logo
AC/DC Reaches A Historic Milestone With The Song That Won't Stop Selling

AC/DC Reaches A Historic Milestone With The Song That Won't Stop Selling

Forbes05-06-2025
AC/DC's 'Thunderstruck' reaches 520 weeks on Billboard's Rock Digital Song Sales chart, marking a ... More full decade as a top rock digital seller in the U.S. INDIO, CALIFORNIA - OCTOBER 07: (EDITORIAL USE ONLY) Angus Young of AC/DC performs onstage during the Power Trip music festival at Empire Polo Club on October 07, 2023 in Indio, California. (Photo byfor Power Trip)
AC/DC's 'Thunderstruck' is a once-in-a-century kind of hit. The track not only defines the band's time together, but it's also recognized as one of the most successful in hard rock history. Few tunes have come close to matching its ubiquity and commercial success. Decades after its release, the cut remains a staple — and at least in the United States, it's a consistent bestseller.
This week is especially notable for 'Thunderstruck' on one Billboard ranking, as it reaches a milestone that very few compositions will come close to achieving.
On the latest edition of the Rock Digital Song Sales chart — the Billboard tally that ranks the bestselling rock-only tracks in the nation — 'Thunderstruck' climbs from No. 15 to No. 9. As it holds on, and even improves, the tune celebrates 520 frames on the list. This period makes it a complete decade as one of the top-selling cuts in that style in the largest music market in the world.
'Thunderstruck' is AC/DC's first track to spend 520 weeks on the Rock Digital Song Sales chart. It's easily the band's longest-running success. The runner-up, 'Back in Black,' has only managed to remain on the tally for 127 stays. 'Thunderstruck' eclipses that total four times over. Those two titles are the only ones in the group's discography to make it to triple digit stays on this purchases-only roster.
'Thunderstruck' surpasses every other smash AC/DC has sent to the Rock Digital Song Sales chart throughout the years. The group has pushed 19 tunes onto the tally, and the other 18 have combined for 224 weeks on the list. That's less than half as long as 'Thunderstruck' has held on.
The generation-defining smash also outpaces every other top 10 hit on the current edition of the Rock Digital Song Sales tally. Combined, those nine tunes have accumulated 146 weeks on the ranking — while 'Thunderstruck' beats that figure three-and-a-half times over, and still manages to rejoin the loftiest tier on the list.
'Thunderstruck' isn't only succeeding on the Rock Digital Song Sales chart this week. It also appears inside the top 10 on both the Hard Rock Streaming Songs and Hard Rock Digital Song Sales tallies as well.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Keith Urban Helps the Next Generation of Country Stars in a Special Way
Keith Urban Helps the Next Generation of Country Stars in a Special Way

Yahoo

time20 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Keith Urban Helps the Next Generation of Country Stars in a Special Way

Keith Urban Helps the Next Generation of Country Stars in a Special Way originally appeared on Parade. Keith Urban's undeniable talent has made him one of the most successful names in the country music industry—and he wants to help the next stars. In a partnership with the Tamworth Country Music Festival, the Australian native, 57, has launched the Keith Urban Rising Star Scholarship. The program will bring an artist from the Land Down Under to Nashville, Tennessee, as part of an all-expenses-paid trip, Billboard reported. The lucky musician will have "unprecedented access" to the city's music scene, including the chance to perform and write, per the outlet. The artist will also be introduced to personnel from the music business and have two days of recording time at Urban's studio, The Sound, which he purchased in June 2024, according to Mixonline. "Sometimes all a musician needs is an opportunity to be heard or someone to help nurture their talent. Having the opportunity to do that not only inspires me, I'm hoping that in some way this scholarship will serve to inspire others," Urban said, per Billboard. The four-time Grammy Award-winner has a long history with the Tamworth Country Music Festival. In 1989, he won the Star Maker competition at the Australia-based event, which helped lead him to worldwide stardom. The "Blue Ain't Your Color' singer was just 22 at the time. The 2026 Tamworth Country Music Festival will take place from January 16-25. "Held in Australia's Country Music Capital, Tamworth, the Toyota Country Music Festival is recognised as Australia's largest and longest country music festival in the southern hemisphere!" the festival's website states. Artists interested in the Rising Scar Scholarship can apply at beggining in January 2026. Country music is highly popular in the Land Down Under. According to a July 2023 report from The Music Network, data from Luminate placed Australia as the world's No. 3 market for country music, right behind the U.S. and Canada. Urban is currently on his 2025 High and Alive World Tour, which began on May 22 in Orange Beach, Alabama. The tour headed to Australia on August 13 and will also travel to Canada before returning to the U.S. The "Somebody Like You" singer will wrap up the tour on October 17 in Nashville. Keith Urban Helps the Next Generation of Country Stars in a Special Way first appeared on Parade on Aug 19, 2025 This story was originally reported by Parade on Aug 19, 2025, where it first appeared.

Michael Franti splits with management after abuse allegations, but tour continues
Michael Franti splits with management after abuse allegations, but tour continues

San Francisco Chronicle​

time21 minutes ago

  • San Francisco Chronicle​

Michael Franti splits with management after abuse allegations, but tour continues

Michael Franti has reportedly split with his longtime management company following sexual abuse allegations made against him by younger singers and colleagues he worked with. The Bay Area-born musician had been represented by Activist Artist Management for nearly a decade, according to multiple sources who spoke to Billboard. The Chronicle reached out to the West Hollywood-based management company on Tuesday, Aug. 19, for comment. Franti has denied the accusations but admitted to a romantic relationship outside his marriage with Spanish American singer Victoria Canal, which he said was consensual. 'I'm aware of the recent posts this artist made about our relationship, and while I support her need to express herself publicly, the relationship was completely consensual, based on mutual feelings and attraction,' Franti, 59, wrote in a statement on Sunday, Aug. 17. 'I vehemently dispute any version of the story that says otherwise.' Canal, who turned 27 this month, alleged in an Instagram post last week that as a 19-year-old she was groomed and abused by a 'very powerful' older musician. She wrote that the man, whom she did not name, initially appeared 'loving, charismatic, and principled' but in private was controlling, abusive and photographed her without consent. 'This is something I've never spoken about publicly, and have been holding for eight years now — it has plagued my body, spirit, and mind,' she wrote. 'These behaviors progressed over a year, slowly keeping me more isolated in a highly unfamiliar and contained environment,' Canal alleged, adding that was still a virgin at the time. In recounting her story, she said she was not allowed to have separate accommodations and that whenever she wanted to sleep in a bed or have a shower, 'he made sure it was his.' The fallout was immediate. Several artists, including Dispatch, Maggie Rose and Liz Vice, dropped out of Franti's Soulshine at Sea cruise, prompting the event's promoter Sixthman to cancel the sold-out November voyage. While she said she was not planning to make any other statements because 'the person who groomed me doesn't deserve so much real estate on my page,' Canal followed up on Sunday, Aug. 17, by posting screenshots of others who recounted similar experiences with the same man. 'I feel a responsibility (and have been asked by some who approached me) to share on these victims' behalf,' Canal wrote. 'Let this be a shedding of light on my own discovery — that I am not the only victim of this person.' Among the alleged victims who chose to share her identity was Carla Swanson, who co-founded SoulShine yoga resort hotel in Bali with Franti in 2011. Swanson — who said 'this same person forced me to sign an NDA. Twice.' — claims that she 'did pick up on a sexual vibe from him' and noted that after Canal shared her story, 'now it all makes sense.' Swanson shared screenshots of texts alleging he also groomed her when she was 19, and claimed that he sexually harassed one of her friends during a recording session. She described her abuser as a 'master manipulator and user,' comparing him to President Donald Trump. The following day in an Instagram Story, Canal added that she's 'used to gaslighting from this person.' 'I'm the one that has to live with effects of what really happened in my body, and I am the one responsible for my own healing,' Canal wrote. 'I have no agenda for sharing my story — I simply want to let go.' 'My wife found out about it and to save my marriage, we ended the relationship,' Franti wrote. 'I broke my wedding vows, I broke my wife's trust, I broke her heart, and for that I am deeply sorry for the pain my actions have caused her… My wife and I have done an incredible amount of work for me to repair the damage that I did. I have and continue to apologize to Sara and my family for the pain that I have caused you.' He added, 'I am also apologizing to the artist for the pain you are going through. My mistake was breaking the vows of our marriage, and involving someone else in the breaking of those vows. For that I will have to atone for the rest of my life. A public conversation about a private issue is never easy for anyone involved and I am sorry you are hurting.' Despite parting ways with Activist and the cruise cancellation, Franti's Welcome to the Family Tour is continuing. The trek includes a scheduled stop at Saratoga's Mountain Winery on Tuesday, Aug. 26.

How the MAGA goon squad became tech lobbyists
How the MAGA goon squad became tech lobbyists

The Verge

timean hour ago

  • The Verge

How the MAGA goon squad became tech lobbyists

Hello there, world! Welcome to the second issue of Regulator, a newsletter about the collision between Big Tech and Washington. If you enjoy this, consider subscribing to get this newsletter weekly and everything The Verge has to offer. Lobbying might be a dubious industry, but lobbyists themselves are often some of the best sources in Washington reporting: generally speaking, they're professionals with lots of prior experience who are paid quite a bit of money to know what's happening and who's making it happen behind the scenes. In normal times, they'd be glad-handling and nudging officials to codify their companies' objectives in the latest bill or whatnot. But when I hit up K Street — the DC catchall term for the lobbying industry — one month into President Donald Trump's second term, the people who used to know everything suddenly did not, and it was making them spiral. Was some decadeslong immigration policy about to be unwound? Was some deputy agency head getting fired? Was that tariff actually about to be implemented? And more importantly: how the hell would their company handle it? To paraphrase what one lobbyist for a major tech company told me: we may not like the policies that are implemented, but the point is that they're consistent, and we can plan our future around it. Six months later, it seems there are two real policies, unwritten but ironclad: you can get almost anything you want if you either enrich Trump and his family, or hire a Trump associate to lobby on your behalf. I'm confident that a regular Verge reader could list at least five recent examples where major tech players either debased themselves or wrote a massive check to Trumpworld. (Here are mine off the top of my head: Coinbase funding a military parade, Justin Sun buying $TRUMP, Jeff Bezos turning The Washington Post into a 'free market' publication, the recent Trump loyalty checklist, and, of course, Tim Cook's gold statue.) But the second tactic, a Trumpworld person, is highly unusual. Traditionally, companies and lobbying firms will hire someone with general expertise in the area they're lobbying on — ex-lawmakers, former staffers, agency alumni, etc. — who can work their connections with former colleagues. But with Trump in office, and most of the regulatory agencies neutered, companies are turning to people and firms that have some tie to the nebulous universe known as Trumpworld: those with little-to-no expertise in technology, whose only qualifications are that they can call someone in the White House to get strings pulled on their behalf and that they're right-wing enough for the administration to trust them. Meta, perhaps the most existentially threatened tech company under the current administration, has onboarded the most overtly MAGA figures so far. It has added two Trump allies to its board of directors: Dana White, the CEO of UFC, and Dina Powell, a top advisor in the first Trump administration. It has also hired Francis Brennan, a former Trump campaign official, as its head of strategic comms; Henry Rodgers, the chief reporter from The Daily Caller, to work on its public policy team; and, as of last week, conservative activist Robby Starbuck, who has actively campaigned against corporations' DEI policies, as an AI advisor. It's hard to say if any of that hiring has worked yet, though; the antitrust case against Meta is still chugging along. But other companies are leaning into the darker political arts — a trend that recently burst into the public eye after Attorney General Pam Bondi abruptly (and messily) fired several senior attorneys at the Department of Justice. The Wall Street Journal recently reported Hewlett-Packard Enterprise hired two prominent Trump allies — Arthur Schwartz, a political and media consultant who has worked with Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth and Donald Trump Jr.; and Mike Davis, a pro-Trump lawyer, Big Tech critic, and the head of the Article III Project — to get the DOJ to approve its acquisition of Juniper Networks, overriding Gail Slater, the head of the DOJ's antitrust division. And on Monday, one of those attorneys — Roger Alford, Slater's former lieutenant in the antitrust division — made a startling allegation: Schwartz and Davis had secretly cut a deal with one of Bondi's top aides, Chad Mizelle, who Alford claimed was known for '[making] key decisions depending on whether the request or information comes from a MAGA friend.' Davis, Schwartz, and HPE did not give comment to The Wall Street Journal about Alford's specific allegations against them, while the DOJ said the merger was decided on its own merits and blasted Alford as 'the James Comey of antitrust—pursuing blind self-promotion and ego, while ignoring reality.' But during a speech at the Technology Policy Institute conference in Colorado, Alford, who served in the first Trump administration, revealed that HPE's success had inspired its rivals to hire their own Trumpworld lobbying armies. The DOJ, he said, was 'now overwhelmed with lobbyists with little antitrust expertise going above the antitrust division leadership seeking special favors with warm hugs… I experienced nothing remotely like this when I served at the DOJ the last time.' And you would not believe what I've heard about Trumpworld lobbying in other agencies. But why has the tech industry glommed onto the Trumpworld lobbying grift so quickly — faster than other industries navigating Washington? I recently spoke with Verge deputy editor Alex Heath, who's been covering the corporate intrigue of Silicon Valley for quite some time, and he gave me a very nihilistic answer: because the CEOs never had ideology to begin with, other than their bottom line. 'The Biden administration was reflexively hostile to the tech industry,' he told me, 'and flattery works with this president.' That's a rule so consistent that one could call it a policy. Below the fold, Alex and I go into the lore of tech's tumultuous relationship with the executive branch. But first, here's what we've been writing about recently… 'I talked to Sam Altman about the GPT-5 launch fiasco' I can't mention Command Line without highlighting Alex's recent on-the-record dinner with the OpenAI CEO, which goes into Sam Altman's ambitions for the next decade: buying Google Chrome, winning the AI race against China, and raising a trillion (with a t!) dollars to build data centers. And yes, they do talk about the GPT-5 launch fiasco, as the label says. 'Elon Musk's gangster tech regulation comes for Apple' Speaking of antitrust, Musk is now threatening to sue Apple for not carrying xAI in the App Store — and according to resident Musk expert Liz Lopatto, there's a deeper proxy war happening here against OpenAI. 'AI companies are chasing government users with deep discounts' These are very deep discounts — federal agencies can access OpenAI and Anthropic chatbots for $1 a year! — but as Lauren Feiner reports, it's a lucrative side hustle and a political power play: 'get as many users as you can in hopes that a service becomes so valuable that employers have to keep paying for it, eventually at a much higher cost.' 'A treaty to end plastic pollution is still out of reach — that's not necessarily a bad thing' Yeah, I did a double take at the headline, too — but attendees at a recent United Nations conference explain to Justine Calma what happened behind the scenes. Regulator is premised on the idea that tech and politics have no idea how to handle each other, and whenever I'm baffled about a tech titan fumbling through Washington, I always send a Slack message to Alex, because he seems to know all of them. (His latest issue of Command Line is about a dinner with Sam Altman, for god's sake.) The more I talk to him, though, the more I realize that even as reporters, we have two versions of the same story — told through the perspectives of our sources. In politics, everyone operates under the premise that they're doing things because of values, and political reporting tends to approach Trump's relationship with the tech industry in that framework: the CEOs who used to champion diversity, equality, environmentalism, liberal democracy, etc., now being forced to jettison their morals to keep their companies afloat. But in Alex's experience, those CEOs never had morals to begin with — which recontextualizes the last eight years of the tech-politics relationship completely. Tina Nguyen: Could you go more into the Biden versus Trump relationship with the tech industry? Alex Heath: The Biden administration very much wanted to rein in Big Tech, whether it was through deregulation on the federal side, antitrust cases, Lina Khan at the FCC blocking mergers and acquisitions, or wanting platforms to reiterate the administration's view on the COVID-19 pandemic. But with Trump, it's purely transactional. It's purely, if you give me this, I give you that. Trump is obsessed with optics, but I think he really just wants leverage. I'm not a politics reporter, but I think tech is playing ball this time because they know if they play ball, they can at least get part of what they want, whereas with Biden, it was unclear that they could get anything. The Biden versus Trump dynamic doesn't come to mind whenever people think of tech interacting with politics, but it does sound like it really informed the tech industry's relationship with the government as a whole. How was that shaped in previous administrations — Obama, Trump One, and Biden? The tech industry was relatively small during Obama. It wasn't most of the S&P 500 like it is now. It was still an upstart. Obama used social media, but it was a tool. It wasn't seen as a challenge to power, necessarily. The first Trump term certainly was when people started to realize, like, oh, there could be an impact here: Facebook, Cambridge Analytica, etc. And then Biden's term was like, well, they are big now. We gotta rein them in. Now Trump is saying, they're big, but I don't necessarily care about reining them in. I care about using and utilizing them for my own power. So if it means that I need to beat up on a company to get one over on them, to get them to make some concession or kill some DEI project, then I will. But I don't think he ideologically wants to rein them in. It seems that he just wants to use the power that they have for his own gain. Prior to this administration, I think it's safe to say that a lot of Silicon Valley leadership was leaning Democrat. You had your outliers, but it seemed as if there was tech leadership that really believed in a specific set of liberal values. How fast did the mentality shift from 'this our political position' to 'alright, here's what we do to keep our companies around'? They have some values, I guess. But I think it's always been about making money. And to make money in this regime, you got to play ball, you got to kiss the ring. I think it was just easier to make money and not have to worry about this stuff until the last six years or so. And it's gotten progressively more intense every year. But it's not like every CEO was a Democrat that has flipped. I don't know if they've actually been in either one of these parties this whole time. I think they're capitalist. That's their political role of view. A quick note before Recess: Thank you to all The Verge subscribers who've signed up for Regulator since we launched last week! (Special shoutout to all the Instagram users who caught the 'movinge' typo in our first post on the @Verge account and just kept posting 'movinge' in the comments.) And for those who've come to The Verge because of Regulator, your subscription also gives you access to the website's archives, exclusive newsletters from my colleagues about the hottest topics in the tech world, plus unfettered access to the fastest tech newsroom. Please take advantage of this! And NOW, Recess: Posts from this author will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed. See All by Tina Nguyen Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed. See All Column Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed. See All Policy Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed. See All Regulator

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store