Lenny Kravitz
Lenny Kravitz was born on May 26 in 1964 in New York
City. His family ties (his Jewish father was a top television producer
while his Bahamian mother, Roxie Roker, was an actress) suggested a
future in show business. As a teenager he attended the Beverly Hills
High School where his contemporaries included Slash, later of Guns 'n'
Roses, and Maria McKee of Lone Justice.
Kravitz's interest in music flourished in the mid-80s
and he signed a recording contract with IRS Records under the moniker
Romeo Blue. The deal eventually fell through, but in 1987 the singer
(now using his real name) completed the first of several demos which
concluded with an early version of Let Love Rule. These
recordings led to a contract with Virgin Records America, although the
company was initially wary of Kravitz's insistence that the finished
product should only feature "real" instruments - guitar,
bass, keyboards and drums - rather than digital and computerised
passages.
Although denigrated in some quarters as merely
retrogressive (notably in its indebtedness to both Elvis Costello and
Jimi Hendrix) Let Love Rule proved highly popular. Kravitz then
gained greater success when Madonna recorded Justify My Love, a
new, rap-influenced composition quite unlike his previous work.
In 1991, Kravitz continued his unconventional path by
writing a new arrangement to John Lennon's Give Peace A Chance
as a comment on the impending Gulf War. The resultant recording
(credited to The Peace Choir) featured several contemporaries,
including Yoko Ono and Sean Lennon. The latter also appeared on Mama
Said, where Kravitz's flirtation with 60's and early 70's rock was
even more apparent. The set spawned the US Top 5/UK Top 20 hit It
Ain't Over 'Til It's Over, a kiss-off to his soon to be ex-wife,
actress Lisa Bonet.
The prolific Kravitz then wrote an entire album for
French chanteuse Vanessa Paradis, and collaborated with artists as
diverse as Curtis Mayfield, Aerosmith and
Mick Jagger. The hard
rocking title track of the follow-up Are You Gonna Go My Way?
was another worldwide success, breaking into the UK Top 5.
Circus featured a stripped-down version of his
trademark sound, displaying his talent as a writer of more
contemporary sounding material rather than the 60's pastiches of his
earlier albums. The belated follow-up, 5, saw Kravitz embracing
digital recording and attempting a more relaxed fusion of soul and
hip-hop styles.
The singer topped the UK charts in February 1999 with Fly
Away, thanks to extensive media exposure as the soundtrack to a
Peugeot car advertisement. In 2003, Kravitz teamed up with Warner
Brothers Records to launch his own Roxie Records imprint.
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