Great RockMetal Albums of 1984: Bon Jovi
Before I launch into the debut album by a band considered to be a symbol for 1980s hard rock and heavy metal, I thought I first begin by naming four more films of 1984 I missed. Two of them I can’t believe I did and two of them starred comedian Eddie Murphy.
There was a fifth film called Best Defense with Eddie Murphy and Dudley Moore which was okay but just okay.
Now onto the self-titled debut from Bon Jovi. While I have always liked this album, at the time, I thought it was nothing spectacular. Yes, the single that got them on MTV, “Runaway,” was very good, probably still one of my favourite Bon Jovi jams, even if one friend of mine considered it to sound too much like Rick Springfield. Furthermore, I felt exactly the same way when I saw them open for The Scorpions in this year. I thought they weren’t bad but not anything phenomenal.
Like all Bon Jovi albums, when I listen to it, I ask myself the question why Bon Jovi are considered heavy metal. True, there are some hard rocking songs on the album and there was the potential for more had not the keyboards been too heavy on them. The tracks I’m talking about are “Burning For Love” and the second single, “She Don’t Know Me.” The latter officially became the first song I liked on account of the video for it. Had I heard it on the radio or the album, I wouldn’t have liked it so much. The former does have a great guitar solo on it though.
On the other hand, there are some decent rockers on the album in addition to “Runaway.” “Love Lies” is definitely one of those. Whenever I listen to it, I remember why I have always held the guitar abilities of one Richie Sambora in such high regards. He does shine here. “Breakout” can’t make up its mind as to whether it wants to be a rocker or not. I do like the standard keyboard intro followed by the thunder of the guitar. However, the keyboards come back in and take over a little too much in some places. The song sounds like a power struggle between the hard rock and commercial sounds. The decider is again, another good guitar solo from Richie. I have always said that a good closing song can do wonders for an album and “Get Ready” does that job well on the album. It is a strong rocker which ends things quite well. Plus, it gets some good support from the penultimate track.
Track Listing:
- Runaway
- Roulette
- She Don’t Know Me
- “Shot Through the Heart
- Love Lies
- Breakout
- Burning For Love
- Come Back
- Get Ready
Jon Bon Jovi- lead vocals, rhythm guitar
Richie Sambora- lead guitar, backing vocals
Dave Bryan- keyboards, backing vocals
Alec John Such- bass, backing vocals
Tico Torres- drums, percussion
Now here’s the big question I am going to explore on all my Bon Jovi posts in the future. Someone once commented that Bon Jovi represented everything that was wrong with heavy metal in the 1980s. What? I never thought there was anything wrong with metal back then. It’s something I’m going to investigate though. Thinking back to 1984 and this debut album, I certainly wasn’t thinking that. Then, I would never have thought that the band would go onto achieve so much.
Next post: Accept- Balls to the Wall
To buy Rock and Roll Children, go to: https://www.amazon.com/Rock-Roll-Children-Michael-Lefevre/dp/1609763556/ref=sr_1_3?ie=UTF8&qid=1508760900&sr=8-3&keywords=michael+d+lefevre
This entry was posted on October 23, 2017 at 12:18 pm and is filed under 1980s, Heavy Metal, Heavy Metal and the 1980s, Music, Rock, Uncategorized with tags Americans, Bon Jovi, Classic Rock, Eddie Murphy, films, Guitarists, hard rock, Heavy Metal, Heavy Rock, humour, MTV, The 1980s. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.
10 Responses to “Great RockMetal Albums of 1984: Bon Jovi”
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October 23, 2017 at 3:30 pm
Reblogged this on American Badass Activists.
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October 24, 2017 at 5:49 pm
Thank you for the reblog. As always, I am honoured.
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October 23, 2017 at 4:04 pm
It is definitely not a bad first album. It wasn’t outstanding either, but a good place to start and improve off of…which they did. It was a more raw, less polished sound than they would come to have, however, I did enjoy that rawness. They were made for MTV though.
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October 24, 2017 at 5:49 pm
I have to agree with you on all points here.
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October 23, 2017 at 8:58 pm
Definitely not “heavy metal” but I guess that’s how they were marketed. Playing on bills with Scorpions and Anvil etc. I prefer this album to most of the later ones. I really only prefer New Jersey and These Days to the first LP.
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October 24, 2017 at 5:51 pm
Wow, you saw them with Anvil? That must have been cool. I saw them a year later supporting Ratt. I put New Jersey on a par with this one and I think the reason they were called heavy metal was because of Sambora’s guitar abilities.
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October 24, 2017 at 9:59 pm
No they played with Anvil in Japan. I’ve never seen Bon Jovi. It was weird that they were a “metal” band, and you’re probably right about Sambora. His shredding was awesome then and now.
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October 25, 2017 at 6:53 am
I think it was so called mainstream music who labelled Bon Jovi metal. It’s weird that many of the bands they opened for back then would probably open for them today.
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October 24, 2017 at 10:03 am
I had this album and enjoyed it’s catchy and somewhat scruffy edged rock feel. Never thought of Jovi as metal.
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October 24, 2017 at 5:51 pm
Neither did I but what you say about this album is spot on.
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