A lonely masterpiece

A lonely masterpiece

Let Love Rule (Audio CD)

Customer Review

Even stupid, if you sets the bar so high coinciding with the debut album, that this brand - at least in artistic terms - can never reach again. This fate befell with Lenny Kravitz, Let Love Rule '.

When it was published in 1989 it was thought that the seed that had Prince 1984, Purple Rain sown finally came up, because suddenly there handing back a black musician of rock, funk, soul and songwriting so skillfully combined into a homogeneous mixture that a while listening simply breath stayed away. Actually, there are on this album a lot of great, some very good and no bad songs. Also unusual for later Kravitz'sche conditions here though the omnipresent, but more restrained use of guitars. Here's even plenty of room for the electric piano, which carries a lot of songs, and most of all air in the songs, here nothing is overloaded or clogged. The best example is the poignant, Be '- a song to Kravitz afterwards never wrote again in this quality.
All this is late 60s, 70s music, but was so clever and so timeless staged as today just brings together Jack White and the great, especially from independent compositions lives.

From time to time Kravitz managed then to later albums still one to two songs reminiscent of this masterpiece, but mostly he was too busy his ego to maintain, and to stage as legtimen heirs of John Lennon, Jimi Hendrix and Led Zeppelin to get his own compositional skills and his autonomy to be aware. A pity, because this debut was so full of promise.

Very nice, nostalgic light bulb Rank: 5/5
January 17
Effective spreader Rank: 4/5
December 6
Very complementary ... Rank: 5/5
August 20
quite OK but not more Rank: 2/5
November 2
Could do better 198 Rank: 2/5
April 11