During the release of the documentary series “Thank You, Goodnight: The Bon Jovi Story,” the band leader bluntly explained that recovering from surgery “is the worst.”
Singer Jon Bon Jovi believes that the healing of his vocal cords, after undergoing surgery, “depends on God.”
In an interview with Fox News Digital before the release of the documentary series “Thank You, Goodnight: The Bon Jovi Story,” the American rock band’s frontman bluntly explained that recovering from vocal cord surgery “is worst”.
“It’s shit,” said the singer of hits like ‘Livin’ on a Prayer’ and ‘It’s my Life’.
“But, if I compare it to athletes… when Kobe (Bryant) and the Achilles tendon, or Michael Strahan and the pectoral, Tom Brady with the knee, Tiger Woods preparing for another Masters… it’s not easy for any of them,” he pointed.
“And I know his work ethic and mine are very similar. Nobody anticipates an injury like this. And it depends on God to fix it or not, but I am certainly at the Lord’s side working on it,” the singer said.
From 2022
Jon Bon Jovi, 62, whose full name is John Francis Bongiovi Jr., underwent throat surgery in 2022 after suffering from vocal cord atrophy, recalls the American media.
The artist remains hopeful for a full recovery, but is also painfully aware that he will have to make a decision about singing in front of an audience very soon.
“I can tell you that 60 is different from 50 and my current concern is that I am going to forget how to sing,” he told Fox News.
“I’m going to be devastated if I can’t sing live again, but what does a quarterback do when faced with the last ball he’s going to throw? “That is the situation I am in,” he said.
“I want to look back on these 40 years of Bon Jovi, look forward to the new album and appreciate everything. “That is my hope: to find joy in everything,” she said.
Precisely, to celebrate the four decades of history of the band that he created in his native New Jersey, he created the aforementioned documentary series “Thank You, Goodnight: The Story of Bon Jovi”, which will debut on April 26 on Disney + (United States and Europe).
In Latin America the production will debut that same day on the Star+ platform.
The singer revealed to Fox News that he decided to ask his bandmates to contribute to making the documentary given the uncertainty of what will happen to the group, also famous for songs like ‘You Give Love a Bad Name’, ‘Bad Medicine’ and ‘I’ll Be There for You’ and ‘Blaze of Glory’, among others.
“I thought about how we are going to celebrate this anniversary, because there is only one 40th anniversary, and who knows where we will be when we are 50,” he confessed to the news network.
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