ROLLING STONE 2005
Splash Page

Intro
About Fat Possum
Willem Maker
Beaten Awake
Andrew Bird
The Black Keys
Blackfire Revelation
Bob Log III
AA Bondy
Brown and Burnside
R. L. Burnside
Charles Caldwell
Colour Revolt
deadboy
& the Elephantmen

Dinosaur Jr.
Entrance
The Fiery Furnaces
T-Model Ford
Gil Manteras Party Dream
Hayden
Heartless Bastards
About Heartless Bastards
Multimedia
Photos
Press
Paul Jones
Junior Kimbrough
Junior Kimbrough Tribute
Little Freddie King
Nathaniel Mayer
Dax Riggs
Thee Shams
Townes Van Zandt
We Are Wolves

From the Rolling Stone
February, 24 2005
By Bill Werde

Erika Wennerstrom badly needs a stage name, something better suited for her rock-goddess voice. The papers in her hometown of Dayton, Ohio, say that Wennerstrom is petite and shy, but when she opens her throat on Stairs and Elevators, the Heartless Bastards' debut, she sounds like she's wailing on the shoulders of giants; her sad and angry vocals channeling all the swagger and spit of a young Robert Plant, with none of the blues histrionics. "I don't even like myself half the time," she sneers on "New Resolution": "What's the use of worrying what's on other people's minds?" Elsewhere, the sleepy heartland dreamer peeks through: "Someday I'd like to play a part," she sings in "Autonomy," "in the life I waited to start." Factor in the commendable garage-rock pummeling of drummer Kevin Vaughn and bassist Mike Lamping, and the Heartless Bastards are a small-town band who are ready to show the big city no mercy.