Bon Jovi
Keep The Faith


4.0
excellent

Review

by mark1991 USER (37 Reviews)
April 27th, 2012 | 14 replies


Release Date: 1992 | Tracklist

Review Summary: Bon Jovi take a stab at writing a music album.

Bon Jovi is an American rock band best known for their feel good catchy 80s rock songs. World known anthems such as ‘Wanted Dead or Alive’ and ‘Livin’ on a Prayer’ are still played regularly on radio stations and it’s practically impossible to not have heard at least one of these tracks.

A part of the hair metal movement, the band looked destined to be left behind with the rest of makeup heavy rockers as the heyday of that musical movement reached its end. Bon Jovi could see that change was coming, so they adapted to the times with a more mature sound, releasing their fifth album ‘Keep the Faith’ towards the end of 1992.

The band not only shifted musical style, but also changed their look. Leaving behind the big hair and hot pants, Bon Jovi became focused in mixing the sound that made them successful in the 80s, with a new sound that would help them survive in the 90s. This album, and their sixth album, are deeper, more mature and have a more hard rock feel to them.

‘I Believe’ opens the album in brilliant fashion, as a distorted guitar riffs fades in surrounded by Jon’s voice, the riff then gives way to a brilliant hard rock riff. Jon shows that he still has the best mainstream voice in the business as he starts to sing with same real emotion. The song follows a typical hard rock structure, including a memorable solo and a catchy chorus. ‘Keep the Faith’ follows the opener and somehow manages to upstage it. The song is hopeful without being happy, there is a particularly beautiful part when the song slows down and a marching soldier drum beat is played, the emotion that Jon puts in those couple of verses are truly touching.

‘I’ll Sleep When I’m Dead’ and ‘In These Arms’ were hits in their time, and they are closer to the usual Jovi. The former is a typical party song, it has a simple drum beat and a good chorus, but it’s nothing too special. The latter is an insanely catchy song, even though musically the song is simple. ‘Bed of Roses’ follows and I’m sure anybody who has ever had their heart broken has heard it. Bon Jovi has made a career from ballads, and by the early 90s they had already mastered their formula. ‘Bed Of Roses’ follows a typical pattern, as a soft piano and guitar riff are played. Despite the beautiful lyrics, Jon actually wrote the song while on a hangover and the lyrics represent what he was feeling at the time.

‘If I Was Your Mother’ and ‘Fear’ are the heaviest rock songs on the album, and the former could be Bon Jovi heaviest song ever. Despite its cringe worthy title, ‘If I Was Your Mother’ is a great song, with some of Sambora more memorable work. ‘Fear’ has a memorable riff and a decent chorus, but overall nothing too special.

The album dips a bit in quality towards the end, ‘Woman in love’ is just bland musically and lyrically and ‘Blame it on the love of rock n’ roll’ is just a weaker version of ‘I’ll Sleep When I’m Dead’. ‘I Want You’ has a great chorus, but the solo is weak and the verses are average. The closer is an okay blues song with some soul influence, and the band seems to be genuinely having fun with it, but the song is just nothing really worth mentioning.

I’ve mentioned the opening songs on the album, and I’ve briefly mentioned the closing points, so all I have left is that one song right in the middle, a little number called ‘Dry County’. This is by far the best track on the album, and also the best track any member of Bon Jovi has ever recorded and probably ever will. Clocking at just less than 10 minutes, ‘Dry County’ is about a small town recently hit by a decline in the oil industry and its inhabitants who have come to rely on this industry to survive. It is truly the definition of an epic ballad, starting with a dark piano and consisting of numerous of rises, climaxes and two long and powerful guitar solos. ‘Dry County’ is truly one of the perfect songs of the 90s, the chorus is catchy and the lyrics are unique but since it focuses on the hopelessness people feel in such situation, it will ring home with many different people.

‘Dry County’ is an important point in the band’s history, since it’s the moment, for me anyway, that Bon Jovi stopped being entertainers and for at least 9 minutes they became musicians that are not trying to please the masses but instead are attempting to write something truly special.

Bon Jovi continued to develop this sound with the more introspective ‘These Days’, and then went back to the more stadium rock music they are known for, with mixed results. It’s now 2012, and Bon Jovi have been releasing mainly below par albums for most of the last decade. It seems that after 20 years, they have not found another reason to try to write some actual music with some actual feelings. But hey Its their life.



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user ratings (269)
3.5
great


Comments:Add a Comment 
DotEight
April 27th 2012


5704 Comments


Good review. Met JBJ in Aruba when I was with my then-girlfriend on vacation. It was pretty wild.

rockandmetaljunkie
April 27th 2012


9660 Comments


Props 4 reviewing this.
Pos'd.

mandan
March 14th 2013


13925 Comments


Album has some nice cuts, but I didn't enjoy the whole thing that much.

danielcardoso
August 27th 2014


11770 Comments


Dry County is great.

treefingered2
September 2nd 2014


221 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0

Best Bon jovi album I've heard so far

danielcardoso
September 2nd 2014


11770 Comments


These Days is best.

0GuyMan0
August 15th 2018


4986 Comments

Album Rating: 3.0

Dry County and T/T are so good

Dewinged
Staff Reviewer
August 15th 2018


32249 Comments


Oooh I remember liking this.

But can't remember why...

Kennycamp
March 26th 2019


1 Comments


"I believe" is an awful composition but Bon Jovi is not most deserving of the blame. Bob rock produced this album. It is the producers job to stand up and calmly deliver the message "THIS IS S***" when a band puts forth this poor an effort on their albums lead song. Because there are times when a singer/writer has talked himself into believing it's not s***. Someone in the room has to be objective. That's the producer. The song that should have been the lead on this album is "taking it back". The album still had its share of crap("blame it on the love of rock and roll" and "I want you" among others) but would have gleamed much brighter with a song of the caliber "let it rock" or "lay your hands on me".

Dewinged
Staff Reviewer
March 27th 2019


32249 Comments


Great first comment.

rockarazza
July 24th 2021


3 Comments

Album Rating: 5.0

magical one of my favorite bon jovi album all outside keep the faith

0GuyMan0
July 26th 2021


4986 Comments

Album Rating: 3.0

I was just thinking about T/T yesterday. What a banger.

CaliggyJack
August 20th 2021


10319 Comments

Album Rating: 4.5

One of their absolute best

Dewinged
Staff Reviewer
March 30th 2022


32249 Comments


This is the last good Bon Jovi album imo, everything after is meh.

Also impressed by the fact that Kennycamp made an account in 2019 to write his comment and never came back. Amazing.

Might have been Richie Sambora.



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