Jailbreak

AC/DC · '74 Jailbreak [1984]

There was a friend of mine on murder

And the judge's gavel fell

Jury found him guilty

Gave him sixteen years in hell

He said "I ain't spending my life here

I ain't living alone

Ain't breaking no rocks on the chain gang

I'm breakin' out and headin' home



Gonna make a jailbreak

And I'm lookin' towards the sky

I'm gonna make a jailbreak

Oh, how I wish that I could fly



All in the name of liberty

All in the name of liberty

Got to be free



Jailbreak, let me out of here

Jailbreak, sixteen years

Jailbreak, had more than I can take

Jailbreak, yeah"



He said he'd seen his lady being fooled with

By another man

She was down and he was up

He had a gun in his hand

Bullets started flying everywhere

And people started to scream

Big man lying on the ground

With a hole in his body

Where his life had been

But it was -



All in the name of liberty

All in the name of liberty

I got to be free



Jailbreak, jailbreak

I got to break out

Out of here



Heartbeats they were racin'

Freedom he was chasin'

Spotlights, sirens, rifles firing

But he made it out

With a bullet in his back

Jailbreak - AC/DC

Released in 1984 on the album '74 Jailbreak, Jailbreak is a quintessential example of AC/DC's hard rock sound. The track features the band's signature blend of driving rhythms, soaring guitar riffs, and Angus Young's energetic guitar work, delivered over Brian Johnson's distinctive vocals. As a staple of their discography, the song exemplifies the Australian rock band's ability to craft anthems that define the genre. It remains a powerful recording that captures the raw energy and rebellious spirit characteristic of AC/DC's work during the mid-1980s, solidifying its place in the canon of classic hard rock music.