CD Music Shop

|   More |  Search  
Artistopia Music - The Ultimate Resource for Artists
Home Music Charts Events News Forums Directory Classifieds Shop

Username   Password   Help  |  Register
Music Shop
Shopping Cart   Shopping Cart
  Browse Shop By :  Music CDs  |  Sheet Music  |  Books  |  Magazines  |  Instruments
  7800° Fahrenheit CD by Bon Jovi
Shop Home  >>  Music CDs  >>  Top Seller
Bon Jovi - 7800° Fahrenheit

7800° Fahrenheit

Music Artist :Bon Jovi
Music Style :Album-Oriented Rock (AOR)
Record Label :Island / Mercury
Release Date :1999-02-09
Store Price :$9.98

Artistopia's Price: $8.99

Usually ships in 24 hours

CD Tracks/Songs


Disc 1

1. In and Out of Love
2. Price of Love
3. Only Lonely
4. King of the Mountain
5. Silent Night
6. Tokyo Road
7. Hardest Part Is the Night
8. Always Run to You
9. (I Don't Wanna Fall) To the Fire
10. Secret Dreams

Other Artist Albums


Music AlbumThe Circle
Music AlbumThis Left Feels Right: Greatest Hits With a Twist
Music AlbumSlippery When Wet
Music AlbumCross Road
Music AlbumLost Highway
Music AlbumHave a Nice Day
Music AlbumNew Jersey
Music AlbumCrush

Customer Reviews of This Album/CD

Bon Jovi's 7800° Fahrenheit Equals Pure Hard Rock!
Submitted on: 2009-06-16
The band's sophomore collection "7800° Fahrenheit" came out in 1985 and it continues where the debut left off with ten hard rock/pop metal compositions. At this point in their career the line up consisted of Jon Bon Jovi on vocals, Richie Sambora on guitar, David Bryan on keyboards, John Alec Such on bass, and Tico Torres on drums. Lance Quinn was chosen to produce the recording made at the Warehouse in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

The album begins with probably the most popular tune of the bunch called "In And Out Of Love" which was selected for single release (it reached #37 on the Billboard Mainstream Rock chart) and it is a fine piece of hard rock typical from its time with those shouted background vocals in the chorus. Sambora plays some killer staccato rhythm guitar and an even cooler solo. There are two memorable ballads "Only Lonely" and "Silent Night" (both released as singles) that feature the expected catchy vocals, some atmospheric keyboard textures from Bryan, and memorable melodic soloing. A fourth single "The Hardest Part Is The Night" employs some melodies that recall the AOR sound of the group Foreigner and it is a favorite of mine. Another interesting composition is the Bon Jovi/Bryan/Sambora written "(I Don't Wanna Fall) To The Fire" where the rhythm section of Such/Torres uses a more electronic based sound with Bryan providing a melodic string-synth line that drives the song along while Sambora lets the heavy chords ring out. Torres's only songwriting contribution comes in the overlooked "Secret Dreams" where keyboardist Bryan provided a staccato melodic pattern similar to the one he used in "Runaway" and it's a gem!
The remaining songs "The Price Of Love", "King Of The Mountain", "Tokyo Road", and "Always Run To You" feature their vintage hard rock/pop metal sound and they are fantastic! It was surprising to find out that the band has recently refused to play any material form this LP live because they feel is not up to par with their newer stuff... I don't get it! There are a lot of gems here! I much rather listen to their early hard rock sound instead of their latest experiments such as the Hawaiian renditions of the classics or their more recent soft country direction. There's nothing wrong with Hawaiian music and country but that's not what Bon Jovi was really about as the excellent "7800° Fahrenheit" demonstrates!

Do you like hard rock and pop metal? If your answer is yes, you should add this great sophomore LP from Bon Jovi to your music library. I'm pretty sure you will enjoy it!
Thanks for taking the time to read!
Later...
Two words: HOT ROCK
Submitted on: 2009-04-24
I absolutely LOVE this album. I don't understand how some listeners and even the band themselves hate this album. I love every song on this album especially "In and Out of Love", "Silent Night", "The Hardest Part is the Night" and many others. This album has that classic 80's feel with the unique kick that Bon Jovi brings to all of their albums. I'm thrilled that I bought this album, it was worth it!
Set to explode in the heat...
Submitted on: 2009-04-15
Somewhere along the way to megastar status between their self titled debut and their monster breakout third record, Bon Jovi mistepped on album number two. Not a bad LP but certainly not a stunner, `7800 Degrees Fahrenheit' was not better than `Bon Jovi' was is the proof that it was a slight decline in their evolution. Still trying to find their identity (do we want to be a hair metal band or a Journeyesque pop band?), Jon and the boys cover all the bases with nothing really notable with the possible exception of opener "In and Out of Love", a very good song but it really didn't set the band apart from their glam metal brethren. "Tokyo Rose" is okay but kinda silly. The ballads aren't great though "Only Lonely" features a great lead from Richie Sambora. I love the intro and verse on "Always Run to You" but man the chorus sucks! "Hardest Part " is probably the best slow song after "Only" and don't get me started on "Silent Night" (God awful!). `7800' would be disowned by the band and I really can't say I blame them.....'Slippery When Wet' it ain't!
Good for the collection
Submitted on: 2009-03-24
Good for the collection, Bon Jovi's later material is better, but still worth getting this cd.
Bon Jovi - Raw
Submitted on: 2009-02-28

I bought this album 15 years ago while I was still at school. Having already bought "Slippery when wet" and "New Jersey", I found this album to be quite the treat. Having been released before the massive commercial success enjoyed by the band on the release of Slippery when wet,7800 Farenheight is a rare glimpse at Bon Jovi's original attempt to classify themselves as "hard rock". It is worth a listen, if only to chart to progress of their music - although there are a few good tracks on there like "the hardest part is the night" and my personal favourite "The price of love". Following their first albums "Bon Jovi" and "7800 Farenheight" the band mellow out significantly, taking on the identity of Pseudo rockers, or soft rock, rather than the original raw attempts. Like diamonds in the rough, the first 2 albums are in need of a little polishing. However, 7800 marks the first step towards the rest of Bon Jovi's remarkable career.

Write a review of this item at Amazon.com

Bon Jovi Music CDs



Browse CDs
Music CDs Home
Alternative Rock
Blues
Vocalists
Children's
Christian and Gospel
Classic Rock
Classical
Country
Dance and DJ
Folk
Hard Rock and Metal
International
Jazz
Latin
New Age
Opera and Vocal
Pop
R&B and Soul
Rap and Hip-Hop
Rock and Roll
Soundtracks

Browse Sections
Music Shop Home
Music CDs
Sheet Music
Books
Magazines
Instruments

Bon Jovi
Bon Jovi by Bon Jovi
Bon Jovi

Keep the Faith
Keep the Faith by Bon Jovi
Bon Jovi

These Days
These Days by Bon Jovi
Bon Jovi

New Jersey
New Jersey by Bon Jovi
Bon Jovi

Destination Anywhere
Destination Anywhere by Jon Bon Jovi
Jon Bon Jovi

Bounce
Bounce by Bon Jovi
Bon Jovi


Home  |  About Us  |  Privacy  |  Sitemap  |  FAQs  |  Terms and Conditions
Copyright 2009, iCubator Labs, LLC, All Rights Reserved.