Heartless Bastards
Heartless Bastards | |
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Heartless Bastards in 2012 | |
Background information | |
Origin | Cincinnati, Ohio, United States |
Genres | Blues rock, indie rock, garage rock, country rock |
Years active | 2003 – present |
Labels |
Partisan Records Fat Possum Records, Dine Alone Records (Canada) |
Website | TheHeartlessBastards.com |
Members |
Erika Wennerstrom Dave Colvin Jesse Ebaugh Mark Nathan |
Past members |
Mike Lamping Kevin Vaughn Adam McAllister Michael Weinel |
Heartless Bastards are an American garage rock band formed in Cincinnati, Ohio in 2003. They are often compared to fellow Ohioans The Black Keys. The band has so far released five albums.
History
Heartless Bastards originally formed as a four-piece band with members Erika Wennerstrom on vocals, piano and guitar, Dave Colvin on drums, Adam McAllister on bass and Michael Weinel on lead guitar. They played their first live show at The Comet, a bar in the Cincinnati community of Northside, in August 2003. After parting ways with Colvin, McAllister and Weinel, Wennerstrom reformed the group as a three piece with Kevin Vaughn on drums and Mike Lamping on bass. The band was signed to Fat Possum Records in 2004 after Patrick Carney from The Black Keys passed along a demo he received from Erika. The 5-song demo was recorded in December 2002 at Ultrasuede Studios by Shannon McGee and featured Colvin on drums, along with contributions from Reuben Glaser on lead guitar and Jesse Ebaugh on bass.
Rolling Stone reviewed their debut album Stairs and Elevators and said, "the Heartless Bastards are a small-town band who are ready to show the big city no mercy".[1] The Village Voice wrote: "deadeye accurate in pitch and message... what we've got is a hard, gnarled voice singing simple-seeming melodies that feel archetypal rather than ordinary, which is no easier to explain than it is to do". Stylus gave the group high praise, stating, "(Erika Wennerstrom) and her two band mates have created an album with more rocking songs and fat hooks than most bands can dream of. It’s not just that they rock, it’s that you believe what you hear, that they love the sound they make, that Wennerstrom lays her soul bare in her lyrics without sounding like Sarah McLachlan, that the women of rock who labored to make it OK for a girl to dream of playing guitar deserve far better than Avril Lavigne or Kelly Osbourne as their descendants."[2]
The second full-length album from the band, All This Time, was released on August 8, 2006. The band road tested many of the tracks on the record prior to releasing it and received rave reviews from audiences. The album relies less on guitar riffs and belted vocals and more on musicianship, without leaving behind the group's unique sound. On the modern rock station WOXY, the band was ranked No. 12 on the 97 Best of 2005, putting the band among the likes of Spoon and ahead of blues rockers The White Stripes.[3]
According to Wennerstrom, the name of the band comes from a question on a Mega Touch trivia quiz game at a bar. A question asked the name of Tom Petty's backing band, and one of the options was "Tom Petty and the Heartless Bastards". She thought it was funny, and used it when she later formed a band.[4][5]
In August 2008, a new line-up for the band was announced. Erika Wennerstrom remains the only constant member, rejoined by bassist Jesse Ebaugh and original Heartless Bastards drummer Dave Colvin.
Their third album The Mountain was released February 3, 2009 on Fat Possum Records and was produced by Spoon producer Mike McCarthy. For this album the band broadened their sound to include elements of country music, employing violin, banjo, mandolin and steel guitar.[6]
Heartless Bastards performed a taping for the PBS series Austin City Limits on June 3, 2009 as part of the show's 35th anniversary season.[7] In October and November 2009 the band opened for Wolfmother during the band's American tour.
Current line-up
On November 17, 2011, Heartless Bastards announced they had signed with Brooklyn-based Partisan Records to release their fourth album Arrow on February 14, 2012.[8] On December 15, 2011, the band announced on Twitter that the pre-order for Arrow was launched, and that fans could get a limited edition lithograph by preordering.[9] Arrow was produced by Spoon drummer Jim Eno at his Public Hi-Fi Home studio in Austin, Texas. It features the current line-up of Erika Wennerstrom (vocals/guitar), Jesse Ebaugh (bass), Dave Colvin (drums) and Mark Nathan (guitar).
In Billboard's November 17, 2011 album announcement, Wennerstrom explained: "I feel like this is the strongest record I've ever done. I feel like playing with these guys, us all being so connected, really helped make it so fully realized. I'm really, really happy with it".[8]
On December 1, 2011, the first single from Arrow called "Parted Ways" was released exclusively on RollingStone.com[10] and to the band's fans.
The band's fifth album, Restless Ones, was released on June 16, 2015.[11]
Discography
- 2005 - Stairs and Elevators - Fat Possum Records
- 2006 - All This Time - Fat Possum Records
- 2009 - The Mountain - Fat Possum Records; No. 150 U.S.
- 2012 - Arrow - Partisan Records; No. 78 U.S.
- 2015 - Restless Ones - Partisan Records
Television credits
- "Sway" was featured in Season 4 for the television series Friday Night Lights, and included on the Friday Night Lights Vol. 2 soundtrack album. "All This Time" was featured in "Git Er 'Dun" (Season 1, Episode 5) of Friday Night Lights, but was not featured on the official soundtrack.
- "Got to Have Rock and Roll" was featured in "Discovery" (season 2 episode 4) of Suits, while "Marathon" was featured in "Blood in the Water" (season 2 episode 12) of the show.
- "Only for You" was featured in "The Path of the Righteous" (season 1 episode 11) of Daredevil.
- "Hi Line" and "Gates of Dawn" were performed live on Last Call with Carson Daly in November, 2015.
Reviews
- Rolling Stone Review of Stairs and Elevators
- The Village Voice Review of Stairs and Elevators
- Stylus Review of Stairs and Elevators
- PopMatters Review of Stairs and Elevators
- Blender Review of Stairs and Elevators
- Prefixmag Review of Stairs and Elevators
- Sponic Zine Review of Stairs and Elevators
- Stylus Review of All This Time
- Pitchfork Review of All This Time
- Blender Review of All This Time
- The Austin Chronicle Review of All This Time
- Time Magazine live Review 7.30.13
- Filter Magazine Live Review 2.27.09
References
- ↑ "Rolling Stone Music | Album Reviews". Rollingstone.com. Retrieved 2012-01-08.
- ↑ "The Heartless Bastards - Stairs And Elevators - Review". Stylus Magazine. 2005-02-15. Retrieved 2012-01-08.
- ↑ Archived April 22, 2009, at the Wayback Machine.
- ↑ Heard on Morning Edition (2005-06-14). "'Heartless Bastards' Take Cautious Steps Into Limelight". NPR. Retrieved 2012-01-08.
- ↑ "Keeping The Music Alive". Cincy Groove. Retrieved 2012-01-08.
- ↑ "FILTER Magazine". Filter-mag.com. 2011-11-25. Retrieved 2012-01-08.
- ↑ "Austin City Limits | Watch Online | PBS Video". Pbs.org. Retrieved 2012-01-08.
- 1 2 "Heartless Bastards Sign to Partisan Records for 4th Album". Billboard.com. 2009-09-14. Retrieved 2012-01-08.
- ↑ "Twitter". Twitter. Retrieved 2013-08-08.
- ↑ Catherine Fuentes (2011-12-01). "Exclusive Download: Heartless Bastards' New Single, 'Parted Ways' | Music News". Rolling Stone. Retrieved 2012-01-08.
- ↑ Jeff Pearson (2015-03-25). "Heartless Bastards Announce New Album Restless Ones, Tour Dates". Paste.
External links
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