Serious music fans love to debate.
The Beatles or the Stones? Which Prince album is best? Does Bon Jovi deserve to be in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame?
Two weeks after being inducted into the Rock Hall, Bon Jovi established something Saturday at Xcel Energy Center that is not debatable: Frontman Jon Bon Jovi is one magnetic, energetic rock 'n' roll showman.
One thing, however, was debatable Saturday: Was it a bad sound mix, or did Jon Bon Jovi sound bad?
Hard to tell, quite honestly. The drums and especially the electric guitars were often louder than the lead singer's voice. Good thing that just everybody in the arena knew the words to nearly every song. Plus, that was helpful since Bon Jovi encouraged the fans to sing along on several hits, letting 16,000 folks be his backup singers, as he acknowledged when he introduced the band members.
Moreover, Bon Jovi did have plenty of help from his sidemen, with five guys — everyone but drummer Tico Torres — singing along with him for 2½ hours.
So, despite Bon Jovi insisting Saturday in the 2016 song "God Bless This Mess" that "My voice is shot/ I'm going gray/ these muscles all ache," it was hard to tell if his voice was shot. At times, his voice sounded strained; he sounded flat on "Bad Medicine" (or was it the bad sound?) and oftentimes he left the high notes to the fans.
When the group did a two-song acoustic set, Bon Jovi's voice sounded somewhere between serviceable and soulful, though it's clear the years have taken a toll on his pipes.