The band began a world tour in
Perth on 1 February, playing 16 dates in Australia for the first time in seven years. The band played live four tracks from
Blow Up Your Video on the tour: "Heatseeker", "That's the Way I Wanna Rock 'n' Roll", "Nick of Time" and "Go Zone". On the eve of the
North American leg of the tour (a long stretch that would run from May to November), Malcolm Young was unable to participate as he had to deal with a by-now problematic alcohol addiction. Unlike Angus, who had always been a
teetotaller, Malcolm enjoyed drinking but in recent years it had escalated to the point where it began to affect performances. The band's former US agent Doug Thaler recalls seeing the band at one of the
Monsters of Rock shows in 1984: "I'd gone into AC/DC's dressing room and had a scotch with Malcolm and Jonno [Brian Johnson] while
Mötley Crüe played. When AC/DC went out to take the stage, Malcolm had clearly had too much to drink. And they were playing the song that Angus used to do his guitar solo and strip to, and Malcolm would just barely keep a steady rhythm—he couldn't even do that. And he fell into the drum kit, and I thought, 'Oh boy, this is not headed any place good.'" By April 1988, Malcolm recognised he had a problem and, ever mindful of his former bandmate
Bon Scott's premature passing (the previous AC/DC singer died of alcohol poisoning in London in 1980), he began attending
AA meetings, confessing to
VH1's
Behind the Music in 2000, "My drinking overtook my whole thing. I felt like
Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde. I had a talk with Angus... I was letting people down... I wasn't brain-dead, but I was just physically and mentally screwed by the alcohol." Filling in for him was Malcolm and Angus' nephew,
Stevie Young, although Malcolm was present on the rest of the tour and in the
Blow Up Your Video promotional videos. Stevie would also step in for Malcolm in 2014 when it was disclosed that the guitarist was suffering from
dementia. After their last few albums underperformed commercially, this tour brought AC/DC back into the spotlight and their following album,
The Razors Edge, proved to be a greater commercial success. ==Reception==