Bon Jovi These Days review
Album details

Album Details

Release date: June 27th, 1995
Label: Mercury Records
Producer: Peter Collins, Jon Bon Jovi and Richie Sambora

Musicians:

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

Singles:

  • This Ain’t A Love Song
  • Something For The Pain
  • Lie To Me
  • These Days
  • Hey God

Chart performance:

  • #1 UK Album Chart
  • #9 US Billboard 200
  • #1 UK Rock And Metal Album Chart

Total sales: 5,000,000
Certification: 3x platinum
Score: ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★

Bon Jovi: These Days (1995) Review

“We ready?”, asks drummer Tico Torres.

“Just about…”, replies Jon Bon Jovi.

This muffled interaction kicks off sixth studio album, These Days, and it does a pretty good job of preparing us for what’s in store.

For the bombast which adorned their 1980s output, which was gradually dialled down on Keep The Faith, has now been totally ironed out of the mix in favour of an incredibly stripped back, raw, almost rehearsal-like production.

(Indeed, the album was originally set to be titled Strip in reference to this.)

Bon Jovi These Days

Still Kings Of The Mountain

New Jersey’s finest exports have quite literally seen it all, and they’re keen to tell us about it.

Seriously, they reminisce so frequently it could’ve been called Those Days!

However, there’s no question that we can forgive Jon Bon Jovi for “feeling old before his time” when we consider the fact that his battle-weary squad have already survive the death of hair metal, the short-lived seventies rock revival, the thrash uprising, and the grunge wave…

… which is enough to wear anyone out, right?!

So let’s not sugarcoat this:

The fact that they’re still here and still creating music on thier own terms, when nearly all of their contemporaries are but a distant memory, is a fantastic achievement.

These Days 1995

A Brand New Perspective

The good news is that these persistently rocky waters have gifted the frontman a reflective tone befitting somebody far more advanced in years.

You wouldn’t believe it from listening to him, but Jon Bon Jovi is still just 32.

Regardless, his urge to reminisce about days gone by isn’t really a bad thing when the bulk of the material is this strong.

Case in point; These Days.

Forcing his new lyrical style onto the band’s well-established anthemic template (e.g. Livin’ On A Prayer and Keep The Faith) gives us something which feels altogether more grounded than we were expecting.

It’s a heartfelt, somewhat cynical, and remarkably catchy title track.

These Days tells a story of dashed hopes and broken dreams, which is underscored by Jon Bon Jovi’s belief that real success lies not in materialistic riches, but in the feeling of self-worth which is earned by powering through life’s day-to-day struggles.

That message is made even more powerful by the fact that Bon Jovi are essentially living it, having stayed true to themselves while everyone around them seemed to be losing their minds, selling their souls, or being deleted by a scene which no longer needed them.

For they are the last men standing from a bygone era of rock, and they’re well aware of it.

Bon Jovi These Days
Bon Jovi These Days review

Use Your Disillusion

Special praise must be reserved for album opener Hey God.

It’s locked and loaded with all of the anger, resentment, and disenchantment you’d expect from a band who have seen so much upheaval in such a short space of time.

A face-melting guitar riff from axeman Richie Sambora helps it come tearing out of the gates, before Jon Bon Jovi delivers a thunderous vocal performance which carries a level of audible turbulence that we’ve only heard from him once before (the rollicking Fear from Keep The Faith).

Quite frankly, it’s one of the best tracks they’ve ever written.

Bon Jovi These Days review
Alec John Such Hugh McDonald

Times Of Change

When founding member Alec John Such was unceremoniously fired from the band in early 1994, it forced Bon Jovi into their first ever line-up change.

Or so it seemed…

Fans feared that the loss of the charistmatic bassist would spell disaster, but were shocked to hear that Such was little more than a “live performer”.

It turns out his replacement, Hugh McDonald, has been an active member of the group since their earliest days, and has played bass on every record so far – including hits like Runaway and Keep The Faith!

So it’s not so much a change, but rather the first time McDonald has received credit.

Bon Jovi These Days
Bon Jovi 1995
Bon Jovi 1995

Is “Dated” A Bad Thing?

Peter Collins’ minimalistic production is a focal point of the album.

It’s totally understandable that the band felt they needed to go this route in order to remain relevant in the mid-90s and to further their sound, but it’s an experiment which doesn’t always work.

For example, one huge plus point is that Collins’ lack of studio tinkering means that These Days still sounds every bit as fresh today – some 30 years after release – as it did back in 1995.

Hallelujah!

However, one can’t help but feel that the same barebones production inadvertantly robs a few songs of their true power.

For instance, the fabulous This Ain’t A Love Song (spoiler; it is) and the great-but-not-quite-as-good Lie To Me would’ve been sure-fire contenders for the top of the charts had they been lucky enough to receive the kind of studio heft which was synonymous with Bon Jovi by this stage in their career.

Bon Jovi These Days

A Game Of Two Halves

Unfortunately, all of These Days’ best ideas are packed into the first half of the record.

Because aside from a terrific vocal performance on Something To Believe In, there’s not a lot to write home about once you cross into the deeper waters here.

Was this problem fixable?

Sure.

But perhaps the most frustrating thing about These Days is that the band actually brought this upon themselves.

You see, had the production trio (Peter Collins, Jon Bon Jovi, and Richie Sambora) got their collective heads together and included the outstanding Someday I’ll Be Saturday Night and all-conquering mega-hit Always – both of which were written for this record – it would’ve significantly improved the overall flow of These Days.

Unfortunately they made the rather bizarre decision to include those tracks on a Greatest Hits compilation which was released just six months prior, essentially hamstringing the second half of this record.

In their place sit a smattering of laclustre ballads which don’t hit anywhere near as hard, including the New Jersey outtake Diamond Ring, (It’s Hard) Letting You Go, and the Aerosmith-esque ballad Heart’s Breaking Even, which fails to live up to it’s own potential thanks to a series of clunky key changes.

Bon Jovi These Days album review
Bon Jovi These Days

Bon Jovi: These Days

Overall, Bon Jovi’s sixth studio album has enough quality to be remembered as a strong piece of work.

Perhaps more importantly, it’s the record which proved that no matter how volatile the 90s rock landscape became, there would always be space for the ever-dependable Bon Jovi.

The remarkable commercial success of These Days cemented their status as the biggest rock band in the world circa 1995.

It famously knocked Michael Jackson’s HIStory off the #1 spot while the band were on stage at Wembley Stadium, and eventually went on to sell just shy of five million units.

Upon completion of the extensive world tour – which included two sold out nights in London which they class as their proudest moments – Bon Jovi would decide to take a “short break” which eventually transformed into a lengthy five year hiatus.

But despite the fact that they would create a handful of classic singles during their post-2000 timeline (e.g. It’s My Life and Have A Nice Day), they would never truly be able to recapture the magic of this incredible four album run which started all those years ago with Slippery When Wet and finished with These Days.

“11” Re-worked Tracklist

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11 responses to “Bon Jovi: These Days (1995) Review”

  1. […] Because while the monumental power of its highly polished lead single is obviously aimed at attracting a new young audience to the band (see the video), the rest of Crush follows a minimalistic production style similar to that which was used on 1995’s These Days. […]

  2. […] ballad Whole Lot Of Leavin’, the air-punching Any Other Day (which sounds like a track from These Days which has been countrified), and feel-good album closer I Love This Town, which was clearly written […]

  3. […] 1992’s splendid Keep The Faith, but they’re easily good enough to have made the cut for These Days, Crush, or Bounce – albums which actually suffered for not having enough rockers of this very […]

  4. […] as “The Jovi” instead lean into a minimalistic production similar to the one used on These Days (1995) – and just like five years ago, it yields both good and bad […]

  5. […] finish it’s a more consistent listen than either of their previous two efforts (1995’s These Days and 2000’s Crush), because while it doesn’t provide any music which we expect to […]

  6. […] Greatest Hits collection at this point in their career, having enjoyed a string of hits from These Days, Crush, and Bounce in the decade which had passed since Crossroads: The Greatest Hits (1994) hit […]

  7. […] to The Cowboy Way as a favour to his Young Guns II buddy Keifer Sutherland, it was cut from These Days (1995) at the eleventh hour due to not fitting with the overall feel of the […]

  8. […] Last Cigarette, which face up to the realities of getting older (something he’s been doing since 1994!), while cutting himself open on the broken pieces of failed relationships, and attempting to […]

  9. […] The anthemic title track and slow-building Make A Memory are good examples of why Bon Jovi are naturals at the country rock genre, and they’re not the only highlights here; take a look at the feel-good Summertime, catchy-as-fuck ballad Whole Lot Of Leavin’, and the fist-pumping Any Other Day which sounds like a countrified version of something from These Days (1995). […]

  10. […] is unfortunate, because one of Bon Jovi’s best attributes – particularly throughout the 1990s – was their roughness around the edges, but this excessive tinkering means this LP is left […]

  11. […] mid-album effort Beautiful Drug sounds like it could’ve been featured on the likes of These Days (1995) or Crush (2000), but is held back by a surprisingly unimaginative guitar solo from […]

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