Indepentent-31.05.2006
Jon Bon Jovi: The man and his band on the road
To his critics, he's just an over-coiffed mediocrity. To his fans, he's a living
rock god. To himself, he's just a kid from New Jersey who got very, very lucky.
But one thing's for certain: Jon Bon Jovi's latest world tour is the
quintessential rock'n'roll experience. Ed Caesar joins the man and his band on
the road
Dusseldorf, 12 May 2006
You can tell who's in the band. They're the middle-aged guys acting like
teenagers. Take guitarist Richie Sambora - full-length tracksuit, cap on back to
front - high-fiving with the crew. Or Dave Bryan, hair falling in ludicrous
blond curls, playing with the "strings" function on his synthesiser at
ear-puncturing volume. Or Tico Torres, battering his drumkit like his dad just
gave him his 15th birthday present. The only one not joining in is the
serious-looking character up front.
It's Friday night in the Landeshaupstadt arena, Dusseldorf. The stadium, which
tomorrow night will host 55,000 screaming fans, is deserted. Well, nearly.
There's the band, of course, hundreds of roadies, uniformly massive and goateed
like pro wrestlers, and the odd meddling journalist. But the sound fills the
arena to bursting.
On stage, the boys are running a sound check. Mostly, that means making sure
their instruments still sound very, very loud on the cliff-like banks of
speakers. They fine-tune some new numbers while the crew scuttle around them,
taping things down, fixing things up and carrying spare guitars. You know the
rehearsal is going well because it's punctuated by regular whoops from Richie.
"That's it my brother...! Yeah, you got it going on...!"
Outside the stadium's service entrance, a fleet of black Mercedes waits, ready
to spirit the band and a dozen members of the immediate entourage back to their
Cologne hotel. And, in the production office, by Fortuna Dusseldorf football
club's home dressing rooms, laptop-toting managers and producers are tweaking
the operational details for tomorrow's opening-night extravaganza. One anxious
facilitator approaches with a missive from Mr Bon Jovi.
"Jon wants to do this now."
If Bon Jovi is a business (and 100 million album sales is very definitely a
business) then there is no doubting who is the CEO. Despite the vastness of the
travelling team (the European leg of the Have a Nice Day world tour employs more
than 130 managers, road staff, chiropractors, cocktail-shakers, lighting
designers and flight attendants) they all share one verbal characteristic: they
say the word "Jon" more than is natural, and with more reverence than might be
thought seemly. And, over the coming weeks, not one of the employees of Bon Jovi
Inc. will utter one negative word about their boss. Indeed, despite the
bonhomie, the songwriting collaborations, and public declarations to the
opposite, Jon Bon Jovi is Bon Jovi.
As the door to his dressing room is opened, there's a palpable shift in
atmosphere outside, where half a dozen trusted deputies are stationed. Jon is
short, but not tiny (think Michael Owen, not Tom Thumb), wearing a T-shirt tight
enough for his tanned, muscular arms to get a good show. The hair, once the
standing joke of the rock world, is more respectable in its 44th year than it
was in its 21st - blond (artificially), a touch feathered, and shoulder length.
The glare off his teeth could solve the world energy crisis. (He later admits,
with a pinch of understatement, that he has "a close relationship" with his
dentist.)
****
"Come in," he says. "Wanna drink?" He pours a Coke, and adds: "Don't say I'm not
a good host."
Was that a welcome or a command?
"Doing interviews blows," he continues.
And, as I'm wondering whether "blows" means the same as "sucks", the rock star
is off, filling the silence with pre-cooked statements on the state of the
Democratic Party; how downloads are killing the music industry; the melting of
the icecaps; the need to eradicate homelessness; and the bonuses of record-label
bosses. He says he hates the fact that Bon Jovi are seen as a "guilty pleasure",
and gives a weary sigh when asked about the critical acclaim that has always
eluded his band.
"But, whatcha gonna do?" he shrugs, sounding every inch the New Jersey boy.
With that, he stands up and heads for the door.
"See you in Dublin," he says, over his shoulder.
****
Dublin, 20 May 2006
It's 2pm, and the stage at Croke Park, a north Dublin behemoth, is fully
operational. The crew has already been working for seven hours, and they have 11
more to go. Their leader, a bear of a man called Bugzee, has been touring with
Bon Jovi since 1986, and has been on the road since 1971, when he came to
England with a little-known American college band called McKendree Spring. The
scale of his responsibility is enormous. He leads three separate road crews that
leapfrog one another throughout the tour. Each team has 10 massive trucks full
of staging. Added to these three teams are two advance teams, who also leapfrog
each other - with four trucks each full of weather protection, rigging, power
cables, and all the things that must be installed before the stage can even be
put up. The screen at the back of the stage alone needs four trucks to haul it
around. No one, says Bugzee, gets much sleep.
"But then again," he says, "try going into an office every day. None of these
guys could do it."
With the set up and running, there's a strange calm in the arena. It's more than
can be said for the Four Seasons Hotel, where the band have holed up. At 1pm,
the front entrance resembles the forecourt of a Mercedes dealership. The lobby,
meanwhile, is a whirligig of competing interests. Bon Jovi's presence is
responsible for the curious guests, permasmile porters, drivers and sundried
members of the touring carnival. By coincidence, a wedding party is also trying
to leave the hotel. It's the start of a long day for both groups, and there will
be entertainment later watching the two worlds collide. (One priceless moment
occurs just after midnight in the hotel bar, when a wedding guest buttonholes a
member of Bon Jovi's support band, Nickelback, with: "Hey, aren't you the singer
from Nickelodeon?")
Over at Croke Park five super-fans have already turned up. It's 3pm. Bon Jovi
won't be on stage for five hours. Julia Eaton, Cheryl Norman, Danielle Pakes,
Kat Haeusser and a gothic woman calling herself "Black Velvet" share a love of
Bon Jovi, and, it seems, heavy make-up. Three are English, one is Australian,
and one, naturally, is German. Between them they have clocked up 900 Bon Jovi
gigs, travelling together across continents to be with their idols. Five years
ago, Jon was so impressed by their fidelity that he issued all the women with
free tickets for life, along with backstage passes.
These five have invested a ridiculous amount of time, money and energy in Bon
Jovi. Why? Do their other friends know of their addiction?
"My close friends know about it," says Danielle. "But if you meet new people you
don't really go into it."
Why?
"Because people just think we're nuts."
What is revealing about this posse of obsessives is that, even though they're
within their rights to flash a backstage pass and meet their heroes, they never
do so. The relationship they crave is straightforward. The girls are the
entertained. The band are the entertainers. Full stop.
It was not ever thus. At the height of the band's success in the late Eighties,
when Bon Jovi were considered "the biggest band in America", you couldn't move
for libidinous females. The band's old security guard, Michael Francis, recalls
how groupies would sleep with roadies just to have a shot at sleeping with the
band. But things are different now. The boys have grown-up issues to deal with.
Jon has been married to his high-school sweetheart Dorothea, with whom he has
four children, for 18 years. And Richie, always the man with the beautiful woman
on his arm, is dating the actress Denise Richards, while also embarking on a
custody battle with his estranged wife, and Richards' friend, Heather Locklear.
This is not to say that the band have lost the ability to party. But there is a
mellower edge to it now. A night out is much more likely to start with dinner
than an orgy. And the drinks of choice tend to be more sophisticated; Jon admits
a predilection for fine wine, and says, in inimitable style, "those big bordeaux
reds are killer". And Richie's on-stage cool-box always contains a bottle of
chilled pinot grigio, presumably for those times when only a light, fruity
Italian will provide adequate mid-performance refreshment.
****
On every show day, at 5pm, Jon eats his pre-performance meal. As he chews on a
grilled chicken breast, some limp pasta and anaemic-looking greens, he looks
relaxed - happy that his family have flown in for the gig, and happy to be in
Dublin. Some of his greatest concerts have been here, he says, including one
notable, rain-sodden event five years ago at the Royal Dublin Society. Jon
recounts how he had told the crowd that the raindrops were angels' tears,
"because they didn't get a ticket to the sold-out Bon Jovi show".
"Right there, on the downbeat, there was thunder, and a big bolt of lightning.
And I fell to my knees, afraid, and I crawled back to the microphone stand, and
I stood up. I said, 'I didn't know you Irish were so connected!' They loved it.
The place went batshit. The paper ran a headline the next day - EVEN GOD WENT TO
THE BON JOVI CONCERT. What an unbelievable night."
As Jon finishes his meal, he starts to play with the set-list. He knows a Dublin
audience don't want any slow songs, so he mixes up a list of high-pep Bon Jovi
favourites, ancient and modern, to whip them up. When he's finished - and that
won't be for another hour - the hand-written list is taken from him and printed
up for the rest of the band. The bassist, Hugh, describes over a post-gig drink
how Jon's choices can be unpredictable: the Dublin show, for instance, contained
a rendition of "Garage Band", a number the band have played maybe twice in two
years
"I got the list in the car and thought, 'Shit, Jon!'" he laughs. "I got to learn
that song over."
****
Mischief-making aside, Jon is strikingly adult. He talks, for instance, with a
kind of staccato eloquence about causes close to his heart. He recalls his
financial support for the presidential campaigns of Al Gore and John Kerry, and
complains, wistfully, that the world would have been a better place were Gore to
be President now. He says a preview of Gore's film, An Inconvenient Truth (about
Gore's campaign to raise awareness of climate change), blew him away, and that
he hopes "a fire will start, and maybe [Gore] will run again." He admired Bill
Clinton's efforts to "straighten out the Welfare system", and talks of how the
ex-President got "punched out" on healthcare.
Jon has never wanted to be a politician. But he has discovered that - in that
hackneyed phrase - he wants "to contribute". To that end, he and Sambora bought
The Philadelphia Soul, an Arena Football League team (an abbreviated form of
American football). All the proceeds the team makes now are channelled back into
philanthropic gestures. Last year, for instance, The Soul were responsible for
building 26 shelters for homeless.
Where do this philanthropic urge come from? Is Jon guilty about the hundreds of
million dollars he has made?
"Guilty? Fuck, no!" he says. "I worked my ass off for that money. But money's
only a good thing if you do something with it."
Jon is fired up by this subject. And as he talks, his hero worship of Frank
Sinatra becomes apparent. Sinatra, a fellow Italian-American singer-actor from
New Jersey, was the subject of his biggest hit single ever, "It's My Life", in
2000, and remains his role model. Jon admits to having read The Way You Wear
Your Hat, a profile of Sinatra, twice in recent months.
"What I really got from that book," he says, "was that Frank was a great ideas
guy. He was the guy that made things happen, whatever he was doing - he didn't
want to deal with the minutiae. But he knew exactly what he was doing. He might
have come off a little like the crazy uncle sometimes, but he knew exactly what
was going on. And he was incredibly generous, too - always buying everybody a
drink. Didn't matter how much money he had, gave it all away. Took care of
everybody."
After this skittish encomium, Jon falls very quiet. He leans forward, earnest.
"One of my few regrets," he says, "was that I never met him. It would have been
quite an engaging conversation to have now. I'd love to sit and talk to him now.
Not then. I would have had nothing to say to him then."
What has happened between "now" and "then"?
"I'm... finding another way. There's just something in my psyche telling me, I'm
here for this short period of time. What am I going to do to make myself felt
here? In some way. Not just as an entertainer. That's just what gets me in the
door. I have come to a place and a level in my life that says there's got to be
more to it."
****
For now, thrilling 70,000 people will have to do. It's 10.50pm and the night has
turned cold. But for the lighters and the camera flashes, Croke Park is in
darkness. Bon Jovi have played their final number - the last notes in a
performance that started at 8pm - and the crowd have gone wild. Again. The mums
and the dads in their original Slippery When Wet T-shirts have gone wild. The
twentysomethings, who may or may not choose to talk about their Saturday night
when they turn up to work on Monday, go wild. The teenagers, whose numbers are
legion, go wild. New recruits to the band's fanbase, they've learnt the words to
hits from the 1980s - a time when both they, and Bon Jovi, were coming into the
world.
Everyone wants one more song, but it isn't coming. There is a strict 11pm
curfew, after which the police start getting interested. Jon runs from the
stage, with one last 1,000-watt smile and a hand on his heart. He's wearing a
Stars-and-Stripes denim jacket and a pair of black trousers so tight they'd
contravene decency laws in several American states. And tonight, he has
delivered a set so spirited that even the harshest of Bon Jovi's critics - and
there are a few - would have been stirred.
"The best live band in the world," says Eamonn, a local boy and lifelong fan,
who's secured a spot 10 yards from the stage. "Better than U2. Better than the
Stones. The best."
Bon Jovi abandon their instruments and run through to the back of the stage. The
police sirens fire up, the band jump into their limos, and the cavalcade steers
its way through hundreds of fans. Richie's on his way to an executive jet
tonight, but the remainder of Bon Jovi will wait until Wednesday to board their
private plane back to Germany. Riding in the front car is Vicky, who calls
everyone "sweetie" and has been the band's tour flight-attendant for 20 years.
Serenely unbothered by the shaking windows and the motorcycles speeding past,
she describes how, to stop her "boys" getting homesick, she feeds them with the
things that remind them of home - Bazooka gum, Tic Tacs, chocolate-chip cookies,
and Double-Stuffed Oreos. And she cooks meatloaf, the boys' favourite, for the
first and last flights of every tour.
"They're like my babies," she says. "I love to spoil them."
****
Munich, 28 May 2006
In the gloaming, the wide, reclining banks of the Olympic Stadium in Munich
burst with life, while, down the steps at the furthest end of the stadium, the
floor has filled like an ant colony. The crowd are already singing as the band
close the door of their room behind them, just before 8pm, quiet and focused
like it's fight night. Jon shoots a little grin and raises a "V" signal, before
he and the band relive the Goodfellas Steadicam shot - from the dressing room,
down a concrete stairwell, along a galley, through the steaming kitchens, past
the parked trucks, and finally to the stage.
Earlier in the afternoon, outside the Mandarin Oriental Hotel, hundreds of
digital cameras had awaited a momentary glimpse of their heroes on the four-yard
journey from the hotel to the door of the limousine. And, as the crowd gathered
below his first-floor suite, Jon had explained why he thought critics had always
panned him, and his band.
"I guess our music is the kind that's easy to pick on," he says. "The accusation
is, if rock'n'roll is meant to about rebellion, then how can a parent and a
child go to the same rock show? And I think, hey, that's actually right - I hear
you, I agree. But on the other hand, I own that turf. It's mine. None of my
peers got that, and none of the guys that came up when I came up are ever going
to get that. So I'm not looking for the cover of Uncut magazine. I don't know
any of the guys in Uncut."
There's another accusation that's levelled at Bon Jovi, though - that their
lyrics are unexceptional, a little straight forward. That you wouldn't have to
have a great grasp of English to get something from "I'd hold you/ I'd squeeze
you/ I'd get down on my knees for you." Jon agrees.
"Sure, I want those songs to be universal. I want them to be so everyone
understands them. That's exactly what I'm trying to do. To me that makes those
songs more timeless - that you can have those universal spins on what the words
are saying. But sure, there are specific things that inspire me. Take "It's My
Life" - that song was so specific to me making U-571, finally getting my foot in
the door of the movie business. It was specific to me finding Frank Sinatra as a
role model. It was specific to not having made a band record in five years. But
no one gave a shit. Frankie became their buddy, their husband, their brother.
And I love that."
"And, you want to talk about specifics? Listen to me rip my guts out on "Bed of
Roses". That's from my least successful commercial album ever. When I wrote
those words, "wasted and wounded" I was hungover as Jesus could be, trying hard
to write this song, with a bottle of vodka kicking me in the head and I was
fucking puking and this blonde was still in my bed. You think that was fiction?
It wasn't. But no one's ever asked me what that song is about, so I've never
felt the need to tell anyone."
That night, on stage, this accusation is still ringing in Jon's head. During
"Radio", he recounts the highlights of our afternoon conversation to the crowd.
He tells them how a guy asked him, "why my songs are so universal. Why all these
people love Bon Jovi but we're never in the critics' Top 10. Well, we're all on
this little pimple called Earth, together. And we're all the same. And as long
as I'm feeling you and you're feeling me, well, we'll all just keep feeling it
together..."
He then proceeds, with tears in his eyes, to rip his guts out on "Bed of Roses".
The crowd's response is positively volcanic.
****
At 2am, most of the band have gathered round a table to drink "Concoctions" - a
post-show rite of passage. It's a cocktail only a band would invent - one part
vodka, rum, gin, triple sec, midori and cranberry juice. Richie's on his fourth
one, and seems curiously unaffected by them. Across the room, Jon has been
cornered by a chatty couple, but he finds an exit by asking if anyone wants a
drink. He's got a glass of iced pinot grigio in his hand, and he hands another
one over his shoulder, deftly breaking up the little circle that has gathered
around him. He's a little down tonight, even after the reception he left a
little over three hours ago, because his team, The Philadelphia Soul, have just
lost in the play-offs.
"I guess I'm just like 99 per cent of people," he says. "They go to work, get
their paycheck, fall in love and watch the game."
There you have it. The reason 80,000 people sang along tonight, and why 32
million have done so, in stadiums worldwide, throughout their career. It's
because they know Jon Bon Jovi's enthusiasm, like his haircut, is unironic.
Because the ludicrously handsome figure before them wants to be with them as
much as they want to be with him.