AC/DC – Touch Too Much
Brian Johnson Never Sang It Once — The AC/DC Song Left Untouched for Thirty-Six Years, Then Given to Axl Rose
The official video for “Touch Too Much” was filmed during the If You Want Blood tour in 1978 and 1979 — before the single existed, before the album that contained it had been released, before anyone watching would have known the footage was preserving something that could not be repeated. Bon Scott is in a ripped jean shirt, performing on a darkened stage, at a moment when AC/DC had just completed the sessions that would produce Highway to Hell and were building toward an American audience that was finally paying attention. The video is a live rehearsal document: no artifice, no storyline, no concept beyond the song and the band playing it. Scott died on February 19, 1980. Brian Johnson, who replaced him two months later, never sang “Touch Too Much” live — not once in thirty-six years. The next time the song was performed in concert was May 22, 2016, in Prague, with Axl Rose singing lead. Rose had previously described it as his favourite AC/DC song.
The song’s existence was not straightforward. A version called “Touch Too Much” had been recorded by AC/DC in July 1977 with entirely different words and music — a separate composition that went unreleased until 1997, when it surfaced on the Bonfire box set. The Highway to Hell version was a new song in all but name, written by Scott with Angus and Malcolm Young during the sessions at Roundhouse Studios in London in early 1979. Producer Robert John “Mutt” Lange, who had been brought in to replace an abortive recording attempt in Miami, coached Scott specifically on breathing technique for this track. According to Arnaud Durieux’s account of the sessions, Lange — himself a trained singer — worked with Scott to improve his vocal control on “Touch Too Much” and sang background parts himself during recording, positioned on the other side of the studio because his own voice was too distinctive to sit near the main microphone. The melodic backing vocals the song required were new territory for AC/DC: more structured harmonics than the band had previously attempted, without softening the characteristic crunch of Angus and Malcolm’s guitars.
Malcolm Young had described the work with Lange as a genuine creative freedom: the producer understood what the band was and did not ask them to become something else. He let them record live in the studio as they always had, then focused his attention on the details that elevated individual performances. The result across Highway to Hell was a set of songs that sounded unmistakably like AC/DC while carrying a clarity and commercial weight that the band’s previous records had approached but not fully achieved. “Touch Too Much” sat at the more melodic end of the album’s range — a churning, hook-driven track with a chorus that doubled back on itself, driven by Phil Rudd’s locked-in drumming and the conversation between Angus’s lead and Malcolm’s rhythm that the brothers had spent years tightening to the point of reflex. Cash Box, reviewing the single on its January 1980 release, called it “high voltage rock” and praised both Scott’s vocals and Angus Young’s guitar work specifically.
The Last Single, The Last TV Performance
“Touch Too Much” was the third and final single pulled from Highway to Hell, released in January 1980, six months after the album. On February 7, 1980, Scott and the band performed it on Top of the Pops — lip-synching in the format the BBC programme required. It was Scott’s last-ever television appearance. Twelve days later he was dead, found unresponsive in the back of a friend’s car in London after a night of heavy drinking. The coroner’s verdict was acute alcoholic poisoning, classified as death by misadventure. The band’s final live performance of the song with Scott had been on December 14, 1979, in Nice, France. The single was still active on the chart at the time of his death. Highway to Hell peaked at number eight in the UK and number 17 on the US Billboard 200 — AC/DC’s first American top-20 album, and the commercial breakthrough Lange had been brought in specifically to help achieve.
AC/DC briefly considered disbanding. Brian Johnson, former vocalist of the British band Geordie, was recruited within weeks. The subsequent album, Back in Black, released in July 1980 with an all-black sleeve as a mark of mourning, went on to become one of the best-selling albums in recording history. Johnson brought his own formidable vocal identity to the band and made the transition work by not attempting to replicate Scott. What that strategy required, in practice, was leaving some of the Bon Scott catalogue alone. “Touch Too Much” was among the songs that stayed off the setlist entirely for the duration of Johnson’s tenure. When Angus Young invited Axl Rose to fill in for Johnson in 2016 — Johnson having been advised that performing at arena volume risked permanent hearing loss — Rose’s enthusiasm for the song he had named as his favourite made its Prague revival possible. The band had not played it in concert for thirty-six years and four months.
The Song That Skipped a Generation
The official video, filmed before Scott’s death and before the scale of the song’s particular weight had become clear, now functions as a kind of fixed point: the lineup that recorded Highway to Hell, in the touring period that produced it, playing a song that would outlast the circumstances of its creation in ways nobody could have anticipated. The Highway to Hell album was certified 8× Platinum by the RIAA in July 2024, representing eight million units in the United States alone. The song Brian Johnson never sang had been waiting in the catalogue for thirty-six years for a vocalist willing and able to take it back to the stage. That it required Axl Rose, fronting AC/DC in a sports arena in the Czech Republic, to finally get it there is a detail that resists tidy summarising — which is, in its own way, entirely consistent with the AC/DC story.













