
Ronald Belford “Bon” Scott was born in Forfar Angus, Scotland and lived as a child in nearby Kirriemuir. In 1952 his parents, Charles and Isabelle Scott, emigrated to Australia on July 9th 1946.
He became the lead singer of AC/DC when he attended one of their shows before they made it big. The band was on stage playing instrumental versions of rock songs without a singer. Bon jumped on stage and started singing along with the band, and the rest is history.
He was the singer an songwriter, (and on one song the bagpiper) for AC/DC starting in 1974. Bon fronted the band until he died in 1980.
AC/DC would release six studio albums featuring Bon Scott. They included; “High-voltage”, “TNT”, “Dirty Deeds Done Dirt Cheap”, “Let There Be Rock”, “Powerage”, and “Highway To Hell”. Scott, Malcolm Young and Angus Young started working on music for their follow-up to Highway to Hell when Bon passed away.
The band thought about calling it quits after Bon’s passing, but with the encouragement of Scott Family, and knowing Bon would have wanted them to continue, they recruited singer Brian Johnson and went back to writing the follow-up to “Highway to Hell”.
On July 25th. AC/DC released “Back In Black”, the first album to feature new lead singer Brian Johnson. It was a tribute to their lost band-mate and became their biggest album to date. The album sold more than 50 million copies worldwide, and is still the 7th. best selling album of all time.
The official cause of death on his death certificate stated Bon Scott died from acute alcohol poisoning.

I always thought he was born here in Scotland and lived his early life in Kirriemuir. Certainly we ‘claim’ him as one of our own. 🙂
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You are right and I corrected it. Thanks for catching that for me.
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