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25 years on, AC/DC fans recall how wild rocker met his end

This article is more than 19 years old
The following correction was printed in the Guardian's Corrections and Clarifications column, Wednesday February 23 2005

As rock pilgrimages go, the journey to the block of flats at 67 Overhill Road is uninspiring. Set on a steep hill in a bleakly nondescript corner of East Dulwich, south London, it seems an unlikely setting for the death of a legend.

It was here, 25 years ago today, that Bon Scott, the bourbon-swilling leader of the hard rock band AC/DC, met his end. Left in a car outside the flats to sleep off the effects of a night of partying, his body was discovered curled around the gearstick on the evening of February 19, 1980. The coroner's report cited acute alcohol poisoning.

It was the end of the road for the 33-year old Australian hellraiser who wrote the lyrics to pivotal AC/DC songs including Highway to Hell, Jailbreak and It's A Long Way to the Top (if you wanna rock'n'roll). A man who consumed industrial quantities of alcohol, but still managed to hoist the lead guitarist, Angus Young, on to his shoulders and belt out his anthems to "booze, sex and rock'n'roll".

AC/DC survived Scott's death. They recruited a new singer, Brian Johnson, recorded the groundbreaking Back in Black album and went on to sell more than 80m records.

But they have never forgotten their singer, lyricist, dysfunctional father figure and the role model for every tattooed, bare-chested rock wildman.

Asked for his thoughts, the AC/DC founder, Malcolm Young, released a short statement this week. "Bon has already become part of rock folklore. Ride on Bon."

Geoff Barton, the editor-at-large at Classic Rock magazine, describes Scott as an "exceptional talent - a superb lyricist who captured a fist-fighting, bar-room feeling, but very poetically".

"He was like the guy next door in a lot of respects," said Barton, whose magazine put the singer at the top of a list of the 100 greatest rock frontmen last year. "But he could make a pub feel like an arena and an arena feel like a pub."

It is unlikely today's anniversary will draw crowds to Overhill Road. The only signs that No 67 is one of rock's holy sites are the signatures of fans scratched into a small metal plate at the front of the building.

But in Australia, where Scott grew up after his family emigrated from Scotland in 1952, his memory is still cherished. A movie, Thunderstruck, was released last year about a group of young men who travel across Australia to bury a friend's remains next to Scott's gravestone in Perth.

A pipe band will march to the gravestone today to mark the 25th anniversary. And AC/DC tribute bands from Spain to Sydney are gearing up for commemorative concerts.

When compared with the mysterious deaths of the Doors frontman, Jim Morrison, and the Rolling Stones 's Brian Jones, Scott's death can be seen as a straightforward case of misadventure. He was a hard drinker who embraced the rock'n'roll lifestyle. As Clinton Walker, the Australian author of Highway to Hell - The Life and Times of AC/DC Legend Bon Scott puts it: "A lot of people thought it was remarkable he lived as long as he did."

But there is an element of mystery surrounding his death. Alasdair Kinnear, the friend who left him in his car that night and discovered the body some 14 hours later, has disappeared. Walker believes he never existed. "No one spoke to him before or after the event. He just doesn't seem to exist."

Walker believes Kinnear was a name adopted by one of Scott's associates who did not want to be identified.

The mystery does not end there. Barton says a couple of musicians claim to have been informed of Scott's death hours before Kinnear was reported to have discovered the body. "It's a tangled web that I struggle to understand to this day."

Whatever the truth about his death, Scott made an indelible mark on rock. "He embodied a peculiarly Australian spirit and character," says Walker. "He was a larrikin - a wild-eyed kid who somehow got let loose in the lolly shop."

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