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The Richie Sambora Appreciation Thread. Goto Page: [] [<] 1 2 3 ... 8 9 10 11 12 13 ... 25 26 27 28 [>] [>>] [»|]

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Beautiful Sin
Vice Captain

PostPosted: Sat Feb 25, 2006 9:04 am


Vankar
My sister's got Undiscovered Soul too, but i've been too busy this week to listen to it. It's currently in my cd player, and is next on my list of things to listen to.

My sister is actually the biggest Bon Jovi fan in my house. She's got all the Bon Jovi albums, all the Jon Bon Jovi solo albums, the two Richie Sambora albums, a load of vinyl, videos, tour programs and tapes and stuff like that, and half the movies Jon Bon Jovi has been in. I've got one album because she got it for christmas and she already had it.

I did have Crossroads before she had any, but then she nicked it stare

xd Awesome!
PostPosted: Thu Mar 02, 2006 2:04 pm


YaY! Go Richie! He's one of the greatest guitar players alive. Besides my mom has an oober big crush on Richie! xd

BreaControversy


Beautiful Sin
Vice Captain

PostPosted: Thu Mar 02, 2006 3:33 pm


He is one of the greatest guitarists of all time! I have an oober big crush on Richie too. xd He's just so hot.

I found a site where you can vote for Richie as the greatest guitarist. It's all in french though. xd
PostPosted: Fri Mar 03, 2006 6:12 pm


lol! Kool! ^_^

BreaControversy


Roses and Revolvers
Captain

PostPosted: Sat Mar 04, 2006 3:59 pm


I just watched a performance by him today. He was singing Wanted Dead or Alive all by his lonesome. It was awesome!
PostPosted: Sat Mar 04, 2006 5:37 pm


I bet! Where'd you see it? I wanna see!

Beautiful Sin
Vice Captain


Roses and Revolvers
Captain

PostPosted: Sat Mar 04, 2006 5:41 pm


I'll give you the link =D
PostPosted: Sat Mar 04, 2006 5:43 pm


YAY!

Beautiful Sin
Vice Captain


Beautiful Sin
Vice Captain

PostPosted: Sat Mar 04, 2006 7:08 pm


I don't know if anyone here has a profile at www.last.fm but I made a Richie Sambora group, so if any of you are there, join it! And if you aren't, join the site!

http://www.last.fm/group/Richie+Sambora+Fans
PostPosted: Wed Mar 08, 2006 1:43 pm


Richie Sambora keeps a firm grip on his mojo

The co-writer of Bon Jovi's biggest hits says the band has grown up
By Sean Daly

Sunday, Mar 05, 2006,Page 18


The first time Bon Jovi's ample-haired guitarist made out in the back seat of a car, Layla was playing on the radio. He'll never forget it. The song and the smooching have blended into one steamy teen memory.
"I remember what I was doing, you know?" the 46-year-old laughs during a teleconference call from his Los Angeles home. "I remember how that smelled. How it felt. It's like a sonic picture."

He's telling this story to try to explain why his band, after 20-plus years of power chords and poufy hairdos, is still stuffing arenas worldwide. As co-writer of Bon Jovi's biggest hits -- including arena-rockin' anthems Livin' on a Prayer, Wanted Dead or Alive and You Give Love a Bad Name -- Sambora is well aware that New Jersey's hunky native sons cater to that "back seat" demographic.

"We're a part of the fabric of people's lives at this point," says Sambora. "As songwriters, but also as a band, we can stand up there and sing songs that (people remember) listening to the first time (they) made out in the car with somebody. It's a big privilege for us. When we walk out there and sing those songs, you see what's in the eyes of those people. We're singing about everybody."

Like fellow Garden Stater Bruce Springsteen, Sambora comes across as a wealthy man in a working-class body. His voice is all gravelly blue-collar cool, and although he's on the phone, you fully expect Sambora to offer you a cold Coors Light and show you his bowling trophies.

If you're waiting for him to say something snarky about sexy lead singer Jon Bon Jovi, you're wasting your time. (And if you're waiting for Sambora to comment on his crumbling marriage to actor Heather Locklear, alas, this interview was conducted before she filed for divorce.)

Sambora knows that his music career is dipped in lucky dust, and he's not about to mess with his mojo now.

When asked if he ever gets tired of playing the same old hits night after night, Sambora dismisses the question, almost as if the rock 'n' roll gods will smite him for complaining.

"After all these years, if we [Bon Jovi] haven't learned how to be a great rock 'n' roll band, then something's messed up."

Richie Sambora, songwriter

"Everybody asks that question a lot," he says. "How does it feel to play Livin' on a Prayer for the 20,000th time? You know what? Songs like that don't get tired."

Sambora has a right to be thankful. Bon Jovi is riding a red-hot rebirth. The 2005 album Have a Nice Day has shown solid sales. And the band's current world tour has been nothing short of gangbusters. The first wave of dates sold out so rapidly that the band added second nights in several cities, including Tampa.

"God, it feels as if we're as big as we've ever been," Sambora says.

It wasn't always so. After the band signed a major-label deal with Polygram/Mercury in 1983 (Sambora joined the band a short time after it formed, replacing original guitarist Dave Sabo), Bon Jovi landed a major gig opening for metal heroes Judas Priest, whose leather-clad fans pelted Bon Jovi with invective and projectiles, including M-80 fireworks.

It was 1986 before Bon Jovi could truly court a mainstream audience. That's the year the band released the seminal pop-metal masterpiece Slippery When Wet, which sold more than 10-million copies. The album turned them into superstars -- and turned Jon Bon Jovi into a sex symbol.

But during the 1990s, when the US got down with grunge, Bon Jovi went through a rough period, dangling on the precipice of high-haired 1980s has-beens. At least in the US.

These days, however, the US and Bon Jovi are steaming up the ol' back seat again, and Sambora thinks he knows why.

"You know what happened? We grew up and then America caught up to us," he says. "In the 1990s, we started talking about more social issues. I mean, we still wrote great love songs, and we still wrote good rock songs. But we started growing up ... and having kids, going through our own stuff, and writing about the feelings that we were having ... Sometimes with an artist, people have to catch up to you and your thought stream."

Sambora's presence in the band has continued to grow.

Marrying a Hollywood hottie always helps with exposure, of course. Plus, though Jon Bon Jovi has made movies and bought sports teams and supported politicos, Sambora has remained a straight-ahead rocker, a good-time guy, hungry for guitar licks and banging heads.

His inventive, bluesy guitar style has been emulated up and down the Billboard charts, and his harmonizing gives Bon Jovi songs a fraternal last-call charm. Fans have responded to Sambora, too. The Internet is now loaded with fan sites devoted to one of the great second fiddles in the rock canon.

Sambora, currently working on a solo album, says Have a Nice Day is a balance of Bon Jovi's philosophical one-two punch: Jon's political voice and Richie's rock 'n' roll swagger.

"Jon's particular take on Have a Nice Day was that the whole country was bipartisan," he says. "He saw this great divide in the country. For me, the album's message is more social. That's what makes a band happen, you know? It's all about different kinds of feelings, you know? For me, `Have a nice day' was the operative line. When the world gets in your face, I say, `Have a nice day.' Very Clint Eastwood, you know?"

No matter how political Bon Jovi albums might get, though, Sambora promises that Bon Jovi shows will forever be rowdy.

"After you come to see a Bon Jovi live show, you're going to be converted," he says. "After all these years, if we haven't learned how to be a great rock 'n' roll band, then something's messed up. We put out that boxed set, 100,000,000 Bon Jovi Fans Can't Be Wrong. Well, they can't."

And he swears that he and his bandmates remain tight.

"We're a band of brothers," Sambora says. "I think that people want to see people stay together. They want to be entertained by people that are staying together, and people that have camaraderie. We still like each other. That's pretty unbelievable after 22 years."

And will the relationship last another 22 years?

Sambora laughs: "Well, you may be in danger of that happening."

Beautiful Sin
Vice Captain


Beautiful Sin
Vice Captain

PostPosted: Wed Mar 08, 2006 1:53 pm


RICHIE SAMBORA ROCKS!!
PostPosted: Wed Mar 08, 2006 1:54 pm


RICHIE SAMBORA ROCKS!!

Beautiful Sin
Vice Captain


Roses and Revolvers
Captain

PostPosted: Wed Mar 08, 2006 2:00 pm


That was a great read.
PostPosted: Wed Mar 08, 2006 2:06 pm


Yup. Found it on a site, and thought some people over here might appreciate that.

Beautiful Sin
Vice Captain


Beautiful Sin
Vice Captain

PostPosted: Thu Mar 09, 2006 5:47 pm


I just bought the Stranger In This Town cassette off eBay. heart
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All About Lovin' Bon Jovi Guild

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