Power of Flower
Los Angeles Weekly
June 12 - June 18, 1998
By Miles Marshall Lewis
At: http://www.laweekly.com/
'Round midnight on December 20, 1989, at the
World in downtown Manhattan's Alphabet City, Terence Trent
D'Arby trooped back onstage to perform an obligatory encore
for a scant crowd of a couple hundred concertgoers. The black-clad,
dreadlocked soul singer was promoting his commercially doomed
soph-omore album, Neither Fish nor Flesh, and quelled
the applause to acknowledge a few famous guests. Apparently,
Nona Hendryx was in the house - necks craned to catch a glimpse;
so was Lenny Kravitz, at that time known mainly as the so-SoHo
husband of actress Lisa Bonet. Lenny had just released his debut
album, Let Love Rule, and in dedication to Kravitz, D'Arby
strapped on a rhythm guitar and led his band in a cover of Jimi
Hendrix's "Spanish Castle Magic."
Wherefore art thou, TTD? He dropped from
sight after his '95 effort, Vibrator. But D'Arby's
vote of confidence that night led me to purchase Let Love
Rule the following day. And the media blitz that followed
its release constructed an image that has persisted for years:
Kravitz is a flower child; his music is derivative; his lyrics
are simplistic. In fact, replace "flower child" with "stereotypical
rocker" and you've summarized the vast majority of reviews for
his latest album, 5.
Still, things seemed so much simpler then. As
a brother, I found Lenny & Lisa doing their boho John &
Yoko act in Central Park on Earth Day entrancing. "Let Love
Rule" was paced identically to "Hey Jude," but this was during
a period when the Black Crowes were aping Mott the Hoople and
the Faces without much critical backlash (wherefore art thou,
Black Crowes?). True, Kravitz's lyrics - lines like "little
fishies in the sea say hooray" - were a bit mortifying (more
McCartney than Lennon), but back then there was the prospect
of impending growth.
Nine years later, after gracing the cover of Rolling
Stone, recording a Yoko-sanctioned "Give Peace a Chance"
cover, working with Aerosmith, Madonna, Sean Lennon and Mick
Jagger, and opening for the Stones, Lenny Kravitz is still having
props problems. When Prince was in nine years deep, he was savoring
his second Album of the Year Grammy nomination for Sign o'
the Times; at five albums in, he was commanding 1999
powers, plotting the Revolution.
For those who've been paying attention (and Kravitz
consistently garners gold and platinum plaques), 5 might
qualify as Lenny's first pop album - not as in Hanson, but as
in U2 circa Zooropa. Less determinedly rock-flavored
than Circus, less musically far-reaching than Are
You Gonna Go My Way, but more funk-focused than any previous
release, 5 is a give-'em-what-they-want album. Kravitz
records digitally for the first time, seemingly abandoning his
time-pegged analog cocoon, and crafts a CD to compete with contemporaries
like Beck and the Verve.
As perfect a pop moment as he's ever produced,
"I Belong to You" is an uptempo love song on which Kravitz blends
the same potent elements as master alchemists Stevie Wonder
and Prince; he plays every instrument on the track save the
toy piano, including sandpaper blocks. "Fly Away" and "It's
Your Life" are punchy numbers with fluid choruses that beam
sunshine, perfect backdrop tunes for zooming down the California
coast.
5's breezy,
guitar-centered funk ambiance comes to a head on the highlight,
"Thinking of You," an ode to Lenny's late mother, actress Roxie
Roker. Over fat, excellently miked drums and chunky Fender Rhodes
bass chords, he sings in falsetto, "Tell me mama/Are the colors
deeper shades?/And tell me mama/Are there great big brass parades?/Does
the sun shine night and day?" (The often lyrically deficient
Kravitz co-wrote the verses with songwriter Lysa Trenier.) The
guitar solo on the lumbering, doomsday groove of "Take Time"
exhibits Kravitz's improved chops - he usually left such sonic
theatrics to longtime sideman Craig Ross. "Black Velveteen"
declares the dawning of an age of cybersexual paramours; it's
tongue-in-cheeky as churning synths, drums and Mellotron generate
an electronic pulse that recalls Blondie. Critics who say Kravitz
lacks a sense of humor might be taking him a bit too seriously
themselves; with lines like "Nice piece of kit/Electronic clit"
and "Black Velveteen's cat smells like strawberry kittens,"
let's give him the benefit of the doubt.
But the above-mentioned are 5's highlights.
The paint-by-numbers funk instrumental "Straight Cold Player"
is more Brand New Heavies than JBs. "Flowers for Zoe," Kravitz's
Mama Said dedication to his daughter, is more poignant
than his latest, the seven minutes-plus "Little Girl's Eyes."
And "Can We Find a Reason" ends things weakly ("It's the new
millennium," he tritely ad libs in closing), with a C&W
twang.
He's searched for his own sound for the past nine
years, and while his tunes don't move you as much as the artists
they invoke (Sly & the Family Stone, the Beatles, et al.),
Lenny Kravitz has written moving songs ("Butterfly," "The Difference
Is Why," "All My Life," Vanessa Paradis' "Natural High"). And
despite the lows, 5 is his strongest album in five years.