The
beginning
- Of course the
beginnings of the band members are different.
Jon Bon Jovi is born in Perth Amboy
on March 2, 1962, and is grown in Sayreville, New Jersey.
His father John, sr. is native of Sciacca, a little town
near Agrigento, Italy and he was an hairdresser; his
mother was a Playboy bunny.
At 13 he began to play piano and guitar, using as
trainers Elton John songs, and he founded his first band,
called Raze.
At 16 Jon met David Bryan (Feb 7, 1962, Edison, NJ) and
with him founded a band named Atlantic City Expressway, a
ten-piece band with a big horn section, playing clubs,
even if they were minor.
At 19 Jon had his first recording experience, singing the
song "R2-D2 We wish you a merry Christmas" on a
Star Wars Christmas album, "Christmas With the
Stars", with musics by John Williams, produced by
Jon's cousin Tony Bongiovi at the Power Station in New
York, and released on the RSO label.
In 1983 Jon had a fluke: a radio station, WAPP, had a
contest to search for the best unsigned band. Jon went to
the Record Plant, a studio in NYC that his cousin worked
at. He used studio musicians to play on the track
"Runaway". After it won the contest, it quickly
became the most popular song in NYC in the summer of '83.
The studio musicians that helped Jon to record
"Runaway" were known as "All Star
Review" and they were Tim Pierce (guitar), Roy
Bittan (keyboards), Tony Laroca (drums) and Hugh McDonald
(bass).
Soon, to his surprise, he had a minor hit on his hands.
So now he needed a band, but not, he thought, for
anything gigantic. "I only thought the group would
stay together for a couple of weeks," he says.
"A band playing original songs in New Jersey in the
'80s."
"You could get, max, a hundred bucks a night, maybe
two nights a week. So I figured having a song on the
radio meant I could maybe get two hundred bucks, three
hundred bucks. Maybe I could get an opening slot at a
bigger club."
David Bryan was a natural recruit. He had quit the band
he and Jon founded to go to college, then quit college,
figuring he'd go to Julliard, the leading classical music
school. "But when Jon called. I dropped that,"
he says. "I said, 'oh. fuck it. I'll take a
chance."
The other guys took bigger chances, because all of them
were established musicians, though for Richie Sambora (July 11, 1959, Perth
Amboy, NJ). Actually he'd toured with Joe Cocker, been
talent-spotted by Led Zeppelin's label playing with a
group called Mercy and had just been called up to
audition for glam-rock Goliath's Kiss ("but it
didn't work, thank God" is what he says about that
right now); he also played in the album
"Lessons" with the band "Message",
that has been recently rereleased in CD through Long
Island Records.
But when he first saw Jon perform in a club in Jersey,
Richie knew he'd found the man he wanted to work with. He
immediatley introduced himself and gave Jon a piece of
his mind: "I said I had a lot of songs and I had a
knowledge of making records, and that guitar player
(Jon's neighbour and future Skid Row's guitarist Dave
Sabo) was very good, but he was very young... The band
was kicking and I was the missing piece".
Jon, unconvinced, took his number, but had second
thoughts and called him to a rehearsal with his band a
week later. Then fate took a hand. Jon was unavoidably
detained and by the time he got to the rehearsal, Richie
had the band grooving. Jon listened at the studio door
for about 30 seconds and yelled, "Hired".
Tico Torres (October 7, 1953, NYC)
was skeptical. "Jon was raw, definitely
unpolished," he says. "He was only 21. I'd
jammed with Miles Davis, I played live with the
Marvelettes and Chuck Berry. I'd played on about 26
records. I'd just recorded my third album with Franke and
the Knockouts" (a Jersey band with hit singles in
the early '80s) "But Alec (November 14, 1956) and
I had played in bands together since we were kids. and he
asked me to check Jon out. What really convinced me was
watching Jon perform. The reaction from the kids,
especially the girls. was over whelming. They saw this
young god, running around the stage, shaking his ass. So
I said 'take the gamble and go for it.' The pay was two
hundred a week or some shit. I'd bought a house, I
figured I'd pay the mortgage with money I put away."
Luckily for everyone, "Runaway" got on national
radio, eventually hitting No.39 on the singles chart; Jon
(and not the band) quickly got a record deal with
Polygram.The band, called BON JOVI, also gained
experience on the road together with ZZ Top and they
recorded their first album, simply called "Bon
Jovi" (1984).
The album went gold (50000 copies sold) and was also
released in the UK.
After the first album, the band went back on the road.
"We played bars coast to coast," Jon remembers.
"Thirty shows in 29 days. I got off the bus the
second day, it's snowing, we're in Buffalo, and I saw we
were playing a place with one of those flashing arrows
you see at a used car dealer. It said '50 cent
beers."'
Time passed, and by 1985, as Jon says, "bands like
Tears For Fears were on the radio. Just like now, we
didn't fit the fashion. So we just went out and did what
we did." The group recorded its second album,
"7800 Fahrenheit" (1985) (the title coming from
the temperature inside a volcano during eruption, that is
also the temperature at which rock melts), containing
songs as 'In And Out Of Love', 'Only lonely' and 'Tokyo
Road'.
However, this album was not as successful as was expected
to be.
The leading British metal magazine Kerrang!, that was
positive about the debut record earlier, said "a
pale imitation of the Bon Jovi we have got to know and
learnt to love".
Also Jon himself later said it could and should have been
a better disc.
The band toured again, this time as opening act for the
Scorpions, Ratt and Kiss. "We learned how to become
an arena band." David says, and it wasn't easy.
"We weren't heavy metal," Richie remembers.
"We're singing "Runaway" when the Scorps
are singing kill your mom. So if we got off stage with
out being pelted, we were happy."
But that taught them how to make the fans pay attention.
"During the 50 minutes we were on each night, we
never let up", Richie says.
One of the first career highlights of the band was to
appear at the first Farm Aid charity event in USA,
together with such stars as Willie Nelson and Kris
Kristofferson. Jon commented: "It was as if I was
finally being accepted by all these amazing musicians as
one of them."
Gradually they brought the crowds around, gaining fans
and, maybe even more crucially, experience, until they
headlined their own arena tours.
During the first independent gig in England the band
played in the London Dominion.
While a, specially invited, incredibly proud mom and dad
Bongiovi were waiting in the audience, the sound system
broke down. Not once, not twice, but four times! And no
matter how hard they tried to fix it, no decibel shower.
At that point Jon grabbed a acoustic guitar and started,
under great enthusiasm of the crowd, a what they called
'camp-fire session'.
"A great historical night" is what Jon says
about that now.
The
big success
- There were two
important events at this point of their career.
The first was when Jon heard a tape of Black and Blue (a
Los Angeles band) album "Without Love" and was
so impressed that he had to find out who the producer
was. Turns out that it was none other than Bruce
Fairbairn, a then semi-unknown Canadian guy, best known
for bands like Loverboy.
The second was the encounter with Desmond Child.
He was a semi-successful disco artist back in the 70's.
He also did the music for the movie "The
Warriors". His songwriting career took a huge leap
when he wrote "I Was Made For Loving You" for
Kiss.
With Bruce Fairbairn as producer, Desmond's help in
song-writing and with Bob Rock (he too an unknown guy at
that time), the band went to an unknown studio in
Vancouver to record its third album "Slippery When
Wet" (1986).
There are a lot of stories about the recording of this
album; the most known but also the most curious, is the
way the band shaped the song content; actually they took
demo tapes in a Pizza Palor in NJ and played the new
music for reaction of the guys working in the palor, that
were called "Pizza Palor Jury".
The story about the album title is very curious as well,
as David Bryan says: "During the recording of the
record we frequently wound up in a striptease club where
incredibly good looking girls were putting water and soap
on each other. They became so slippery because of that,
that you couldn't hold on to them even if you wanted to
really bad. "Slippery when wet!" one of us
yelled out and the rest of use immediately knew: that had
to be the title of the new album! Originally we were
going to put a picture of some huge brests, the really
big ones, on the cover; but when the PRMC (a moral board
under command of Tipper Gore, the wife of the current
vice-president of the United States, ed.) found out we
were in big trouble. So we made it into a very descent
cover.".
Contrary to some press reviews (Rolling Stone described
it as "third generation Quiet Riot"), Slippery
had a big selling success, with 15 millions copies sold.
This album includes some of Bon Jovi's all time greatest
hits like "You give love a bad name" (written
initially for Loverboy), "Livin'on a prayer",
"Wanted dead or alive" and "Never say
goodbye".
To promote the album Bon Jovi did a monster tour of 130
shows, called "The tour without end".
During 1987 MTV Video Music Awards Jon and Richie played
acoustic versions of "Livin'on a prayer" and
"Wanted dead or alive", starting the Unplugged
craze.
During a short stop of its tour, the band recorded the
fourth album, "New Jersey" (1988), and went
back on tour, playing even in the Soviet Union at
"Moscow Music Peace Festival", staged by their
then-manager Doc McGhee as punishment to have brought
40000 pounds of pot into US.
"New Jersey" was the first american album to be
released in the Soviet Union too.
Sales were lower than Slippery ("only" 9
millions), but this record includes big hits as "Bad
Medicine", "Lay your hands on me" and
"I'll be there for you".
The tour that followed "New Jersey" was even
bigger than "The tour without end", it was set
out in October '88 and was called the "Jersey
Syndicate tour"; Bon Jovi played 232 shows, for a
total of over three million people in 23 countries.
During the tour Bon Jovi jammed also with famous
musicians, as Elton John, Jimmy Page and Bryan May.
The tour ended in Mexico in 1990, not without some
trouble, because of the sizeable student riot that
occured as a protest towards the gig promoters.
Bon Jovi released also a video from this tour called
"Access all areas".
In this period Jon started to think to a more committed
album, especially in the lyrics, because "To the
people I have ever been that 'Hey, Jon has another hit in
the charts!', and you say, yeah, it's ok, but inside you
think that it's not enough".
Besides Jon married his high school sweetheart Dorothea
Hurley on April 28, 1989, after a flirt with actress
Diane Lane.
During these years Jon and Richie helped bands like
Cinderella and Skid Row to get signed.
And the Skid Row connection might have been the cause of
a possible Bon Jovi break up.
Actually in 1990 the band took two years off, officially
because "We'd done nothing but album-tour-album-tour
for eight straight years and at the end we were
burned" as Jon says or because "Looking back
there was a lot of bad shit that went down. And by the
end we were zombies." as Richie remembers.
But Sebastian Bach (Skid Row singer) helped perpetuate
break up rumours by saying that Jon and Richie had a
major blowout over the handling of Skid Row's publishing.
Actually Skid Row were signed to The Underground, Jon and
Richie's publishing company. Since then, most ties
between the two bands has all but deteriorated. Skid Row
claimed that Jon and Richie owed them money. Jon and
Richie came to blows after Richie gave Skid Row his share
of the money. Jon did not and to this day, things have
been edgy between Jon and Skid Row.
To perpetuate the split rumours there are also the two
solo albums that Jon and Richie released during this
period.
Jon produced with Danny Kortchmar the album "Blaze
of Glory" (1990) , that contains songs inspired by
the movie "Young Guns 2", a little part of them
being also in the soundtrack; Jon was introduced to
Emilio Estevez, star of the movie, by Ally Sheedy (former
girlfriend of Richie Sambora).
In this album Jon received the help of great stars like
Kenny Aronoff (John Mellencamp), Randy Jackson (Journey),
Elton John, Benmont Tench (The Heartbreakers), Danny
Kortchmar, Aldo Nova, Jeff Beck, Lou Diamond Phillips,
Robbin Crosby (Ratt) and Waddy Wachtel (Stevie Nicks).
Anyway in the interviews Jon stressed that this is not
his solo album. He said that he wrote everything from the
script of the "Young Guns II" movie.
The song "Blaze of Glory" won a Golden Globe
Award.
In this period Jon worked as well as producer for the
album 'Blood in the bricks" by Aldo Nova.
Richie released in 1991 his solo effort "Stranger in
this town", a deeply emotional album with blues
influences, in which appear Eric Clapton, David Bryan,
Tico Torres, Randy Jackson, Tony Levin, Frankie Previte
and Dean Fasano; anyway some songs were written before
Bon Jovi even got together.
Jon purposely didn't work with Richie in this album
"because it would wind up sounding like a Bon Jovi
record anyhow, this time with Richie's voice. I felt it
had to be his record. He also needed to feel what it is
like to work on a record alone. And because of it, he's a
lot more self-confident now."
David Bryan made a solo album too, actually he wrote the
soundtrack of the science fiction movie
"NetherWorld" (1991), in which great part of
the songs are instrumental and Edgar Winters sings in the
other ones.
But he also got sick, "I got a parasite in South
America," he says. "I was in the hospital for a
month. I didn't fully recover 'till 1992." Even
Alec, the most reticent guy in the band to outsiders,
says he had trouble, "I fell off my motorcycle right
in front of my house." He damaged a crucial muscle,
'and yeah I worked out (and learned a new way to hold his
bass), but it ain't coming back."
The
Turn
- After the success
of "Blaze of Glory" Jon realized, he needed to
make big changes. So with the firing of his manager Doc
McGhee and lawyers, he "took back control." as
Jon emphatically declares.
And then began a process of rebuilding. "I wanted to
get back to being five guys in a basement," he says.
So that's what they did: they all went down to Jon's
basement (and later back to the studio in Vancouver) to
make what after 6 months spent in recording eventually
became their 1992 album "Keep The Faith",
produced by Bob Rock.
This, as Richie says, was "a transition record"
or as David puts it, "an experimental record. We
didn't want to put out "Slippery 3," "New
Jersey 5." This isn't Freddy Krueger. The music is
expression, it's growing." So there were new
rhythms, especially in the album's title track, along
with a new kind of social concern, and, for the first
time in the band's career, the fans didn't immediately
respond. "I hoped it was going to be wow, look at
the chances the band took," Jon says. "But you
knew when you played St.Louis and broke into the new
songs and nobody moved, that wasn't what you'd been used
to. I had to go out there and prove "Keep The
Faith" was a good song by performing the **** out of
it."
The album contained really big variety of songs and 5 hit
singles: 'Keep The Faith', 'I Believe', 'I'll Sleep When
I'm Dead', 'In These Arms', and 'Bed Of Roses'.
In the end "Keep The Faith" was a victory. The
album went on to sell over eight million copies
worldwide. If anyone thinks that's not enough because New
Jersey and Slippery sold so much more. well as Tico says,
"there's a time in our life when we exploded, but to
expect that every time, it's impossible".
In 1994 David Bryan released another solo album, "On
a full moon", a montage of contemporary
instrumentals, directly from the heart, and the band
celebrated its 10th Anniversary with the album
"Crossroad-The best of Bon Jovi", that
contained 13 old classics and 2 new songs - 'Always',
worldwide single hit and 'Someday I'll be Saturday
Night', the single with MTV-banned video.
This album sold more than 12 millions copies and brought
to the band a World Music Award 1995 as "best
selling rock band".
After this recording Alec John Such left the band; there
are a lot of rumours about the cause of this break up, in
an interview (afterwards belied by himself) Alec said
"I have enough of Jon, he's puffed up, he thinks
that I'm a weak bassist, he dislikes each note I
play..."; more officially Jon said that Alec wasn't
into it anymore and that he needed some time off for
family and things, and that "a rock band is not a
life sentence for us".
In the AOL chat with fans Jon said "It was obvious
that we were growing apart, and Alec had different
priorities that led to this decision. And it wasn't fair
to the band to continue in that manner."
Officially noone replaced him in the band, because as Jon
says "band is like family and you couldn't replace
family", but unofficially Hugh McDonald (former
Alice Cooper/Michael Bolton session man) took Alec's
place.
In this period there were also happy events for the guys;
Richie Sambora married actress Heather Locklear in Paris
on Dec 15, 1994, Jon became for the second time father,
with the birth of Jesse James Louis (Feb 19, 1995) after
that Stephanie Rose was born on May 31, 1993, and also
David Bryan, after having married April McLean in 1990,
became father of two twins, Colton and Gabrielle, born on
March 10, 1994.
After "Crossroad" the band had to decide which
way to go.
"These Days" is the answer.
"Jon and I have written 40 songs," Richie says.
"We've explored new avenues of music, and a lot of
the songs, they're not political, but they relate to
today's problems" or in other words to things he and
Jon find they think more about as they grow older.
"I go through that every day." Jon says .
"almost like 'Why me?' Why did all these wonderful
things happen to me, when you're walking across a
homeless man or see some kid that didn't eat last night.
If there's supposed to be this God, what the ****, he
doesn t work 57th Street?"
So maybe the most important thing about this record is as
Jon says, that "it's the first "we" record
since Slippery. Everything since, as he looks back now,
was what he calls a "me" record". In a
rush to get New Jersey out, he and Richie wrote the
songs, he alone wrote most of Keep The Faith because, as
he says, "This was my way of trying to keep things
together.".
Richie adds that his own input had to be limited, because
he'd been supporting his solo album. But now, he happily
says, "We went out and spent two years together on
the road again, and all the friendship, the family stuff
is back full bore."
During the world tour that promoted this album Bon Jovi
played for the first time in countries like India and
made a lot of busks and free concerts.
In 1995 Jon made also his debut in a movie starring role,
with the movie "Moonlight and Valentino",
featuring Elizabeth Perkins, Whoopy Goldberg and Kathleen
Turner.
The 1995 World Tour ended in December, with the concerts
in South Africa and Australia, and their 6th Christmas
show at the Count Basie Theatre in Red Bank, NJ, after
they won an Award as "Best rock band" at the
MTV Europe Music Awards.
In the first months of 1996, Jon filmed his second movie,
"The leading man", a black comedy directed by
John Duigan, while Richie began to work on his second
solo album and Tico did some art exhibitions.
In the spring they did other concerts in Japan and
Europe, in which for the first time they played a lot of
songs from "These days"; actually this small
tour was called "These days tour".
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