BON JOVIÂ – “Because We Can” (2013 Island Records Japanese single)
There was a time I used to look forward to new releases by Bon Jovi. Â It’s been a long time since I felt that way. Â I thought the band bounced back (pun intended) with 2002’s Bounce, then they lost me immediately again with This Left Feels Right. Â I don’t like to give up on bands that I used to feel strongly about, so I decided to check out Bon Jovi’s newest single, “Because We Can”.
I chose the Japanese single as it had one more track than the European. Â I had not even heard the song yet. Â It is written by Jon, Richie and songsmith Billy Falcon, produced by Jon and John Shanks. Â (In other words, more of the same…) Â The single came with a small 6-panel fold out poster and lyric booklet in English and Japanese.
Like many fans who have been hanging on long past Bon Jovi’s best before date, I found the song disappointing. Â Rather than growing, it sounds like Bon Jovi are returning to the mainstream modern pop sounds of Have A Nice Day or even Lost Highway. Â Bon Jovi’s never been the hardest rocking band, but they have written some great passionate rock songs in the past. Â “Because We Can”, by title alone, should be in your face and proud of it. Â Instead, it’s another faceless Pop Jovi song. Â I’m going to write my own Pop Jovi song called “Who Says We Ain’t Strangers Tonight Because We Got It Goin’ On”.
I hate the chorus, it would be embarrassing to be caught singing this one.  There are some nice guitar licks flitting here and there, almost Brian May-like in sound, but barely audible.  Everything is buried under a thick blanket of backing vocals, plastic drums and electronic sounds.  You can barely make out Richie’s voice, and what passes for a guitar solo is really just a layered guitar melody.  At least the Japanese single comes with an instrumental version, which will allow you to hear Richie’s simple and sparing guitar.
The third and final track is a 7 minute live version of “Keep the Faith”, from 2010 in New Jersey. Â Even this is slightly more laid back than the original 1992 version. Â But at least it shows that Bon Jovi can write and play challenging material while keeping it accessible. Â From the manic drum patterns to Richie’s smokin’ solo, this live version is everything that “Because We Can” should be. Â Richie really shines on this track; I hope he comes back. Â Bon Jovi without Richie ain’t Bon Jovi.
Based on this single, I won’t be buying the new album What About Now unless I find it cheap.
1.5/5 stars


