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Lenny Kravitz, Circus CD cover artwork

Lenny Kravitz, Circus

Audio CD

Disk ID: 1164314

Disk length: 51m 9s (11 Tracks)

Original Release Date: 1995

Label: Unknown

View all albums by Lenny Kravitz...

Tracks & Durations

1. Rock & Roll Is Dead 4:48
2. Circus 3:24
3. Beyond the 7th Sky 4:54
4. Tunnel Vision 4:19
5. Can't Get You off My Mind 4:33
6. Magdalene 3:48
7. God Is Love 4:26
8. Thin Ice 5:33
9. Don't Go and Put a Bullet in Your Head 4:22
10. In My Life Today 6:29
11. Resurrection 4:27

Note: The information about this album is acquired from the publicly available resources and we are not responsible for their accuracy.

Review

On the opening cut of Lenny Kravitz's latest album, Circus, the rock star falls just short of completely writing off his own existence. The song: "Rock and Roll Is Dead," a standard indictment of the fabled rock and roll lifestyle ("You're living for an image...you got five hundred women in your bed"). It's ironic, though, that Kravitz himself has always played rock star to the hilt--not in any gross display of decadence, but rather through his pronounced narcissism and pretentiousness. If rock and roll really is dead, surely the Lenny Kravitzes of the world would have slunk their way into extinction by now.

Kravitz's continued adherence to his ridiculous, often-parodied rock star stance is what makes him--even more than his decidedly retrograde music-- an anachronism. And while bands like Urge Overkill get away with Kravitz-like stud rock because they riff with their tongues firmly planted in their cheeks, Kravitz is all the more difficult to stomach because he's so lacking in irony.

If it's possible to separate the music from the silly rock star that created it (or if you actually dig Kravitz's pose), Circus turns out to be a better-than-average classic rock record. "Magdalene" bursts with as much melody and enthusiasm as Matthew Sweet power-pop; the mid-tempo "Can't Get You Off My Mind" sways like the country-flavored rock of the '70s; and "Don't Go and Put a Bullet in Your Head" is driven by a surprisingly nonretro drum machine beat.

Circus is interesting as well for its heavy religious content. Though Kravitz's hippified vision of world harmony goes back to his first single, 1989's "Let Love Rule," never has he sounded more overtly Christian than here on songs like "God Is Love" and "The Resurrection." Traditional Christians might find his mix of sexuality with religion offensive, and secular rock fans might find his beatitudes creepy. Still, if gangster rap or left-wing folk music are valid themes for pop music, there's certainly room as well for Kravitz's religious convictions and positive vibe. --Roni Sarig

Other Versions

Albums are mined from the various public resources and can be actually the same but different in the tracks length only. We are keeping all versions now.

Circus

Tracks: 11, Disk length: 51m 9s

Circus

Tracks: 11, Disk length: 51m 9s

Circus

Tracks: 11, Disk length: 51m 10s (+0m 1s)

Circus

Tracks: 11, Disk length: 51m 10s (+0m 1s)

Circus

Tracks: 11, Disk length: 51m 11s (+0m 2s)

Circus

Tracks: 11, Disk length: 51m 12s (+0m 3s)

Circus

Tracks: 11, Disk length: 51m 19s (+0m 10s)

Circus

Tracks: 12 (+1 tracks), Disk length: 55m 13s (+4m 4s)

Circus

Tracks: 4 (-7 tracks), Disk length: 22m 31s (-29m 22s)

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