Now 30 years into a multi-million-album-selling career, serial Grammy winner Lenny Kravitz credits his success with hits such as Are You Gonna Go My Way and Always On The Run to instinctive, from-the-gut riffing and a ‘first take’ recording philosophy. Here, he looks back on his lifelong love of guitar, the virtues of vintage Gibsons, being schoolmates with Slash and how his greatest riff was recorded with another band hammering on the studio door…
“I was five years old and my dad had this acoustic guitar in the house. I remember it distinctly. It was a nylon-string guitar that I think he’d gotten at Manny’s. It was in a soft canvas case, and it used to live in the closet. Apparently, my mother had gotten it for him, hoping he would learn how to play, I suppose, and serenade her. So I began to pick it up and just started banging on it. In our tiny apartment in New York City, there was that guitar and there was a little upright piano. It was really small. Pots and pans, that was how I started [laughs]. Banging on pots and pans, the guitar and the piano.”
Inner City Influence
“Curtis Mayfield’s Super Fly album was influential for me. I loved his music. I loved his songwriting, I loved his voice. Even as a kid, I understood that his voice really represented the inner city. It represented the street. His music sounded like the streets to me. I saw Super Fly when I was a kid and I loved all that music – Freddie’s Dead and Super Fly and all those songs. Yes, so Curtis Mayfield, definitely. A major educator.”
Team Slash
This story is from the March 2019 edition of Guitarist.
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This story is from the March 2019 edition of Guitarist.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 8,500+ magazines and newspapers.
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