Before “Wanted Dead or Alive,” before “It’s My Life,” before Jon Bon
Jovi went off to Hollywood and took the Lost Highway through
Nashville in 2007, Bon Jovi was a pretty decent hard-rock band. Poppier
than most, definitely, but Jon’s Springsteenian tales of boardwalk
knockabouts and Richie Sambora’s streetwise riffs combined to make a
denim-clad, working-class alternative to stacked-heel Sunset Strip
skirt-chasers like Mรถtley Crรผe. Judging by its debut CD,
Where I Stand (released last year), Houston’s Low Man’s Joe is
quite familiar with pre-Slippery When Wet Jovi โ€“ the woman
in “No Heroes” even works in a diner. (All day.) Not only is singer
Bret Gyrich’s voice a dead ringer for Jon’s, growling the verses and
exalting the choruses, but the music clings tightly to the Jersey boys’
Thin Lizzy/Journey axis, with just a hint of Jovi’s thrashier neighbors
Skid Row. The lyrics, meanwhile, peer into the lives of people who
don’t have a lot (except each other) or a lot to lose, people for whom
salvation is a Saturday night on the town. The frustrated desire of
“Temptation,” on-our-own defiance of “No Heroes,” last-chance
powerdrive of “Radio Saved (My Life Tonight)” โ€” it’s all
well-trodden territory, to be sure (and was when Jovi got there too),
but why fix something that was never really broke?

Chris Gray is the former Music Editor for the Houston Press.