Rating:
Genre:
Rock
Release Date: 10/30/2001
Sure,
5 gave
Lenny Kravitz a career revival, thanks to a really big hit with the didactic, clumsy
"Fly," and he followed it with a hit that was equally inexplicable -- a lumbering, dunderheaded cover of
the Guess Who's
"American Woman," which surely benefited from its presence on the blockbuster
Austin Powers: The Spy Who Shagged Me and
Heather Graham's accompanying, chest-grabbing video -- and equally distasteful. Combined with the lackluster
Circus, it was easy to assume that
Kravitz had plateaued, deciding to recycle lame sub-
Hendrix stadium rock instead of crafting the kind of lush, post-
psychedelic soul that made his first three records so fine. Then, out of nowhere, he threw out the lovely
"Again" as a new track for
Greatest Hits, setting the stage for the return to form that's
Lenny. This, not the empty
hard rock of
Circus and
5, finds
Lenny Kravitz at the peak of his powers, crafting
classic rock homages that get by not only on their melodic force but in sterling studiocraft that may shamelessly worship
classic rock, but gets the sound and texture right.
Kravitz has gotten to the point that his blend of
album rock,
smooth soul, hippie love, and hipster
pop is now his own musical signature -- yes, it's still possible to play "spot the influence," but it's all blended better and presented with an offhand grace, particularly in how the gorgeous, enveloping
ballads and mid-tempo
pop is punctuated by the rockers that sound much fiercer in this context. There may not be singles that are as immediately grabbing as
"It Ain't Over Til It's Over," "Let Love Rule," and
"Are You Gonna Go My Way," but there are no dull spots, either, and this easily stands alongside his first three albums as a set of classy, near-irresistible
pop for listeners weaned on classic and
college rock, which is a wholly welcome surprise.
~Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Music Guide