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The Bon Jovi story began in Sayreville, New Jersey. Where Jon and his brothers Matt and Tony were raised by their parents Carol and John Bongiovi (Jon later changed his name). By his early teens, Jon was hanging out at local clubs, convinced that one day he would be a rock star.

By the time he was 16, Jon was playing clubs. It was not long before he hooked up with keyboardist David Bryan (real name: David Brian Rashbaum), who played with him in a ten-piece rhythm and blues band called Atlantic City Expressway. Jon also performed with bands called The Rest, The Lechers and John Bongiovi and the Wild Ones.

The members of Bon Jovi had crossed paths in these early days, but the current lineup didn’t come together until March of 1983 after the first Bon Jovi single, “Runaway,” had become a minor hit. A local radio station included "Runaway" on a compilation tape, and the song started getting some serious airplay. The success of “Runaway” got Jon noticed, and he realized that he’d need more than session players if he wanted to capitalize on his success by touring the New York clubs to support the single.

 

Jon gave Dave a call, who in turn tapped Alec and Tico. A succession of guitarists (including Dave “The Snake” Sabo, who went on to form Skid Row) followed, until finally Richie signed on, and the band came together as a whole. They began gigging around New York in earnest. At one show, where they opened for Scandal, the band caught the attention of record exec Derek Shulman, who signed them to PolyGram. “With Jon, I felt he had an unbelievable desire to be a star”, recalls Shulman. “he had a burning desire to be huge.”

Their self-titled debut came out January 21, 1984. Filled with the group’s now-signature power ballads and hooked-filled tunes underscored by soaring guitar riffs and well-crafted melodies, the album went gold (sales of over 500,000). Bon Jovi released their follow-up album, 7800 Farenheit, in April 1985 which included the hit singles “Only Lonely” and “Silent Night”, it sold equally to its predecessor.

Slippery When Wet, the band’s third album, provided the break-trough. Powered by songs like “Livin’ on a Prayer” and “Wanted Dead or Alive”, the LP went gold and platinum simultaneously within six weeks of its six weeks of its release. By April of 1987, Slippery When Wet had sold seven million copies. By the time the Slippery Tour finished in Hawaii on October 17, 1987, the album had sold in excess of 14 million copies, putting it in the same league as Thriller by Michael Jackson.

Jon was asked what all this astronomical success meant, to which he answered, “Everything is bigger, and it moves twice as fast. You’re recognized twice as often. This is bigger, the whole world gets bigger. You have to sell more records, be huger. You get smarter and you understand the business a little more, so it's more responsibility. You understand it now, and you want to make sure everything goes right.”

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