Bon Jovi Have A Nice Day album review
Album details

Album Details

Release date: September 20th, 2005
Label: Mercury Records
Producer: John Shanks

Musicians:

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

Singles:

  • Have A Nice Day
  • Welcome To Wherever You Are
  • Who Says You Can’t Go Home

Chart performance:

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

Total sales: 2,000,000
Certification: Platinum
Score: ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★

Bon Jovi – Have A Nice Day (2005) Review

Bon Jovi have made a career out of surviving the next big thing.

Grunge flattened most of their late-’80s rivals. Nu-metal later did the same to many of the bands that replaced them. Bon Jovi, somehow, stayed standing — and It’s My Life proved they could still thrive in the mainstream even when the trend cycle turned against them.

By 2005, alternative rock dominated the landscape and the walls were closing in once more. Have A Nice Day was their answer: a hook-heavy, defiant record that didn’t just keep them relevant, it ranked among the strongest albums of their post-millennium era.

bon jovi have a nice day review

Modern Vintage

Bon Jovi’s ninth studio album is packed with stadium-sized riffs and radio-friendly choruses from wall to wall. It’s the sound of a band that knows exactly what it does best — and has spent decades perfecting how to deliver it.

No, it isn’t here to redefine rock music. That was never the point.

From the opening riff of the title track Have A Nice Day, it’s immediately clear that this is as close to a return to their long-missed ’80s muscle as we’re ever likely to get. The song is unmistakably contemporary, but it’s built on thick layers of guitar hooks and those defiant, don’t-take-no-shit lyrics that Bon Jovi have always been uniquely good at selling.

It’s irresistably effective — and that “modern vintage” approach shapes the entire record.

Bon Jovi Have A Nice Day review

If It Ain’t Broke, Don’t Fix It

If the title track throws the ball, the rest of the album runs with it.

The New Jersey giants return again and again to their battle-tested anthemic template — big riffs, bigger choruses, and slogan-sounding lyrics — and more often than not, it pays off.

The radio-ready uplift they’ve been perfecting for decades can be clearly heard on Story Of My Life, Unbreakable, and Complicated, each one built to hit hard in a stadium setting.

No, these songs don’t quite scale the once-in-a-generation heights of Livin’ On A Prayer or It’s My Life — but that’s an absurd bar to hold any band to. Instead, the real strength of Have A Nice Day is in its consistency, and Richie Sambora sounds like he’s having the time of his life throughout, throwing out crunching riffs with the ease of a guitarist who knows exactly what the record needs.

Have_A_Nice_Day

This Romeo’s Still Bleedin’

Now 43, Jon Bon Jovi is finally at an age that suits his lyrical tone.

Across Novacaine and Last Cigarette, you hear a more grounded worldview taking shape — songs that face the realities of getting older (a theme he’s been circling since These Days), weigh the damage of failed relationships, and wrestle with the idea of “becoming a modern man” without losing the stubborn pride that’s always defined him.

Elsewhere, the blistering Last Man Standing turns its attention outward. Bon Jovi sounds more cynical than ever as he takes aim at an industry he sees as increasingly manufactured, criticising labels for favouring product over musicianship and railing against the corporate failure to adapt in a world reshaped by piracy and digital consumption.

Bon Jovi John Shanks

Enter John Shanks

In the build-up to Have A Nice Day, Bon Jovi sounded like a band in need of a spark.

The previous couple of years had been spent on a subdued acoustic detour and an overstuffed archival project tied to their “100 million records sold” milestone — and for the first time in a long while, the creative momentum felt uncertain.

Enter John Shanks.

Best known at the time for his modern pop-rock craftsmanship, Shanks didn’t reinvent Bon Jovi so much as re-centre them. He took the band’s old-school instincts — big riffs, bigger choruses, direct emotional slogans — and framed them with a slicker, contemporary studio sheen that made everything feel larger than life.

The result is a record that sounds refreshed without sounding unfamiliar, and it’s no coincidence this partnership would shape the band’s next decade. Shanks’ influence would later become divisive among fans, but here, at least, it’s hard to deny the impact: he helps Bon Jovi remember exactly what they’re supposed to be.

John Shanks Bon Jovi
Bon Jovi 2005

A New Voice

One of the more interesting shifts on Have A Nice Day is what’s happening in Jon Bon Jovi’s vocal delivery.

By 2005, the unforgiving key changes of the ’80s and the raspy howls of the ’90s were becoming less sustainable as default settings, so he adjusts: leaning more often into his lower register, phrasing with extra attitude, and choosing control over sheer force.

This change inevitably means some moments lack the raw intensity of earlier eras — but it also places a useful pressure on the band. With the voicebox-shredding choruses of Always and I Believe no longer the template, Richie Sambora and co. respond by loading these songs with smarter arrangements and hefty riffs, then using well-timed moments of restraint which allow their frontman’s voice to pierce the music without needing to fight it.

It’s a craft you’ll hear in the infinitely hummable Wildflower, which uses smart key changes and a back-to-basics melody where earlier albums might have reached for volume. The same approach underpins Welcome To Wherever You Are and the forward-thinking Novacaine — proof that Bon Jovi’s instinct for survival remains their greatest strength.

Bon Jovi Have A Nice Day album review
Bon Jovi Who Says You Can't Go Home

Is That… Country?

John Shanks’ country music instincts were well-baked into his résumé.

Insterestingly, there are moments where his Nashville influence seeps through the seams of Have A Nice Day — not in a “cowboy cosplay” way, but more in the way that the songs lean on warm acoustic textures, open-road imagery, and choruses which are built to feel communal rather than combative.

That matters, because Bon Jovi have always written songs like modern-day romantics with a cowboy streak. Indeed, should they ever decide to pivot further into the country genre, the groundwork is already here — and the success of Who Says You Can’t Go Home effectively proved it.

The story of this song only gets more fitting from here because Shanks, who was also working with Sugarland around the same period, helped facilitate a duet version of the song with Jennifer Nettles for the album’s special edition — a move that didn’t just broaden the single’s reach, but earned Bon Jovi genuine credibility in the country world.

Bon Jovi Welcome To Wherever You Are

Bon Jovi – Have A Nice Day

There’s something slightly surreal about praising a Bon Jovi album in 2005.

By this point, they were “meant” to be living on legacy alone — a nostalgia act with a Greatest Hits set and diminishing returns.

Instead, Have A Nice Day is a resounding triumph. Packed with giant guitar hooks and stadium-sized choruses from start to finish, it’s an unapologetically modern Bon Jovi record that still feels more authentic than much of what was dominating rock radio at the time.

It proves once again that this band’s greatest talent isn’t reinvention, it’s survival — and in that context, Have A Nice Day earns its place alongside Slippery When Wet and Keep The Faith as one of the finest records they’ve ever made.

These Go To Eleven Reworked Tracklist

>> Have A Nice Day is part of our Bon Jovi discography guide.

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9 responses to “Bon Jovi – Have A Nice Day (2005) Review”

  1. […] the unexpected success of the Who Says You Can’t Go Home (from 2005’s Have A Nice Day), the band decided that their next album would be a full-blown country […]

  2. […] the title track, an up-tempo rocker in the vein of Have A Nice Day, comes across as lifeless and […]

  3. […] they still charted many classic singles during their post-2000 career (e.g. It’s My Life and Have A Nice Day), they would never really be able to recapture the magic of the incredible four album run which […]

  4. […] tour, and sought a change in sound on subsequent releases (a decision which led him towards that ill-fated collaboration with John Shanks, which many fans consider the catalyst for Richie Sambora’s eventual […]

  5. […] This song captured Jon Bon Jovi’s mood at the time, as he unleashed his anger at the direction in which the music industry was heading circa 2003 as drum loops, samples, and generic blurb dominated the airwaves. The short-tempered ballad was pulled at the last moment and re-built into a much more aggressive rock song, eventually being used on Have A Nice Day (2005). […]

  6. […] leaned into the unexpected success of hit single Who Says You Can’t Go Home from the awesome Have A Nice Day (2005) by pulling the band away from their trademark big rock sound and delivering what is largely a […]

  7. […] while his artistic touch undoubtedly helped to elevate Bon Jovi’s material on the fabulous Have A Nice Day (2005), what as once a sheen has now become a thick polish, resulting in rockers which don’t sound […]

  8. […] sheen had robbed his songs of their soul. Furthermore, having helmed the band’s previous four albums, the super-producer had seen his influence grow exponentially inside the studio, and Sambora felt […]

  9. […] when we consider the chart success of recent albums from the likes of Guns N’ Roses, Bon Jovi, and AC/DC, in addition to the collapse of the nu-metal scene, the stage could well be set for […]

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