Cover: Lenny Kravitz Greatest Hits Album
In the pantheon of rock iconography, the greatest hits album is often a contractual afterthought—a cash grab dressed in a lazy collage of tour photos or a garish gold font. But in late 2000, Lenny Kravitz did what he had always done: he ignored the rulebook.
The unbuttoned leather pants are the masterstroke. They suggest undressing—an act of trust. They also serve as a sly nod to the music inside. These are songs about desire, restlessness, and raw nerve. The cover doesn’t illustrate them; it embodies them. lenny kravitz greatest hits album cover
Typography is almost an afterthought: small, sans-serif, white lettering tucked in the corner. The album title doesn't scream. It whispers. This is a design choice that says: You already know the songs. Now meet the source. At the time, some retail chains (notably Walmart) refused to stock the physical CD, deeming the near-nudity too provocative. Others filed it next to Prince’s Lovesexy (where he posed nude with a flower) and John Lennon and Yoko Ono’s Unfinished Music No. 1: Two Virgins . Kravitz shrugged. "It's just a back," he told MTV. "If you’re offended by a spine, check your own." In the pantheon of rock iconography, the greatest


