New Year, New Music...
Tuesday, January 5, 2016
Bon Jovi to release 14th album ‘This House Is Not For Sale’
Bon Jovi to release 14th album ‘This House Is Not For Sale’
Bon Jovi New Album Arriving In 2016; Listen To Matt O'Ree Play 'Living On A Prayer' With David Bryan!
Everyone does their best for a great show, says Bon Jovi drummer Tico Torres
Jon Bon Jovi: “Malaysians know how to rock!”
KUALA LUMPUR: More than a month ago, rock singer Jon Bon Jovi performed a cover of Teresa Teng's classic Mandarin hit Tian Mi Mi, and the video of his performance went viral on social media.
Unfortunately, it isn't one of the songs the American legendary band would be performing at its upcoming concert here on Saturday at Stadium Merdeka.
"Not a chance. That was one time. One line at a time," the singer said with an embarrassed smile when met at the concert's press conference at Shangri-La Hotel here yesterday. "I'm like a parrot. You can teach me, but you got to teach me slowly."
It was his sister-in-law, Nina Yang Bongiovi, who suggested to make the cover.
"I did my best. I was intimidated at first, because it's a language I don't speak. "I told her I would but only if she taught me how."
At the concert, the band will be performing both old and new songs from its body of work that covers 32 years of its career.
"Some of the songs were written way before some of you were even born. Others are current, like from our latest album Burning Bridges, which is like a fan record we put out for the series of concerts we're doing now," Jon said.
The group last performed here 20 years ago in 1995, to a crowd who knew how to rock. Drummer Tico Torres said: "Like at every concert, we expect you to sing along with us, because we appreciate audience's participation."
"Sorry it took us 20 years to come back, but we're here now. We appreciate all of your love and support. We look forward to a great night. "We're also glad that the rain came and cleared the skies. I heard that the air quality here wasn't very good," he added.
He added that Bon Jovi has a catalogue of music that generations are familiar with. The band has held several concerts as part of this tour prior to coming to Malaysia.
"So far the reception has been great, and things keep getting better every day," Jon said.
Bon Jovi Live in Kuala Lumpur 2015 is organised by IMC Live.
source
BWW Interviews: David Bryan, Tony-Winning Composer Of MEMPHIS!
Richie came thru!
As I noted in my previous post, he had been out of the country but he's back home now and he accepted the challenge...
As I am sure you all know by now, Jon Bon Jovi was challenged to do the ALS Ice Bucket Challenge. He readily accepted the challenge and called out David Bryan, Tico Torres and Richie Sambora to do the same.
Tico also accepted the challenge. He called out Tiger Woods, Alice Cooper and Ernie Els...
David, too, accepted the challenge. He called out Richard Saker, Gavin DeGraw and Ryan Cabrera.
The only slacker right now is Richie. Granted, he is out of the country, but still, they have ice, water and buckets in Japan, don't they?
Come on Richie, where's your video?!
For more information about ALS and/or to donate, click here.
David will play at the 2nd edition of "Carrara Idol" festival in Milan on April 8th. Unfortunately it will be a private event so no tickets will be put on sale.
Carrara idol in Milan
The Nation , Carrara - February 18, 2014
BACK Carrara idol , but in Milan. The event is scheduled for April 8 at the city of Milan Design Week when Fuorisalone Vimercate Lambrate will return to perform on her gorgeous grand piano entirely covered with marble David Bryan of Bon Jovi. Nothing to do, then, for all those who expected to live again under the Apuan Alps an evening of glamor and international rock . After the successful first edition of the event in 2012 that brought in the heart of the basin Fantiscritti fans and enthusiasts from all over Italy , the creators of " Carrara idol " ( the same David Bryan and industrial Carrara Gualtiero Vanelli ) , have decided to transfer the cabin and puppets in Lombardy. "Maybe we could go back to the city in two years - says Vanelli that tells how Carrara has never been taken into account for this second - edition . Originally we had planned to organize Carrara idol in London, but since David has already scheduled a date there this year we decided to move to Milan. "
" CARRARA idol " will not be , however, that one of the events to which Gualtiero Vanelli is working on the upcoming Milan Design Week when he presents " Solid senses ." For the occasion, five star design and architecture as Stefano Boeri, Stefano Giovannoni , Alessandro Mendini, Paul Ulian Massimilinao Fuksas and propose original creations in marble designed and made in collaboration with "Robot City, the italian art factory 'of the same Walter Vanelli . Specifically Stefano Boeri has chosen to focus on architectural volumes in one dimension from internal and accentuating the dynamic forces . Alessandro Mendini has instead re-read his Proust armchair , modeling its structural components according to the peculiarities of the marble. Stefano Giovannoni for the occasion has designed a table with chairs zoomorphic , " Bunny" , while Paul Ullian , marble is used to create a table " destrutturabile " and a lamp. Massimiliano Fuksas , has finally taken the task of looking after the preparations of the inaugural evening of 8 April , during which David Bryan will perform some songs on her gorgeous M- Plan , a Steinway grand , around which it was created and "customized " a cover with marble tiles .
From Gibson:
1983, Jon Bon Jovi formed the band Bon Jovi. See This Day in Music Spotlight .
Born John Francis Bongiovi, Jr. in Perth Amboy, New Jersey on March 2, 1962, Jon Bon Jovi’s parents were both retired Marines. After the military, his father, John Francis, settled into work as a barber, while his mother, Carol Sharkey, became a florist. John, Sr. was of Sicilian and Slovak descent, while Carol came from German and Russian stock (it’s been claimed by Jon himself that Frank Sinatra’s blood runs through his). Jon attended St. Joseph High School in Metuchen, New Jersey during his freshman and sophomore years, but transferred to Sayreville War Memorial High School in Parlin, New Jersey.
Jon spent a great deal of his youth pursuing music. He played in local bands with friends and his cousin, Tony Bongiovi, who owned a fairly renowned recording studio in New York called The Power Station. During that time, he played in a number of bands, and while his grades suffered because of a general lack of interest school, his passion for music knew no bounds. By 16, he was steadily gigging in various local clubs and musical hot spots, and it was in one of these early bands, an outfit called Atlantic City Expressway, where he met keyboardist and future Bon Jovi bandmate, David Bryan.
Like his future superstar bandmate, Richard Stephen “Richie” Sambora was also born in Perth Amboy, New Jersey, though a few years earlier on July 11, 1959. Richie’s father, Adam, was a factory foreman, while his mother, Joan, worked as a secretary. Raised Catholic, Richie grew up in Woodbridge, New Jersey, where he started playing guitar at the age of 12, shortly after the untimely passing of one of his musical heroes, Jimi Hendrix. Raised on ’60s rock and blues, he was a big fan of the guitar gods of the day, including Hendrix, Eric Clapton, Jeff Beck, Jimmy Page, Johnny Winter and, later, Stevie Ray Vaughan and Joe Perry. Richie was also a big fan of Spanish classical guitar, elements of which would inspire some of his future work.
Jon and Richie’s musical destinies were on a collision course.
When Jon was seventeen, his cousin Tony gave him a job sweeping the floors at his recording studio. A year later, in 1980, Tony recommended that Jon sing on a song producer/musician Meco [Domenico Monard] was recording for his album, Christmas in the Stars: The Star Wars Christmas Album. Jon’s first-ever professional recording credit (under the name John Bongiovi) was for singing “R2-D2 We Wish You a Very Merry Christmas.”
In 1983, Jon recorded “Runaway,” a song he’d written during his days sweeping the floors at The Power Station studio. He enlisted the help of studio musicians for the session, including guitarist Tim Pierce, keyboardist Roy Bittan, bassist Hugh McDonald and drummer Frankie LaRocka.
After the song was mixed and ready for consumption, Jon shopped it around to various record companies, including Atlantic and Mercury, but he was given the cold shoulder. Undaunted, he continued networking and eventually heard back from promotion director John Lassman at radio station WAPP-FM (103.5 “The Apple”) out of New York City. Lassman told John he’d wanted to include “Runaway” on a compilation album they were putting together that featured local talent. Jon was reluctant at first, but he eventually agreed.
After the album’s release, “Runaway” quickly became a local hit, and Mercury Records took notice, giving Jon his first major record contract. To help promote “Runaway,” Jon called up Richie Sambora, who’d been playing steadily and establishing his name as one of the best young gunslingers on the East Coast (he’d even auditioned, unsuccessfully, to fill the vacant guitar role in KISS). Richie was familiar with Jon and agreed to join him. Jon also contacted his old bandmate, keyboardist David Bryan, who at the time was studying music at Julliard; Bryan quickly dropped out to join Jon and Richie. Experienced local drummer Tico Torres and bassist Alec John Such also got the call – and on this day in 1983, Bon Jovi, the biggest-selling American band in history, was formed.
From Philly.com
When David Bryan phones from a stage in Houston, the Bon Jovi keyboardist isn't calling to discuss his band's tour updates or studio news. He's not giving love a bad name. He's not talking about Slippery When Wet, Richie Sambora, or other topics typically Bon Jovi.
The New Jersey native who started playing with Jon Bon Jovi when the singer still used his given name "John Bongiovi" (Bryan's real last name is Rashbaum) is in the Lone Star State, readying a theatrical production of The Toxic Avenger, his second musical stage pairing with playwright/novelist Joe DiPietro.
Their first? Memphis, the Tony-winning, rocking romantic tale loosely based on disc jockey Dewey Phillips, one of the first white DJs to play black music in the 1950s.
Now on its first tour, Memphis opens at the Academy of Music on Tuesday and runs through Jan. 22.
Among other prizes, the show won four Tonys in 2010, including Best Musical, Best Book of a Musical, Best Score, and Best Orchestrations.
Bryan is "amped" that Philly (a home away from home when Bon Jovi recorded 1985's 7800° Fahrenheit at Philly's Warehouse studio) finally gets a chance to experience his rocking historical musical. "The touring production is a testament to what Memphis is on Broadway, where it's been for three years and almost 1,000 shows. Honestly, we're just so upbeat about it."
Being upbeat is a big part of being David Bryan. Fellow Jersey native DiPietro, famed for writing book and lyrics for I Love You, You're Perfect, Now Change (the second-longest-running Off Broadway musical) says in a phone interview that there's an optimism about Bryan that you don't usually find in theater folk. "Most of them are pretty tragic and pessimistic," adds DiPietro, laughing. "Then again, maybe David's optimistic because he's had people screaming at him in adoration his whole life. Who knows?"
After calling himself the "ultimate optimist," Bryan (who will turn 50 in February) proves as much when discussing the forlorn finale of Memphis, "Steal Your Rock 'n' Roll." Though it's about one character's rise and another's fall, Bryan says that through everything, the ill-fated character "stuck to his dreams no matter what - that's the person I am."
The person Bryan is learned to play trumpet at age 5 when his father, horn man Eddie Rashbaum, taught young David the intricacies of his craft. "He led me down the path of music," recalls Bryan, who eventually learned to play violin, clarinet, and piano before hooking up with Bon Jovi. "Jon and I have been playing together since I was 161/2, and honestly it's been a pretty long, fun ride," says the keyboardist who worked in cover bands with the vocalist before forming Bon Jovi. Bryan has penned a fleeting few songs for the pop-metal act including the fan favorite "In These Arms."
When Bon Jovi went on hiatus between 1990 and 1992, Bryan started considering options. He started work on a solo album, the prog-jazzy On a Full Moon that came out in 1995 (a second solo effort, Lunar Eclipse, was released in 2000) and composed the film score to 1992's Netherworld. In 2001, the "script gods" came calling when an agent sent Bryan, a theater novice, a request for an authentic score for a musical love story, an interracial one, with the birth of rock-and-roll at its core.
"It wasn't just music-for-entertainment's-sake," says Bryan. "The story mattered. It's history. Plus, I knew as soon as I read the script that I wanted to make the band a horn ensemble. I played that soul sound growing up."
DiPietro says that although he knew many talented theater composers, he was looking for a rocker to collaborate on Memphis. "[Bryan] called out of the blue and said, 'I'm David Bryan from Bon Jovi. I just got your script. I want to know how I could write the music,' " DiPietro recalls. "He seemed like a good guy, so I told him to send me something." Figuring a rock guy would take weeks to dispatch music, DiPietro was astounded to receive a burned CD the next morning. "I listened to it once and hoped that David wasn't crazy, because he was the guy," he says.
Bryan had been so enthused by DiPietro's words that he had run into his New Jersey home studio, plugged in the drum machine, sang lead and background vocals, and layered in half a dozen instruments. When DiPietro called, Bryan told him, "Yeah, I am a little crazy, but I'd still take the gig."
After several tryouts with new teams of producers and designers, Memphis debuted during the 2003-04 season in Massachusetts and California and opened on Broadway in October 2009. Nothing about the Broadway staging of Memphis has changed for its touring run, says Bryan. "That final production works because we ran out of wrong things to do," he explains with a laugh.
Meanwhile, the collaboration between rock guy and writer goes on. Not only are they testing out The Toxic Avenger ("The feel-goo musical of the year," proclaims its tag line) in Houston for a hopeful run at Broadway in 2012, they are at work on a musical, featuring all original songs, about the tunesmiths who worked in Broadway's famous Brill Building. DiPietro and Bryan hope to see that effort hit Broadway in 2013.
DiPietro says that the pair's similar ages, Jersey roots, like-minded mothers ("his is Jewish, mine's Italian") and laid-back manners make them a good team. "I've never been in a writing situation where the other person isn't spinning and screaming all the time," says DiPietro. "David isn't that." Nor does Bryan have much of an ego, according to DiPietro, who can tell you stories about rockers who've tried to write musicals and failed.
What DiPietro loves most about Bryan is that the keyboardist writes bright, authentic rock that's inherently theatrical. Music in the theater has to come over the footlights. "David writes with the richness of emotion that the theater requires, whether he knows it or not," says DiPietro.
Bryan knows it. Whether it's an oozing, green, toxic superhero or Memphis disc jockeys and soul shouters, Bryan is confident of his ability to make songs happen and put emotions onto a stage.
"I know how to whip an audience into a frenzy and how to build that up from beginning to end because I've been doing that with Jon [Bon Jovi] since we were kids," says Bryan with a laugh. "I know all the tricks of rock-and-roll, and I use them all in Memphis."
Yep, Memphis is coming to Blu-Ray, DVD and digital download in January (just in time for my birthday!) I think I may need to drop some not-so-subtle hints to Mr. Q so he knows to get this for me for my birthday. Or maybe I'll just buy it and thank him for the very thoughtful gift...
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