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Anchored by the powerful vocals and incisive songwriting of
Erika Wennerstrom, the
Heartless Bastards are a roots rock band whose tough, emotionally resonant music incorporates elements of blues, hard rock, garage punk, and country as filtered through tales of a hardscrabble life lived in the American Midwest. While
Wennerstrom -- the group's sole constant member -- would later move the band to Texas, their sensibility stayed much the same, though her music would become more eclectic and ambitious and the lyrics more philosophical. The tough, blues-based attack of their first era is best heard on 2006's
All This Time, 2012's
Arrow showcased a new lineup and a more polished approach, and 2021's
A Beautiful Life was their most stylistically diverse release to date.
Erika Wennerstrom was born in Dayton, Ohio; her parents broke up when she was nine, leaving her mother to support her and her brother. She grew up with a keen interest in music and songwriting, but it wasn't until she was 18 that she summoned the courage to begin singing in public after she'd dropped out of school, left Dayton, and settled in Cincinnati.
Wennerstrom picked up a guitar, began writing songs, and started performing at open-mike nights and for family and friends, and in 2002 she decided to form a band. Taking the name "The Heartless Bastards" from an incorrect answer on a multiple-choice trivia game (the question: what is the name of
Tom Petty's backing band),
Wennerstrom cut a demo tape late in the year with a handful of local musicians, including guitarist Reuben Glaser, bassist
Jesse Ebaugh, and drummer
Dave Colvin.
In the summer of 2003, the
Heartless Bastards began playing out with a lineup that featured
Wennerstrom on vocals, guitar, and keyboards, Mike Weinel on guitar, Adam McAllister on bass, and
Colvin on drums. This edition of the band proved short-lived, but they found a stable lineup when
Wennerstrom met bassist Mike Lamping. As
Wennerstrom gained confidence in her skills on electric guitar, she and Lamping reintroduced the
Heartless Bastards as a power trio with the addition of drummer Kevin Vaughn.
The Bastards began playing regularly throughout Ohio and the Midwest, and when
Patrick Carney of
the Black Keys saw the band at a small club, he liked what he heard and passed along a copy of their demo to Fat Possum Records,
the Black Keys' label at the time. Fat Possum liked the demo and signed the
Heartless Bastards, releasing their first album,
Stairs and Elevators, in 2005. A second long-player,
All This Time, followed in 2006, and the
Heartless Bastards were earning enthusiastic notices from critics and found themselves sharing stages with the likes of
Wilco and
Lucinda Williams. However,
Wennerstrom and Lamping had become romantically involved, and when they broke up, they found it too difficult to work together, so
Wennerstrom opted to fold this lineup of the group.
She relocated to Austin and recorded a third
Heartless Bastards album,
The Mountain, using a handful of session musicians. When it came time to tour behind the album, she recruited
Jesse Ebaugh and
Dave Colvin, who had played on her first demos, to play in the new version of the band. The trio expanded to a quartet with the addition of guitarist
Mark Nathan, who originally signed on as the group's soundman. In 2011, this edition of the
Heartless Bastards went into the studio with
Spoon percussionist
Jim Eno serving as producer; the band's fourth album,
Arrow, was released by Partisan Records in early 2012.
Arrow became the
Heartless Bastards' first set to break into the top half of the Billboard Top Albums chart, peaking at number 78. In August 2014, the band settled into Sonic Ranch Studios in El Paso with producer
John Congleton to begin work on their fifth album. The sessions resulted in
Restless Ones, released in June 2015.
After touring in support of
Restless Ones,
Erika Wennerstrom put
Heartless Bastards on hold, and released her first solo album,
Sweet Unknown, in 2018. While she intended to follow it with another solo effort, she felt the songs recalled the feel of
Stairs and Elevators, and she chose to release the LP as a
Heartless Bastards project. Titled
A Beautiful Life, it arrived in September 2021. ~ Mark Deming