Bon Jovi Slippery When Wet review
Album details

Album Details

Release date: August 18th, 1986
Label: Mercury Records
Producer: Bruce Fairbairn

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:

  • You Give Love A Bad Name
  • Livin’ On A Prayer
  • Wanted Dead Or Alive
  • Never Say Goodbye

Chart performance:

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

Total sales: 28,000,000
Certification: 15x platinum
Score: ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★

Bon Jovi – Slippery When Wet (1986) Review

You’ve probably heard the line: a change is as good as a rest.

Bon Jovi needed both. After three straight years of touring and a sophomore album that didn’t land the way it should have, they regrouped, swapped producers, and came back with something sharper, louder, and far more inevitable.

Slippery When Wet is the moment the “promising band” phase ends. It’s twelve tracks of stadium-ready hard rock that doesn’t merely hint at Bon Jovi’s potential — it cashes it in.

Bon Jovi

Factory Settings

Slippery When Wet is where the Bon Jovi formula locks into place.

Big-hearted lyrics without the cheese overload, riffs that push forward, and choruses designed for mass singalongs; all delivered with a discipline the earlier records only hinted at.

That’s why the record feels definitive — this is the sound the band would spend the next decade trying to refine, already in its full form.

Richie Sambora

A Point To Prove

The second album was meant to be the leap.

When it didn’t happen, Bon Jovi entered Slippery When Wet with something rarer than ambition: urgency.

That pressure did them a favour. Under manager Doc McGhee, the band’s image had encouraged the easy “pretty boys” dismissal — a label that ignored the hours on the road and the graft behind the gloss. If anything, it lit a fire. Slippery doesn’t just sound like Bon Jovi trying to prove their music works; it sounds like a band determined to prove they do.

And this time, they didn’t just get noticed — they became unavoidable.

Bon Jovi Livin' On A Prayer

Loaded With Hits

It’s hard enough to write one era-defining rock single, but Slippery When Wet delivers three.

Livin’ On A Prayer is the crown jewel: that talk-box hook, that chorus lift, that sense of mid-’80s rock captured like lightning in a bottle. It’s Bon Jovi at their absolute best — optimism with muscle, engineered to make even a grim day feel salvageable.

Then there’s You Give Love A Bad Name, a perfect piece of radio hard rock and the song that turned the band from “big” into unavoidable.

Finally, Wanted Dead Or Alive completes the trio by leaning into the cowboy mythmaking, powered by one of Richie Sambora’s most iconic lead performances — the kind that doesn’t just decorate the track, it sells the whole persona.

Bon Jovi album

Seriously…

The best compliment you can pay Slippery When Wet is that the singles aren’t dragging passengers.

Album cuts like Raise Your Hands hit with real intent, and the run through Social Disease and I’d Die For You proves how locked-in the band were at this point: memorable hooks, brisk pacing, and choruses built to lift a room.

Their confidence wasn’t accidental. By 1986 they had honed their skills with three years of constant touring, often playing six nights per week. The old “too pretty” criticism from the media fell well wide of the mark — indeed, having played more than one thousand gigs together by the age of 24, they were a lot closer to “the real thing” than their drug-fueled rivals who were getting all of the magazine hype for their chaotic off-stage shenanigans.

Bon Jovi Slippery When Wet

Credit To The Producer

Bruce Fairbairn was hired with a clear brief: make Bon Jovi sound like a headline act.

Given the band’s touring pedigree — and the frustration of routinely outplaying bigger-billed names — the ambition was understandable.

Fairbairn doesn’t just polish the material; he scales it. The guitars hit clean, the drums punch hard, and every chorus arrives lit from below. It’s slick, yes — but it’s slick with purpose. This is the sound of a support band finally being mixed like the main event.

Bon Jovi Slippery When Wet album review

Why It Still Works

What keeps Slippery When Wet alive isn’t nostalgia — it’s structure.

The verses are lean, the choruses arrive fast, and the arrangements don’t waste time showing off. Even at its glossiest, the album is built to move: riff, lift, release, repeat.

That economy is not only what helped it spend 8-weeks at No. 1 on the Billboard 200, but why it still lands today. Plenty of ’80s hard rock is fun in hindsight, but Slippery remains highly effective in real time.

Bon Jovi

Rock Don’t Roll

Unlike their later work, Slippery When Wet keeps the ballads to a minimum.

Without Love and Never Say Goodbye aren’t bad songs, but they also aren’t top-tier examples of the lane Bon Jovi would later master in the ’90s. Here, they function as breathers rather than centrepieces — which is arguably the smarter call for an album built on pace.

The rest of the album focuses on crunching rock, and only Let It Rock (the opener) falls short of the standard. That said, opening a make-or-break album with a minute of organ is the sort of move you only make if you’re very sure about what’s coming next.

They were right to be sure.

Slippery When Wet

Bon Jovi – Slippery When Wet

Everything about Slippery When Wet has become part of the mythology — the crunching riffs, the wailing leads, the trio of world-beating singles, even the last-minute cover switch people still misremember as steamy shower glass rather than a water-sprayed black bin bag.

But the real reason it endures isn’t lore; it’s the lack of slack.

Becayse for a blockbuster rock record, it’s unusually disciplined: the singles are monumental, the album cuts keep pace, and the sequencing rarely lets the energy leak out.

It isn’t just iconic — it’s relentless.

Bon Jovi – Slippery When Wet

The 11/11 Standard

An 11/11 on These Go To Eleven is reserved for albums that feel complete — where the craft holds up track-to-track, the pacing never sags, and the record still works outside of nostalgia or context. It’s the ceiling score because it’s rare for any album to leave so little to argue with.

It gives us great pleasure to announce that Bon Jovi’s Slippery When Wet is the first – and still the only – perfect score on These Go To Eleven!

These Go To Eleven Reworked Tracklist

>> Slippery When Wet is part of our Bon Jovi discography guide.

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10 responses to “Bon Jovi – Slippery When Wet (1986) Review”

  1. […] this didn’t spell the end for Bon Jovi, who would go on to release the blockbuster Slippery When Wet 18-months later – and the rest is […]

  2. […] tracks like Roulette and Shot Through The Heart scratch the surface of the undoubted rock potential within the band’s ranks, and the anthemic Burning For Love and Get Ready sound like they […]

  3. […] Looking beyond the outstanding Runaway, the likes of Roulette and Shot Through The Heart both hint that they are scratching the surface of something much bigger. […]

  4. […] By taking some much-needed time off, and then returning to the studio 18 months later feeling fresh and energised, the results spoke for themselves. […]

  5. […] 1984 debut and follow-up 7800 Fahrenheit, and again when they worked straight through landmark LP Slippery When Wet and New […]

  6. […] arrived in the mid-to-late 80s, these guys had played well over 1500 gigs before breakthrough album Slippery When Wet broke into the […]

  7. […] than anything which is currently lighting up their charts. It’ll sit nicely alongside Slippery When Wet (1986) and Keep The Faith (1992) as their finest work to […]

  8. […] The band initially wanted to reunite with Bruce Fairbairn — the producer synonymous with their peak-era firepower — but his death in 1999 forced a rethink, and Crush ultimately landed with Luke Ebbin, brought in […]

  9. […] as the final entry in Bon Jovi’s fabled “golden run” — which also includes Slippery When Wet, New Jersey, and Keep The Faith — where the balance of songwriting, identity, and emotional […]

  10. […] because it’s bad — far from it — but because it’s the follow-up to Slippery When Wet, an album that set the bar at a height most bands never even glimpse. When you’re chasing […]

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