Jon Bon Joviwas “Livin' on a Prayer” that he’d be able to help keep his manager out of jail when he performed in the U.S.S.R. in the ’80s.

“To keep him out of jail, I had to go to the Soviet Union,” the rock star said of his ex-manager, Doc McGhee, whom he says had been accused of “smuggling a lot of drugs” at the time.

“My first manager got into some trouble with the law,” Jon explained. “Honest to God, he was accused of smuggling some incredible amount of tons of marijuana into America.”

Bon Jovi performing at the Moscow Music Peace Festival in August 1989 Luzhniki Stadium in Moscow.Koh Hasebe/Shinko Music/Getty

Bon Jovi, live, Moscow Music Peace Festival 1989 at Luzhniki Stadium, Moscow, USSR, 12th and 13th August, 1989. (L-R) Richie Sambora (guitar), Jon Bon Jovi (vocals).

Koh Hasebe/Shinko Music/Getty

He continued, “Somehow his plea bargain was to take the young, cute kid and throw him to the wolves and the judge and he says, ‘And I’ve got an idea: We’ll go to the Soviet Union and promote peace and harmony and blah blah blah. And please, your honor, don’t put me in prison.’”

“So I had to go in the snow to the Soviet Union and say, ‘We’re coming!’” the Grammy winner added. “He put a package together with some of his acts and some of his friends and we went and played. It was a crazy story. He never went to prison.”

The “It’s My Life” singer also emphasized on the podcast how unprecedented it was to be performing in the politically fraught U.S.S.R. in the late ’80s.

“You got to remember, the Soviet Union, if you even thought of having an album as we knew it, you would be imprisoned,” he said. “There were kids that had lists on a piece of paper that were very small because if the KGB came up at that time, they would crumple and eat it.”

The rocker explained that Moscow’s Luzhniki Stadium even assigned extra security to be backstage at the event because they anticipated a “riot” ensuing, were fans to have seen the catering from the Hard Rock Cafe. “Meanwhile, we’re playing to this festival with these other bands and nobody gave a s— about that because the security was truly crying when they saw the kinds of food,” he said.

Bon Jovi performing at Moscow Music Peace Festival at Luzhniki Stadium in Moscow in August 1989.Koh Hasebe/Shinko Music/Getty

Bon Jovi, live, Moscow Music Peace Festival 1989 at Luzhniki Stadium, Moscow, USSR, 12th and 13th August, 1989. (L-R) Richie Sambora (guitar), Jon Bon Jovi (vocals), Alec John Such (bass).

Moscow Music Peace Festival was held over two days on Aug. 12-13 in 1989 and featured a lineup of bands from the Soviet Union taking the stage along with groups from the U.S. and U.K. In addition to Bon Jovi, A-listers likeMötley Crüe,Ozzy Osbourne, and Jason Bonham ofLed Zeppelinalso performed.

In a 2017 interview about the concert withRolling Stone, McGhee and his attorney Joe Cheshire opened up about the historic show being born out of the music industry professional’s “marijuana conspiracy charges in several jurisdictions.”

Cheshire explained that he thought to launch the Make-a-Difference Foundation, which sponsored the Moscow festival, as a means to “keep [McGhee] from serious punishment.” He said, “We had to suggest to the federal courts that it would be much more profitable for society that this nonprofit foundation exist and raise money and spend money for appropriate purposes than it would be to take one human being and put him in prison. So that’s what we did.”

McGhee himself added, “I heard this back then, and I heard it for years afterwards: ‘I can’t believe all you have to do is a rock show and you get off.’ Well, number one, I’m not sure that any court, no matter what you did, would put your probation [as], ‘If you go and change the world, stop the Cold War, you get off.’ OK? I don’t think anybody should make that s— up. It had nothing to do with it whatsoever. It just happened to be the timing aspect. I was already way over all that s— before I did Moscow.”

Richie Sambora, David Bryan, Jon Bon Jovi, Tico Torres and Alec John Such of Bon Jovi in Moscow in August 1989.Koh Hasebe/Shinko Music/Getty

Bon Jovi on the street, photo shoot on the street, on a street, Moscow, USSR, 12th and 13th August, 1989. (L-R) Richie Sambora (guitar), David Bryan (keyboards), Jon Bon Jovi (vocals), Tico Torres (drums), Alec John Such (bass).

Bon Jovi fans will be able to learn even more history about the iconic New Jersey group in the forthcoming docuseriesThank You, Goodnight: The Bon Jovi Story. The four-part Hulu series is set to premiere on April 26, with all episodes set to hit streaming at once.

The project documents the hitmakers’ rise, as well as tumultuous moments over their four-decade-spanning career, and promises to feature never-before-seen images and previously unreleased demos.

Never miss a story — sign up forPEOPLE’s free daily newsletterto stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories.

When announcing the LP, the frontman shared in a statement, “This record is a return to joy. From the writing, through the recording process, this is turn up the volume, feel good Bon Jovi."

source: people.com