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Lenny Kravitz Looks Back on “Let Love Rule” Backstage in New York

10/29/09, 5:35 pm EST

Rolling Stone recently caught up with Lenny Kravitz backstage at New York’s Fillmore at Irving Plaza, where the rocker performed a residency of five sold-out nights in celebration of the 20th anniversary of his debut album. “It’s been 20 years now since I made Let Love Rule, and for me the record is still just as fresh as it was when I made it,” Kravitz tells RS. “When I hear a recording, I can remember everything about my life at that time. It all comes back.”

Kravitz says the album still sounds fresh because he went about recording Let Love Rule in an “organic way.” “It doesn’t have the sound of a certain era,” Kravitz says, and the album does have a timeless quality — it certainly doesn’t sound like it was recorded in 1989, and even Kravitz admits it doesn’t fit into the archetype of what black men were recording two decades ago. “I’ve never fit in,” Kravitz said. “I was supposed to be the an angry black man. I remember when I first started doing interviews, the big question was ‘Why aren’t you doing hip-hop?’ “

For more on Kravitz, including his inspirations and his in-progress new album Negrophilia, be sure to watch our interview above and check out our Close-Up on Kravitz in our new new issue.

Related Stories:

Lenny Kravitz: I Want to Work With Jack White
Exclusive Audio: Lenny Kravitz Talks About Label Struggles and the Origin of “Let Love Rule”
Exclusive: Lenny Kravitz Tells RS “No Truth to the Story” About Joining Velvet Revolver


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Comments

bama in ut | 10/29/2009, 7:42 pm EST

When I saw the video for “Let Love Rule” I though it was clearly a 1969-70 retro thing done well. The closest thing it reminded me of was the “Blind Faith” project. I think the socio black-white lines were blurred more than with Sly & The Family Stone and Booke T & The M.G.’s, I think it was actually a better time of blending of cultures and music than now, it was an extension of what happened in the 40s and 50s when different ethinic group were getting on the band wagon and playing each others styles blending it into their format.

Wow, man, far out, for sure | 10/30/2009, 8:33 am EST

Why is this even getting coverage? Let Love Rule wasn’t a groundbreaking or influential album — it was Kravitz’s derivative debut with one or two semi-hits but that’s about it.

oh, Romeo Blue | 10/30/2009, 2:34 pm EST

Of course it doesn’t sound like a record from the 80’s — you ripped off the 60s and 70s!

Ari | 10/30/2009, 4:14 pm EST

Good album. Next.

J | 10/31/2009, 12:48 pm EST

Lenny coulda been a good one…Then he decided image and modeling were just as important as music. It probably made him a richer man but a lesser musician. Rolling Stone sucks corporate ass.

Anonymous | 11/1/2009, 5:33 am EST

well, back in the day i bought a copy of it and found the album a straight forward riff off of the Beatles..

The Red Baron | 11/1/2009, 3:23 pm EST

I think his music rocks. It’s just a pity that most of his lyrics don’t.

thevm | 11/2/2009, 2:19 pm EST

“Fuck retro anything…” – Tool

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