Music Review

Arrow

Arrow by Heartless Bastards, published by Partisan

At its core, rock and roll is the antithesis of maturity. Yet ARROW (Partisan), the new album from HEARTLESS BASTARDS, is that rarest of things: a hard-driving record marked by some hard-earned wisdom. The group, which formed in Ohio in 2003, first came to national attention a couple of years later, thanks to an endorsement from Patrick Carney, of the Black Keys. After releasing two albums, vocalist/guitarist Erika Wennerstrom, the band’s only constant member, disbanded the group (when her relationship with bassist Mike Lamping ended) and moved to Austin to start over with a new lineup. As a result, the group’s 2009 release, The Mountain, sounded like the work of a band still finding its way. But now that the Bastards, moving from a trio to a four-piece, have solidified, the music and arrangements lock in with newfound ease. Where the group’s earlier recordings seemed a bit overwrought, striving for hard-rock thunder, new songs like “Simple Feeling,” “Down in the Canyon,” and the Crazy Horse–inspired “The Arrow Killed the Beast” let the storms roll in naturally. Producer Jim Eno (of Spoon) conjures a live, seventies vibe and puts Wennerstrom’s confident, note-bending vocals up front. Better still, she delivers a set of songs that bristle with both optimism and vulnerability. “I’m on my way,” she declares in the album’s opener, “Marathon,” making clear that she’s determined to put past hurt behind her. “Too many things have changed,” she sings on another song. “I just don’t look at things the same way now / Since we parted ways.”

E-mail

Password

Remember me

Forgot your password?

X (close)

Registering gets you access to online content, allows you to comment on stories, add your own reviews of restaurants and events, and join in the discussions in our community areas such as the Recipe Swap and other forums.

In addition, current TEXAS MONTHLY magazine subscribers will get access to the feature stories from the two most recent issues. If you are a current subscriber, please enter your name and address exactly as it appears on your mailing label (except zip, 5 digits only). Not a subscriber? Subscribe online now.

E-mail

Re-enter your E-mail address

Choose a password

Re-enter your password

Name

 
 

Address

Address 2

City

State

Zip (5 digits only)

Country

What year were you born?

Are you...

Male Female

Remember me

X (close)