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7800° Fahrenheit is the second studio album by American rock band Bon Jovi. It was released on March 27, 1985, through Mercury Records . The album's title is a reference to the supposed melting point of rock, which is equivalent to 4315.5 °C.
7800° Fahrenheit: Lance Quinn "The Last Night" Lost Highway "The More Things Change" Greatest Hits "The One That Got Away" 100,000,000 Bon Jovi Fans Can't Be Wrong "The People's House" Forever: John Shanks, Jon Bon Jovi "The Price of Love" 7800° Fahrenheit: Lance Quinn "The Radio Saved My Life Tonight" 100,000,000 Bon Jovi Fans Can't Be Wrong
The album features many of Bon Jovi's best-known songs, including "You Give Love a Bad Name", "Livin' on a Prayer", and "Wanted Dead or Alive". Slippery When Wet was an instant commercial success, spending eight weeks at No. 1 on the U.S. Billboard 200 chart and was named by Billboard as the top-selling album of 1987. [ 7 ]
The song features a music video. [120] "Wedding Day" 1995 Originally appears as a B-side to the single "This Ain't a Love Song". Released as a promo CD only in Germany. [121] "Como Yo Nadie Te Ha Amado" 1995 The Spanish version of "This Ain't a Love Song". It was released as a promo CD in Mexico and USA.
"You Give Love a Bad Name" is a song by American rock band Bon Jovi, released as the first single from their 1986 album Slippery When Wet. Written by Jon Bon Jovi, Richie Sambora, and Desmond Child about a woman who has jilted her lover, the song reached No. 1 on the U.S. Billboard Hot 100 on November 29, 1986, and became the band's first number-one hit.
It is taken from their second album, 7800° Fahrenheit (1985). It was the album's final single, debuting on the Billboard Mainstream Rock Tracks chart Christmas week 1985 and hitting its peak of #24 a month later. The ballad was the glam metal album's most successful entry at rock radio, although it did not make the pop chart.
AllMusic has retrospectively rated Bon Jovi three-and-a-half out of five stars. Leslie Mathew, who reviewed the album, said: "The songs may be simple and the writing prone to all clichés of the form, but the album boasts a pretty consistent hard rock attack, passionate playing, and a keen sense of melody", and called the album "an often-overlooked minor gem from the early days of hair metal".
The song also featured on the band's best-of album Cross Road, and Disc Two of their Greatest Hits album. A live version of the song, recorded in Tokyo during summer 1985, can be found on the album One Wild Night Live 1985-2001. In an interview, Bon Jovi said that he wrote the song while watching MTV's Top 20 Video Countdown.