I do so love the entitlement mentality of musicians like Bon Jovi.
If you want people to buy a whole album, make a whole album that's worth buying. I'm certainly not against buying an entire album if I like the songs--I do it pretty regularly. But if only one or two songs are any good, then I'll just buy those and save myself the money.
And if you really don't want to sell your music track-by-track, don't put it on services like iTunes and Amazon. Sell only full albums. It's not like anyone is forced to sell their songs individually for 99 cents each. You agreed to that when you signed the fucking contract.
Just sounds like he's upset the music industry doesn't run things the way he'd like. Well, tough shit, bro.
Since his record label has the publishing rights to any music he records, he wouldn't have any say in whether they get put on iTunes or sold individually. Depending on how long the record contract was, it might have been signed long before any online distribution was a factor.
And it wouldn't matter if the whole album was great. Most people won't even check out a track unless it's a hit or they heard it somewhere. He's in the pop rock business. Why bother writing a great album when people are only going to buy the singles anyway? I haven't heard any recent Bon Jovi, so I won't dump shit on his music just because he doesn't like iTunes, but that's the world he works in.
One of the reasons I'm glad I listen to obscure bands who focus on writing albums rather than catering to ADD music listeners who barely care about music. To me an average/good album should be 7 or 8/12 good songs, whereas I fully expect a great album to have 10+/12 good songs.