Reception to
Let There Be Rock was extremely positive; according to
AllMusic AC/DC played "sweaty, dirty, nasty rock" and the band had "rarely done that kind of rock better than they did" on
Let There Be Rock.
Cashbox said "Heavy metal is their special forte and there is plenty of voltage displayed on this electrified disc." Julian Marszalek of
The Quietus described the album as "a stepping stone from the
glam rock and toilet wall poetry of its predecessors to the gelling and building of their sound" achieved on their masterpiece
Powerage, concluding that
Let There Be Rock contains "perfect music for adolescents with rampant hormones and for those who view arrested development as a lifestyle option rather than an affliction." Eduardo Rivadavia of
AllMusic enthuses, ""Let There Be Rock" sees AC/DC's religious-like respect for the simple art of making rock & roll brought to its logical conclusion: a veritable gospel to the glory of rock, canonized here in hymn-like worship. The near-epic title track to what is widely regarded as the best Bon Scott-era album, the song is a holy testimony, bringing good news to all those who believe in the healing power of rock & roll -- amen! Oh yeah, it also kicks unholy ass!"
David Fricke of
Rolling Stone wrote of the album in a 2008 cover story, "AC/DC's early albums were perfectly frenetic, but inconsistent. Their second U.S. LP was almost all killer. Scott sings 'Bad Boy Boogie' and 'Problem Child' like he's the
enfant terrible...Angus' solos are true white heat." In 2006, AC/DC biographer Murray Engleheart wrote that
Let There Be Rock "elevated AC/DC to the status of an album band, something that had previously been the exclusive domain of the likes of
The Rolling Stones,
The Who and
Led Zeppelin." In 2000, Angus Young recalled to
Guitar World that producer
Mutt Lange once told him "of all the many albums we'd done with my brother George and his partner, Harry Vanda, the one Mutt wished he would have done, where he was envious of George, was
Let There Be Rock." Band biographer Jesse Fink writes, "Wherever AC/DC ended up in the annals of rock history, this album would stand for all time as an expression of their unrivaled might as a guitar band." ==Track listing==