Jon Bon Jovi Talks Giving Back, 40 Years of Bon Jovi & His Pollstar Live! Keynote Q&A

A few days after being honored by the Recording Academy for his musical contributions and philanthropic work as the 2024 MusiCares Person of the Year, Jon Bon Jovi will take the stage as a featured keynote speaker at Pollstar Live!
The keynote Q&A โ โHow To See A Million Faces And Rock Them Allโ โ features the Bon Jovi frontman interviewed by his longtime booking agent, Rob Light, who is the head of music, a partner and managing director at CAA. The discussion will include JBJ sharing insight about his lengthy career and the artistโs perspective on touring at the highest level. JBJ will also be honored at Pollstar Live! with the Milestone Award in recognition of Bon Joviโs 40th anniversary. Since forming in Sayreville, New Jersey, four decades ago, Bon Jovi has released 15 full-length albums and performed in over 50 countries for more than 40 million fans, grossing more than $1.3 billion.
JBJ caught up with Pollstar ahead of the conference to discuss philanthropy, Bon Joviโs big anniversary and his keynote Q&A.
Pollstar: Congrats on being named the MusiCares Person of the Year. What do you attribute to your heart for giving back? Is it religion or your familyโs values?
Jon Bon Jovi: I think that some of it is instilled by your parents and your upbringing, but the rest of the journey has been organic. When I started the [Jon Bon Jovi Soul] Foundation it wasnโt my first foray into philanthropy, but it was the first time that I had an entity. And now 20 years later, weโre able to be focused in our approach to both issues [of hunger and homelessness]. If there were a bumper sticker to explain why I chose homelessness and hunger issues my belief is that the bumper sticker would read: โI donโt need a scientist to find the Cure. Itโs within us.โ
You know, every little bit helps โ whether itโs one of our four restaurants or during COVID when we both financed and were one of the handful of employers of the food bank, which fed seven pantries, which then in turn fed thousands of people on Long Island. We knew that we could have our own little kind of ripple effect by being in the trenches and doing what it is that we do.
Youโre going to be featured at Pollstar Live! As a keynote Q&A along with your agent, CAAโs Rob Light. Any hint about what you want to talk about on stage?
I told [Ray Waddell, president of Oak View Groupโs Media & Conferences Division] and Tim [Leiweke, CEO and co-founder of Oak View Group, parent company to Pollstar] Iโm open to anything. Thereโs nothing thatโs off [the table] or anything I have to hide. And we can talk about everything thatโs happened. I think it will be great to sit down with an old friend who knows the history of the band in an open conversation with no limits.
Youโre also going to be honored with the Milestone Award. What are your biggest takeaways after 40 Years of Bon Jovi?
First of all, weโre still happy to be here (laughs), but I think that the biggest takeaway Iโm realizing now is that the journey is filled with peaks and valleys and yet, if you stay true to who you are, you have a chance to be around for four decades and counting โ and not to be on a nostalgia tour. Weโre currently getting ready to release a new record and all kinds of other things that are coming to celebrate this 40th. โฆ Itโs about understanding that no career is a straight line from A to 40 (laughs) but rather itโs the peaks and valleys and thatโs what makes you stronger.
Could a tour be in the works following the album?
Thereโs no details but thatโs certainly the hope. Weโre very excited about the new record. Thereโs going to be a documentary coming. Thereโs a whole lot of things in the pipeline. I think yesterday was technically the birthdate of the band โ the 40th birthdate of the band. I only knew that because I saw it online (laughs).
An announcement from your team said that self-reliance optimism and community are key concepts that define Bon Joviโs music and charitable efforts. Do you consider yourself an optimist? And whatโs the key to sustaining that attitude?
Iโve always absolutely been a glass-half-full kind of a guy. I think it was the blue-collar, middle-class upbringing, being born at the time that I was and we were as a band. That kind of optimism was prevalent in America in 1962 when JFK was in the White House and talking about going to the moon and your mom and dad saying, โAnything you want to be, you can be.โ There was a sense of awe about what was to come. And I carried that with me as long as I could. These days it gets harder and harder but then you meet some young kid who blows you away and you think, โOh, thatโs the future.โ Or you see some new innovation thatโs there for the good of mankind and you say โOK, we can save ourselves from ourselves at this point.โ (laughs). I still remain optimistic that itโs not yet too late to right ourselves.
What advice would you give to someone who either wanted to get into music or wanted to get involved with giving back to others?
I think thatโs a really simple question. And the honest answer is to be true to who you are. And in the music business, itโs by being true to who you are and not jumping on fads and fashion because you think thatโs going to bring more success.
And with regard to philanthropy, everybody has the opportunity to give back in their own way. And if you were ever to get involved on a grander scale, i.e. a foundation, just make sure that itโs something you really know about, care about and are willing to roll up your sleeves and get your hands dirty.
