<P> Scott mugs for the camera and, during the guitar solo / vocal improvization section, he lights a cigarette as he duels with Angus with a green mallet . Rudd laughs throughout the performance . Although "Baby, Please Don't Go" was a popular part of AC / DC's performances (often as the closing number), the song was not released internationally until their 1984 compilation EP' 74 Jailbreak . The video from the Countdown show is included on the Family Jewels DVD compilation in 2005 . </P> <P> Aerosmith recorded "Baby, Please Don't Go" for their blues cover album, Honkin' on Bobo, which was released on March 30, 2004 . The album was produced by Jack Douglas, who had worked on the group's earlier albums, and reflects a return to their hard rock roots . Billboard magazine describes the song as "the kind of straight - ahead, hard - driving track that always typified the band's (1970s) records". Edna Gundersen of USA Today called their version a "terrific revival ." It was the first single to be released from the album and reached number seven on the Mainstream Rock Tracks chart . A music video, directed by Mark Haefeli, was produced to promote the single . Subsequently, the song has become a staple of the band's concert repertoire . </P> <P> Other recorded renditions include those by Mose Allison (Transfiguration of Hiram Brown, 1960), Paul Revere & the Raiders (Just Like Us!, 1966), the Amboy Dukes (reached number 106 on the Billboard Bubbling Under Hot 100 Singles record chart in 1968), Beacon Street Union (The Clown Died in Marvin Gardens, 1968), Gary Glitter (Glitter, 1972), Budgie (Never Turn Your Back on a Friend, 1973) and Renée Geyer (Swing, 2013). </P> <P> Big Joe Williams' "Baby, Please Don't Go" is included in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame list of "500 Songs That Shaped Rock and Roll". In 1992, it was inducted into the Blues Foundation Hall of Fame in the "Classics of Blues Recordings" category . The Foundation noted that, in addition to various blues recordings, "the song was revived in revved - up fashion by rock bands in the' 60s such as Them, the Amboy Dukes, and Ten Years After". </P>

Them & van morrison- baby please don't go