EntertainmentmusicTours and Concerts
AC/DC's powerful Australian show sets off earthquake detectors.
The ground didn't just shake metaphorically from the thunderous riffs of 'Highway to Hell'—it shook literally, seismographically, as AC/DC's long-awaited return to Australia after a decade-long hiatus proved so earth-shatteringly powerful that it actually triggered earthquake detectors near the venue. This wasn't merely a concert; it was a geological event, a tectonic shift in the cultural landscape orchestrated by Angus Young's schoolboy-uniformed fury and Brian Johnson's raspy, soul-piercing wail that could be heard cleaving through the night air nearly ten kilometers away, a testament to pure, unadulterated rock and roll volume.For the faithful who had waited ten long years, this was more than a performance; it was a homecoming ritual, a reaffirmation of a sonic legacy that has, since the 1970s, served as the unshakeable bedrock of hard rock, with a back catalog—from 'Back in Black' to 'Thunderstruck'—that functions not just as a setlist but as the shared anthem for multiple generations. The seismic activity recorded that night joins a curious and proud history of concerts literally moving the earth, from a 2011 Foo Fighters show in New Zealand registering on geological equipment to the legendary 2011 UK festival where The Offspring and Slipknot generated measurable tremors, proving that when a crowd of tens of thousands moves in unison to a primal beat, the energy transcends the auditory and becomes a physical force. This phenomenon underscores the unique, almost alchemical power of live music to not only alter your mood but to physically interact with the environment, a feedback loop of human energy and amplified sound that, on this particular night in Australia, was potent enough to make the planet itself take notice and headbang along.
#AC/DC
#concert
#earthquake detectors
#Australia
#rock music
#featured
Stay Informed. Act Smarter.
Get weekly highlights, major headlines, and expert insights — then put your knowledge to work in our live prediction markets.