Heartless Bastards
Arrow
Partisan Records




Singer/guitarist Erika Wennerstrom has taken
the Heartless Bastards through a few different
lineups since forming the band in 2003,
but the story goes that Black Keys drummer
Patrick Carney discovered them in an empty
Akron, Ohio, bar in 2004, which led to a
label deal with Fat Possum Records. Arrow is
a debut of sorts for the latest lineup—second
guitarist Mark Nathan, bassist Jesse Ebaugh,
and drummer Dave Colvin—and it showcases
Wennerstrom’s hauntingly gruff voice dancing
with dirty blues-rock riffs in a way that’s
distinctive and starkly wholesome. The songs
feel as though they’ve been marinating for a
while, perhaps being contemplated in an isolated
cabin somewhere. But this isn’t a singer
songwriter showcase. The second track and
first single, “Parted Ways,” hits you around
the 2:15 mark with Nathan punching out
a 30-second solo that could pass as a Mike
Campbell excursion on a Tom Petty tune,
and then he stomps out the entire last minute
with glorious abandon. It’s an early indication
that the Bastards are a rocking unit.
This is not to downplay the oomph in
Wennerstrom’s powerhouse voice—she’s a definite
MVP here. Stripped-down and vulnerable,
her drawl floats effortlessly in and out of
the songs, through the razor-sharp, alt-twang
melodies of “The Arrow Killed the Beast,” and
over the lingering strum and hum of “Low,
Low, Low.” Throughout the album, I picture
Wennerstrom in moments of reckoning, considering
the stories behind bittersweet realizations
achieved through uncomfortable stretches
of living. Her confessions are punctuated
and juxtaposed with acoustic layers, Skynyrd inspired
solos, and impeccably fuzzed-out electric
blues, all the while being complemented
by down-home, folksy licks. The melodic
guitar parts ooze and groove deeply on songs
like “Only for You”—it’s as if the guitar itself
is crooning. The album’s outro, “Down in the
Canyon,” is finely placed, culminating in a
sonic wail—and wall—of dueling axes.
Arrow is a stylistically sound and heartfelt
roots-rock album—solid up and down.
If that’s what the Bastards’ bow was aimed
at, they nailed it. —Tessa Jeffers
Must-hear track: “Parted Ways”