I think we can all agree that Jon Bon Jovi’s epic hairstyle is one of the few things to be cool in both the 1980s and the 1990s (just like his knack for writing catchy tunes, and his pronunciation of the word “Thay-engs”, which is “things” to you and I).

Thankfully, all of these attributes are out in full force on Keep The Faith.

This is the fifth album from New Jersey’s finest, which sold over 10 million copies and spawned an whopping SIX hit singles.

While these numbers would be impressive by anyone’s standards, perhaps it’s even more so when we consider that this was done during the height of the grunge wave.

You see, news of this impending release was met with a much more tepid response than the band’s previous material, and it was largely expected to be among the year’s biggest flops as a result of the changing rock landscape.

Not only did Bon Jovi defy those expectations, but they did so by delivering one of the best album’s of their career and, alongside the likes of Guns N’ Roses and Metallica, they were elevated into an elite tier of rock artists who were seemingly impervious to the grunge plague which was laying waste to most of their contemporaries.

Bon Jovi Keep The Faith

There are several career highlights scattered throughout Keep The Faith’s lengthy 66-minute runtime.

It’s front-loaded with a handful of massive singles including I’ll Sleep When I’m Dead, In These Arms, and stupendously good power ballad Bed Of Roses, while the title track Keep The Faith sees them uncork their best chorus since Livin’ On A Prayer.

Album opener I Believe also deserves some credit here.

At it’s core it remains a laser focused radio-friendly rock song, and it’s easy to see how this led the band to the eventual creation of It’s My Life, but when we look deeper into the lyrics we can see there’s actually much more going on here than just killer riffs and pumping fists.

Decades before social media, frontman Jon Bon Jovi openly discusses the mental health challenges of attempting to live up to the impossibly high standards set by Hollywood, and takes several pot-shots and their former contemporaries whom he felt were “selling their soul” by changing their sound in a bid to cash in on the short-lived grunge trend.

“Don’t look up to your movie screens,
Your records or your magazines.
Close your eyes and you will see
That you are all you really need.”

I Believe

The experimental Dry County clocks in at a whopping 10 minutes, making it by far the band’s longest track to date.

It’s worth every second, too, as it perfectly demonstrates how much Bon Jovi has grown as a song-writing force since New Jersey (1988), and Bon Jovi’s tortured vocals are equally matched (maybe even topped) by axeman Richie Sambora, who uses the lengthier track to unleash some Earth-shattering riffs, before delivering what will ultimately be remembered as his greatest ever guitar solo.

The astoundingly well-written ballad Bed Of Roses is another of the album’s finest moments.

It’s a track which sees the frontman shed light on the difficulties in his personal life which had surfaced in the two year period prior to Keep The Faith, having promised his wife that he was “done with being a rock star” only to find the call of the stage too difficult to resist.

“As you close your eyes,
Know that I’m thinking about you.
While my mistress she calls me,
To stand in her spotlight again.”

Bed Of Roses
Bon Jovi Keep The Faith

As you move deeper into the playlist you’ll find the ferocious Fear.

Written as a cynical follow-up to worldwide hit Livin’ On A Prayer (“Take my hand, I know we’ll make it!”), the singer replaces the hopefulness of the mid-80s with a bleak story of broken dreams which sounds like it was written on the rain-soaked streets of Gotham City.

It features the band at the loudest we’ve ever heard them, and it’s a crime that this track wasn’t released as a single.

Hidden bonus song Save A Prayer isn’t really a hidden bonus song, because everyone was doing them at the time, but it does contain a fantastic vocal performance which made it worthy of a place on the main album.

Bon Jovi: Keep The Faith review

Not everything lands, of course.

Filler tracks like Woman In Love and I Want You struggle under the weight of Bob Rock’s crunching production values, and would perhaps have fared better as part of their late-80s material, meanwhile the poor lyrics of the ultra-heavy If I Was Your Mother derail what is an otherwise great song.

It’s an album which catches the band at an interesting junction in their career (dare we say Crossroads?), as they are clearly trying to adapt their sound for a more mature fanbase but haven’t yet fully shaken off their 1980s “bombast”. This results in several moments where Jon Bon Jovi’s expanding musical ambitions clash with his inability to save himself from himself, because 10-minute tracks and superior song-writing aside, he still can’t resist telling us that “Seven days of Saturday is all that I need!” (I’ll Sleep When I’m Dead) and declaring his undying lust for every woman in the world (Woman In Love).

In some ways, this jarring combination of backwards and forwards leads to many of the LP’s greatest moments, and even though they would continue to polish their skills on future releases, they would never really sound as great as they did right here.

As such, Keep The Faith is a resounding success.

Despite selling well, it never really received the media reception it deserved at the time. This was mainly caused by poor timing and even worse journalism (e.g. once-respected UK magazines like RAW! and KERRANG! each handed it scathing reviews for being “not Nirvana enough!”), so allow me to do the honours all these years later. Not only does Keep The Faith rank as one of Bon Jovi’s finest pieces of work, it also stands tall as one of the best albums of the 1990s, period!

Album Details

Release date: November 3rd, 1992
Label: Mercury Records
Producer: Bob Rock

Musicians:

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

Singles:

  • Keep The Faith
  • Bed Of Roses
  • In These Arms
  • I’ll Sleep When I’m Dead
  • I Believe
  • Dry County

Chart performance:

  • #1 UK Album Chart
  • #5 US Billboard 200

Total sales: 12,000,000
Certification: 2x platinum
Score: ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★

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5 responses to “Bon Jovi: Keep The Faith (1992) Review”

  1. […] the time their next album came around (1992’s Keep The Faith), the band had seen Guns N’ Roses’ Appetite For Destruction reset rock back to is […]

  2. […] Opener Hey God (complete with face-melting riff from Richie Sambora) might just be one of the best rockers they have ever written. Sure, its lyrics about never giving up hope are familiar territory for Bon Jovi, but they are delivered with a level of rawness and rage we’ve only ever seen on one previous song (the tremendous Fear from 1992’s Keep The Faith). […]

  3. […] it might have been hard to squeeze them onto 1992’s splendid Keep The Faith, but they’re easily good enough to have made the cut for These Days, Crush, or Bounce – […]

  4. Angie avatar
    Angie

    For me this is their best album. I know some people prefer “slippery when wet”, but 90s JBJ is unbeatable.

  5. Johan avatar
    Johan

    Thanks for excellent review of their best album! Love These days too but should have had more rock songs on it.

    Here is my track list for Keep the Faith and These days. Still a mystery how poor Jon was on track listing on album but i suspect that the rest of the band didn’t have much input on this. But it bugs me(like many other fans), though he often spoke about the importans of the flow on an album( don’t get me started on ”Bounce”;)

    Keep the faith:

    I belive
    Keep the faith
    I sleep When im dead
    In these arms
    Bed of roses
    If i was your mother
    Fear
    Dry county
    Fields of fire
    Miss forth of july
    Little bit of soul
    Save a prayer

    These days:

    Hey god
    Something for the pain
    Prostitute
    This aint a love song
    These days
    Lie to me
    Damned
    My guitar loves bleeding in my arms.
    All i want is everything
    Something to belive in
    Hearts breaking even
    Open all night( rock version)
    The end.

    Cheers!

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