Bon Jovi Bounce review
Album details

Album Details

Release date: October 8th, 2002
Label: Mercury Records
Producer: Jon Bon Jovi, Richie Sambora and Luke Ebbin

Musicians:

  • Jon Bon Jovi (vocals, guitar)
  • Richie Sambora (guitar, backing vocals)
  • Hugh McDonald (bass)
  • David Bryan (keyboards)
  • Tico Torres (drums)

Singles:

  • Everyday
  • Misunderstood
  • Bounce
  • The Distance
  • All About Lovin’ You

Chart performance:

  • #2 UK Album Chart
  • #2 US Billboard 200

Total sales: 3,000,000
Certification: Platinum
Score: ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★

Bon Jovi: Bounce (2002) Review

Having successfully reclaimed their throne with Crush, seasoned rockers Bon Jovi looked to capitalize.

So with that in mind, it makes perfect sense that follow-up effort Bounce would take all of it’s predecessor’s biggest moments and amplify them to eleven.

Lots of power chords… check!

I’d-die-for-you-baby lyrics… check!

General cool posturing… check!

However, it results in a rather jarring listening experience.

Bon Jovi 2002

Challenging Times

Several of Bounce’s tracks were conceived during the making of Crush.

In the midst of the recording sessions, however, the occurrence of the 9/11 terrorist attacks – which took place a stone’s throw away from the band’s hometown of New Jersey – led Jon Bon Jovi into a creative spree in which several new, unplanned songs were written for the album.

This two-tone approach means that the record quite literally bounces from one extreme to the other, as the glossy anthems which we expect from Bon Jovi sit alongside tracks overflowing with jagged emotion.

Bon Jovi Bounce review

Another One

Bon Jovi have always been a singles band, and every album always contains at least one track which will eventually grab a spot on what’s likely to be amongst the best Greatest hits collections ever made.

The energetic Everyday seems to be the most likely candidate from this bunch.

It’s a three minute dose of chorus-heavy rock which delivers fistfuls of the guitar hooks and just-keep-going lyrics which their fanbase crave, and it does it well enough to warrant multiple listens.

And although it never scales the heights of uber-hit It’s My Life from two years earlier, it did become an unexpected international smash, landing at #5 in the UK singles chart.

Bon Jovi Bounce 2002

Come Together

Lyrically, Jon Bon Jovi is on fire.

In fact, we’ll go as far as to say this might be his best piece of work yet.

Of course, the subject matter plays an important role in this achievement.

For while his mid-90s material focused heavily on relatable problems like the challenges of growing older and feeling washed up, on Bounce he’s pushing his boundaries as a songwriter as he tries to channel the raw outrage of 9/11 in the hopes of pulling the American people together.

And when it works, it works spectacularly.

Opening track Undivided remains one of the few tracks from this era which was able to bottle the anger and hurt which swept the nation in the immediate aftermath of those tragic events in New York on September 11th, 2001, and it’s quite captivating to hear Jon Bon Jovi attempting to morph his listeners’ reactive thirst for war into an anthem of hope and a drive to be better.

This will be remembered as one of the best tracks of their career, and it’s easily the standout moment on Bounce.

Bon Jovi Bounce album review

Reconnecting With Their Inner Child

Bounce saw the much-anticipated return of Desmond Child.

Despite not working together for eight years prior to this record, Child’s fingerprints remained all over their discography, having helped them pen the likes of Livin’ On A Prayer, You Give Love A Bad Name, and Keep The Faith.

And although he doesn’t create anything near that standard here, his presence is still positive.

This is mainly because it appears Child’s involement in the creative process motivates Bon Jovi to push themselves.

For example, while the frontman was acting in TV drama Ally McBeal, he wrote soppy ballad Open All Night as a back-and-forth dialogue between his character Victor Morrison and Calista Flockhart’s high-flying lawyer.

Meanwhile, catchy singalong Misunderstood has him apologise profusely to his wife – something he’s been doing since 1992 – for missing out on an important chunk of their family life as a result of the his double life as a rockstar.

Finally, the chugging rocker Hook Me Up was inspired by a newspaper article which tells the story of a young Palestinian man who became trapped in enemy terrotiry and spent three gruelling days attempting to make contact with the outside world using a severely damaged ham radio.

Let’s be honest, Bon Jovi don’t need to be going to such lengths.

Most of their fans would’ve been satisfied with a simple It’s My Life re-hash, so they deserve all the flowers for having the gumption to put in this much effort and, as they enter an impressive third decade together, perhaps this is a good indicator as to how they’ve been able to survive for as long as they have.

Bon Jovi Bounce

Dry County

One of the biggest pitfalls of Bounce is that it doesn’t feature any elite power ballads.

I know, I know.

This is usually “bread and butter” for Bon Jovi, right?

Don’t get me wrong, entries like Thank You For Loving Me, Right Side Of Wrong and Love Me Back To Life aren’t necessarily bad songs, but we’ve grown accustomed to these New Jersey cowboys taking this kind of material to significantly higher levels, whether it be via emotion-laced lyrics (Always), or soaring guitar solos (Bed Of Roses), or interesing dual lead vocals (I’ll Be There For You).

Now, had Bounce featured just one ballad we could easily have overlooked this issue, but with a whopping six out of the twelve total tracks on the record it becomes a real momentum killer.

Bon Jovi Bounce Richie Sambora

Riff Raff

Richie Sambora’s new guitar tone makes for another interesting feature.

The veteran rocker has apparently decided that he’s going to It’s My Life the fuck out of everything by swinging ultra-heavy riffs at any given opportunity.

But the strange thing is, with the exception of Undivided, there aren’t any songs on Bounce which necessarily need this kind of treatment.

In fact there’s several moments during its 49-minute runtime where you can almost hear David Bryan’s delicately crafted keyboard arrangements gasping for air beneath the weight of the guitar maestro’s Metallica-like lumbering axe!

Bon_Jovi_Bounce_review

Bon Jovi: Bounce

Overall, Bounce is a solid yet unremarkable follow-up to Crush.

It’s a record which seems to confirm that Bon Jovi’s brand of glossy rock is unfazed by the ever-changing musical landscape which sits around them, and we expect it’ll double down on their status as one of the world’s biggest rock acts circa 2002.

The obvious 9/11 overtones add an interesting layer of depth and perspective to the record which separate it from the rest of Bon Jovi’s work, and it’s fair to say that a handful of these stadium-sized anthems do an adequate job of capturing the raw emotion of the time.

Finally, while Bounce never soars quite as high as we’ve known them to in the past, it also never really drops off, and this makes it a more consistent listen from start-to-finish than either of their two previous efforts (1995’s These Days and 2000’s Crush).

“11” Re-worked Tracklist

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4 responses to “Bon Jovi: Bounce (2002) Review”

  1. Johan avatar
    Johan

    Thanx again for the review!

    This album really lacks of the föow of the tracklisting and this time their ballads aren’t any good. Which is ok though They Where masters on ballads before this. It Would be coocky to not put a radio friendly ballad on this one. A real acoustic song Would fit in whitout the love context. Also their motivatonal lyrics about the event of 9/11 doesent mean that it is a 9/11 album, just a Rise up for a nation our a world full with tragic events that fans could relate too.

    This is the bald and very much Better tracklisting that makes the theme and sound of the album much better.

    Bounce
    Undivided
    Everyday
    No regrets
    Joey( maybe here an acoustic song though Joey sounds from another album. But i Can live white it)
    Misunderstood
    Lucky
    Hook me up
    The distance
    Alive
    Standing
    Another reason to belive

    1. admin avatar

      Indeed, the only reason we state Bounce is “a 9/11 album” is because this is how Jon himself frames it:

      “As writers I think we’d be remiss not to write about what happened in our own backyard. We ran the gamut of emotions from sadness, hurt and anger until we had to find something that was going to ring true for us not only today, which is a year later, but in time to come, and so we were writing songs about that resiliency. The name pretty much personifies what this country is going through. We’re really into writing optimistic, upbeat, pull-yourself-up-by-the-bootstraps kinds of songs, and I think the optimistic songs will live on, but the sad songs will sort of paint a picture in time.”

  2. […] provided the band with an opportunity to blow off some steam after after the disappointing sales of Bounce (2002) and a heavy touring schedule, whilst also giving frontman Jon Bon Jovi a chance to work through the […]

  3. […] arrived in the modern era? After all, the biggest criticism of the likes of These Days, Crush, and Bounce is that they ran out of steam due to a lack of rockers like […]

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