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Former Bon Jovi bassist dies at 70


Jon Bon Jovi (centre) said Alec John Such (far right) was a childhood friend of drummer Tico Torres and had brought Richie Sambora (left) to see the band perform before he later joined as lead guitarist. — Picture from Facebook/Bon Jovi

Jon Bon Jovi (centre) said Alec John Such (far right) was a childhood friend of drummer Tico Torres and had brought Richie Sambora (left) to see the band perform before he later joined as lead guitarist. — Picture from Facebook/Bon Jovi

Monday, 06 Jun 2022 4:09 PM MYT

WASHINGTON, June 6 — Bassist Alec John Such, a founding member of Bon Jovi who played with the group in their 1980s heyday, has died aged 70, the rock band’s frontman announced yesterday.

With a string of quickly memorable hits such as Livin’ on a Prayer, You Give Love a Bad Name and Wanted Dead or Alive, Bon Jovi packed arenas in the 1980s on their marathon, pyrotechnic-fuelled tours.

The hard rockers from New Jersey were led by namesake Jon Bon Jovi, who said yesterday that the band had “found our way to each other thru him.”

“As a founding member of Bon Jovi, Alec was integral to the formation of the band,” the singer said in a statement on Twitter.

Bon Jovi said Such was a childhood friend of drummer Tico Torres and had brought Richie Sambora to see the band perform before he later joined as lead guitarist.

No cause of death was announced.

Unlike many hair metal bands that were their contemporaries, Bon Jovi preserved a more family friendly image, helping the band win a following in diverse corners of the world.

The anthem rockers are one of the top-selling bands of all time, and won a spot in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2017.

Such, who played with the group from 1983 to 1994, and Sambora, who quit in 2013, reunited with the band for the Hall of Fame induction ceremony in 2018.

“When Jon Bon Jovi called me up and asked me to be in his band many years ago, I soon realized how serious he was and he had a vision that he wanted to bring us to,” Such said at the induction ceremony.

“I am only too happy to have been a part of that vision.”

Bon Jovi was notably one of the first Western rock group approved to tour the then Soviet Union when the communist system opened up under Mikhail Gorbachev’s glasnost reforms. — AFP



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