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Supersonic 03-16-2005 12:47 PM

Q review from These Days
 
Aloha !

For the one who don't know: Q is one of the biggest music magazines in the UK.

Bon Jovi - These Days - 3 stars out of 5.

Bon Jovi are the musical equivalent of romantic films like While You Were Sleeping: You realize you're being shamelessly manipulated by the script, but you cry anyway.

For proof, hear "Hey God," the opening track on These Days. Here are Bon Jovi, a band that includes numerous multimillionaires and the guy who married Heather Locklear, and they're rocking out behind lyrics like "We're barely hanging on.... Only two paychecks away from living in the street." Jon Bon Jovi not only sings it with a straight face, he makes it work.

The fact is, nobody does this better. Bon Jovi pump out those really big, rounder-than-round sound-wavin' hooks, the ultimate guilty pleasure. Then there's the BJ-patented Crescendoing Power Ballad, including I-will-die-for-you lyrics that tread that fine line between Springsteen and Hallmark: "She came looking for some shelter with a suitcase full of dreams." The chorus of "These Days" insists you sing along nonetheless.

These Days employs these cheesy-but-irresistible pop qualities while unapologetically presenting mostly sad music for grown-ups. On this, their sixth album, Bon Jovi trade their metallic party-dude past for Garth Brooks and ZZ Top-ish turns. Check the gorgeously depressed twangy harmonies of "Diamond Ring" and the boozy pathos of "Lie to Me" ("If you don't love me, baby, lie to me"). Even the record's most rollicking, guitar-solohappy cut, "Damned," owes more to INXS than to Motley Crue.

The glossy-but-desolate tone of Richie Sambora's solo disc, Stranger in This Town, shows up on "My Guitar Lies Bleeding in My Arms." In fact, a welcome morose quality permeates These Days; it's the next smart step away from the land of puffy hair. Remember the White bands (Lion, Great and 'Snake)? Unlike their crash-and-burned pop-metal cohorts, Bon Jovi have maintained their platinum status and age gracefully along with their fans – who'll probably be flocking to the Vegas Hard Rock Hotel and Casino in the year 2025. Jon Bon Jovi in an exclusive engagement on the big stage ... the Frank Sinatra of his era.


...

Salaam Aleikum,
Sebastiaan

Jovimimi 03-16-2005 01:10 PM

:lol: thanks for this Seb 8) LOL @ the part in bold :P maybe a medium is working at the Q magazine :wink: I'd have love this part to be untrue though :roll:

Kathleen 03-16-2005 03:27 PM

Too bad that this statement "Check the gorgeously depressed twangy harmonies of "Diamond Ring" doesn't acknowledge the fact that this song was written for the hairiest of hair metal days - New Jersey.

Kathleen

UKjovi 03-16-2005 03:31 PM

Quote:

the Frank Sinatra of his era
abit far but good :)

Kathleen 03-16-2005 04:02 PM

And another thing - critics are always quick to accuse millionaires of being hippocrites when writing about poverty. Many of the "millionaire" rock stars grew up poor and they do understand poverty. They may just be using their super star status to sing about a very real problem. Some people don't forget where they came from. I am thinking about Bruce here, who sings about working people but the same could apply to Bon Jovi. None of them grew up rich.

Kathleen

UKjovi 03-16-2005 04:47 PM

Same as Bono and i heard yesterday the hes been nominated for the Nobel peace prize :shock:

ellie 03-16-2005 06:36 PM

im pretty impressed at that from Q... wonder what the NME had to say about matters...

DevilsSon 03-17-2005 12:05 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by UKjovi
Same as Bono and i heard yesterday the hes been nominated for the Nobel peace prize :shock:

and he is one of the possible candidates for the World Bank presidency.

Javier 03-17-2005 12:32 AM

This
is kinda frightening

ugly_queen_from_mars 03-17-2005 12:39 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Kathleen
And another thing - critics are always quick to accuse millionaires of being hippocrites when writing about poverty. Many of the "millionaire" rock stars grew up poor and they do understand poverty. They may just be using their super star status to sing about a very real problem. Some people don't forget where they came from. I am thinking about Bruce here, who sings about working people but the same could apply to Bon Jovi. None of them grew up rich.

Kathleen


exactly what i wanted to say.
also all rock stars or pop stars are multimillionaires that doesn't mean they should always write about money, women, cars, drugs, parties (or whatever) and shut out any other experience they may have lived or something they have witnessed. :?


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