you were here did you sort of envision where the dome would come down?” Mason asked.

“Yeah, I knew exactly,” King replied — and he could show Mason the spot, on the old map still posted on Main Street.

“In the book this would be Route 119, it goes up through here, and the dome would be here,” he explained.

This Summer, King’s novel about a glassy dome descending on an unsuspecting town is being brought to life in a CBS series.

“It sort of came to me that if I could put a dome over an American town, it would be a microcosm for what’s going on in the world itself, where we have finite resources, and we really have nowhere to go,” he said.

“I like the idea of a small town, too, because people have got that ‘Waltons’ vibe, where everybody gets along, everybody knows everybody,” King continued. “And I thought, well, if you put people under pressure, what happens then?”

 

Deputy Linda Esquivel (Natalie Martinez) is separated from her fiance, firefighter Rusty Denton (Josh Carter), by a mysterious barrier in “Under the Dome,” based on the Stephen King novel.

/ cbs

 

Mason asked King if writing is a compulsion for the 65-year-old author: “Or do you need to have some story that just gets in your brain you can’t get out?”

“It’s a compulsion,” King replied. “For one thing, when I was younger, my head was like a traffic jam full of ideas, and they were all jostling, and they all wanted to get out. And I wrote a lot more than I write now. I still write every day.”

SUV Towed From Conn. Home; Possible Link To Boston Double Murder « CBS Boston

This is indicative of what’s wrong with professional sports. The combination of low brow people, gang connections and the usage of steroids are causing crime that shouldn’t take place. Having coached before, I can tell you of the entitlement mentality most athletes have. They’ve had someone kiss their ass, taking care of everything they’ve ever wanted, so the players continue to expect it. 

When I was in college, and also coaching, the athletes (more often than not) could be told apart from the regular students because they drove new cars. And not Fords or Chevy’s. No, they drove BMW’s and Mercedes. Where’s the money coming from when they’re not allowed to work a job during the school year? It’s because the shoe companies and AAU officials (and some of the colleges themselves) pay for them.

What this player has done (along with the one in Cleveland) is give the NFL a terrible black eye. It’s been a long time since the Ray Lewis deal, which most people forget about over the years, but this one will be forever etched into the minds of the public. 

It’s my hope that the NFL will do something to address the thug culture running a muck. 

 

SUV Towed From Conn. Home; Possible Link To Boston Double Murder « CBS Boston.