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Lenny Kravitz has described this self-produced disc as his most personal recording to date, a description that's hard to argue with, given the intimate lyrical tenor of many of the album's 13 songs and the one-man-band makeup of many others. Lenny indulges his Sly Stone fixation on a passel of Baptism's cuts, most notably the good-vibe ode "I Don't Want to Be a Star," which gooses the Family Stone classic "Everybody Is a Star" into the post-paparazzi world. Yeah, the sentiment is pretty much diametrically opposed to the preening opener, "Minister of Rock n Roll," but Kravitz manages to make listeners overlook the U-turn via a winning combination of sharp guitar work and honey-dripping vocals. Although it's one of Kravitz's more rock-oriented albums, Baptism does dip into the trough of funk here and there, most effectively on the greasy, bass-driven "Sistamamalover." Some of the disc's more introspective ballads -- "Baptized," for one -- wilt under Kravitz's overheated delivery, but the surprises, such as a guest spot from Jay-Z on "Storm" and the neo-bubblegum tone of "Flash," make up for those few fallow spots. On his first new album in three years, Kravitz sounds, well, renewed. David Sprague, Barnes & Noble