NOTEWORTHY DEATHS

AC/DC rhythm guitarist, leader Young

A March 3, 2003 file photo of from left: Malcolm Young, Brian Johnson, Angus Young, Phil Rudd and Cliff Williams from AC/DC posing for photographers at the Apollo Hammersmith in London. The band has announced, Saturday Nov. 18, 2017, that 64-year-old Young has died.
A March 3, 2003 file photo of from left: Malcolm Young, Brian Johnson, Angus Young, Phil Rudd and Cliff Williams from AC/DC posing for photographers at the Apollo Hammersmith in London. The band has announced, Saturday Nov. 18, 2017, that 64-year-old Young has died.

NEW YORK -- Malcolm Young, the rhythm guitarist and guiding force behind the bawdy hard rock band AC/DC who helped create such head-banging anthems as "Highway to Hell," "Hells Bells" and "Back in Black," has died. He was 64.

AC/DC announced the death Saturday on its official Facebook page and website. A representative for the band confirmed that the posts were true. The posts did not say when or where Young died but said the performer had been suffering from dementia. He was diagnosed in 2014.

"It is with deepest sorrow that we inform you of the death of Malcolm Young, beloved husband, father, grandfather and brother. Malcolm had been suffering from Dementia for several years and passed away peacefully with his family by his bedside," one of the posts read.

While Young's younger brother, Angus, the group's school-uniform-wearing lead guitarist, was the public face of the band, Malcolm Young was its key writer and leader, and the member the rest of the band watched for onstage changes and cutoffs.

AC/DC was remarkably consistent for over 40 years with its mix of driving hard rock, lusty lyrics and bluesy shuffles, selling over 200 million albums, surviving the loss of its first singer and creating one of the most successful rock records ever in Back in Black, the world's second best-selling album behind Michael Jackson's Thriller.

The Glasgow-born Young brothers -- who moved to Sydney, Australia, with their parents, sister and five older brothers in 1963 -- formed the band in 1973.

Several musicians paid their respects to Malcolm Young on social media, writing about his influence and impact in music.

"It is a sad day in rock and roll. Malcolm Young was my friend and the heart and soul of AC/DC. I had some of the best times of my life with him on our 1984 European tour," Eddie Van Halen tweeted Saturday. "He will be missed and my deepest condolences to his family, bandmates and friends."

A Section on 11/19/2017

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