

Listen to offline music & video, FM Radio, even when the screen is off. ( MP3 Player, YouTube Player, FM Radio, Free Offline MP3 Music Downloader )ĭownload over 20 million MP3 songs fast and play offline music anytime with themes, equalizer, variable speed, bass boost. This app is NOT a YouTube music downloader. You can stream YouTube music but cannot download music from YouTube. Note: this app downloads music for offline listening from Podcasts, Dropbox, and Jamendo. Discover more than 200 million free songs! Keep your music playing while using other apps. Hundreds of millions of users choose this super music app.

AT Player: download free music! MP3 & all formats. Blow Up Your Video also marked the return of AC/DC's early production team, Harry Vanda and George Young, who man the boards for the first time since 1978's If You Want Blood.Best free music player! 🌟 Top music downloader! 🔥 #1 Music app! 💎 Download songs and play offline for free! The best music player for YouTube. The album is glutted with such throwaways as "Nick of Time," "Ruff Stuff," and "Two's Up" - completely missing the point of what made such previous albums as Back in Black so great (they simply did not contain a weak moment). But from there on (with the exception of "Kissin' Dynamite" and "This Means War"), it gets pretty unfocused. The driving album opener, "Heatseeker," turned out to be a surprising Top Ten single in the U.K., while the anthemic "That's the Way I Want to Rock n' Roll" proved to be another highlight (video clips were filmed for both songs, as well). Their first new studio album of all-new material in three years, 1988's Blow Up Your Video turned out to be their most successful album since 1981's For Those About To Rock, even though it was chock full of filler.

But the successful soundtrack for Stephen King's lackluster movie Maximum Overdrive, titled Who Made Who, put AC/DC back on the right track commercially. commercial success of 1980-1981 ( Back in Black, For Those About to Rock, a reissue of Dirty Deeds). AC/DC remained a popular concert draw throughout the '80s, although such albums as Flick of the Switch and Fly on the Wall failed to replicate their mass U.S.
