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Blaze of Glory (Bon Jovi album)

Blaze of Glory
Jon bon jovi-blaze of glory.jpg
Studio album by Jon Bon Jovi
Released August 7, 1990
Recorded April–June 1990
Genre Hard rock
Length 48:43
Label Mercury
Producer Jon Bon Jovi, Danny Kortchmar
Jon Bon Jovi chronology
Blaze of Glory
(1990)
Destination Anywhere
(1997)Destination Anywhere1997
Japanese Limited Edition Cover
UICY-6469
UICY-6469
Singles from Blaze of Glory
  1. "Blaze of Glory"
    Released: June 25, 1990
  2. "Miracle"
    Released: 1990
  3. "Never Say Die"
    Released: January 1991
  4. "Dyin' Ain't Much of Livin' with Elton John"
    Released: 1991
  5. "Santa Fe (Promo)"
    Released: 1991
Professional ratings
Review scores
Source Rating
Allmusic 2.5/5 stars
Entertainment Weekly C−
Rolling Stone 2/5 stars

Blaze of Glory is Jon Bon Jovi's debut solo studio album, released in 1990. It includes songs from and inspired by the movie Young Guns II. Emilio Estevez asked for Bon Jovi's "Wanted Dead or Alive" as the theme song for his upcoming Billy the Kid sequel, but Jon Bon Jovi ended up composing an all-new theme song for the film's soundtrack instead. The album featured guests such as Elton John, Little Richard, and Jeff Beck. Blaze of Glory was awarded a Golden Globe. It also received Academy Award and Grammy nominations.

The album mainly focuses on the theme of redemption and whether an individual's past wrongs will catch up with them. Another theme on the album is about making a stand and making yourself heard in the world. Jon Bon Jovi said on the 100,000,000 Bon Jovi Fans Can't Be Wrong DVD that he originally thought the album's aggression and themes dealt with Billy the Kid and Pat Garrett from Young Guns II but has come to realize that they reflect the bad place he was in at the time. The album more or less transitioned Jon's songwriting from mostly girls and having a good time to other subject matters, which would lead into him and his band's further maturing in songwriting with 1992's Keep the Faith.

Emilio Estevez originally approached Bon Jovi to ask him for permission to include the song "Wanted Dead or Alive" on the soundtrack. Bon Jovi did not feel the songs lyrics were appropriate; however, he was inspired by the project and resolved to write a new song for the film that would be more in keeping with the period and setting. He quickly wrote the song "Blaze of Glory", and performed it on acoustic guitar in the New Mexico desert for Estevez and John Fusco. This was the first time that "Blaze of Glory" was heard. Fusco called his co-producers into the trailer to listen, and it was named the theme song for Young Guns II on the spot. In an interview for UNCUT magazine, Kiefer Sutherland said, "When Jon (Bon Jovi) joined the team for Young Guns 2, we were all eating hamburgers in a diner and Jon was scribbling on this napkin for, say, six minutes. He declared he'd written 'Blaze of Glory', which of course then went through the roof in the States. He later gave Emilio Estevez the napkin. We were munching burgers while he wrote a No. 1 song... Made us feel stupid."


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Wikipedia

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