Bon Jovi weathers turmoil with country twist
‘Lost Highway’ channels new sound for band dealing with hardships
![]() Jim Cooper / AP Bon Jovi, from left, Tico Torres, Jon Bon Jovi, David Bryan and Richie Sambora. Nobody in the band seems sure what the reception will be to their new album — from their fans to the country music industry. |
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BURBANK, Calif. - They still look like the Bon Jovi of old — their leather jackets and jeans. And they still act like the boys from New Jersey, proud of their musical brotherhood that spawned numerous hit albums and No. 1 singles.
But still, there is something different, something unexpected from one of the biggest rock bands of the past few decades. At first listen, it’s their sound. It’s well ... different. And perhaps even more surprising, it’s intentional, they say.
Fresh off their crossover success with a country remake of “Who Says You Can’t Go Home” with Sugarland’s Jennifer Nettles, which earned them the sole Grammy of their 25-year career, Bon Jovi is releasing the country-influenced album “Lost Highway” on Tuesday. And nobody in the band seems sure what the reception will be — from their fans to the country music industry.
“Who knows? This record might be over in three weeks. Or it might have 10 singles on it,” Jon Bon Jovi said during a recent interview.
“I just found myself listening to this kind of music, and finding that they were telling stories. That’s something we’ve been doing our whole career,” he said. “So it was very much a fit for us.”
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It was the inspiration behind the album, which despite its lukewarm reception from critics has already received a fair amount of airplay for its first single “(You Want To) Make A Memory.”
“Richie (Sambora) and David (Bryan) suffered a lot in the last year, a lot of pain. In what had been a very peaceful decade and a half, suddenly there was a lot of pain in the organization,” Bon Jovi said. “I think it was cathartic for Richie to express with me or through me the hell he has been dealing with: losing his dad, losing the wife. And David, it’s the same thing. So it was an easy record to write.”
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In what Sambora told The AP was one of his first sit-down interviews in two years, following the breakup with his wife Heather Locklear and his romance with her friend Denise Richards (the two have since split), said the songs reflect the heartache.
“It’s interesting, the changes I’ve gone through in my life. I think I’ve brought a lot of the dramatics here within the lyric in a bunch of different places — just from the stuff that’s been going on with me. I think even the songs I didn’t write with Jon, I think he used me as his muse.”
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