The Wildhearts
21st Century Love Songs


4.0
excellent

Review

by Batareziz USER (89 Reviews)
March 15th, 2022 | 14 replies


Release Date: 2021 | Tracklist

Review Summary: The house that Ginger built

Unfortunately, despite its long history The Wildhearts failed to achieve wider exposure and ended up a more obscure and cult band. As it is always the case there are several reasons that contributed to that. The bandmembers struggled for a long time with a standard set of addictions which resulted in periodical fluctuations within the band, leaving its leader, Ginger, as a constant but at the same time fickle element. The band went through several breakups and hiatuses. Difficult relationship with and an occasional spanner thrown by their recording label in the early days also made the goal of achieving the coveted exposure look like a line on the horizon.

However, the sound of The Wildhearts is also a large contributor. And this is not a reference to the punk vibe going through the whole discography. The fact that Ginger and Co. let themselves to behave disorderly, pouring out expletives and showing what they think of tolerance and other matters is nothing new and quite typical for the punk movement. The Wildhearts are a lot more intriguing because of their so appealing devil-may-care attitude to the musical conventions.

Let’s take their new album 21st Century Love Songs as an example. Listen to its first track and you will clearly hear the musical approach employed by The Wildhearts. We start off on powerful, almost metal riffs followed by harsh and loud vocals courtesy of Ginger, who sings about modern views on love (don’t forget the album’s title) in a sneering and ironical fashion. Then we get a chorus performed in an almost recitative manner against a heavy punk-like melody.

And what is so surprising there, you may think? That is until the bridge with its instrumental break. Only a minute and a half long it contains some nice changes and styles, so organically though intertwined, and manages to wow the listener. The sudden shift to something progressive like along the lines of Dream Theater and Haken is impressive (however it is bread-and-butter for The Wildhearts), and it is thrown in so casually and breezily but does not fall apart within the song. And even though it then goes back to more traditional rails, ending on the chorus performed with gang vocals, we still sense that imaginative wink to the audience.

Many of the remaining tracks are just as unpredictable and take sudden left turns. Some of them are more straightforward following verse-chorus-verse structure (such as on Sleepaway or Directions). Some move in the completely opposite direction. Institutional Submission is an almost progressive track, mixing thrash metal, hard rock and multiple time signatures. Musically practically every song reverts expectations: radio-friendly poppy choruses can be surrounded by metal verses or pop punk intros are followed by thrash or heavy metal.

And this is exactly what makes The Wildhearts so unique and distinctive, but also hampers the chances of mainstream adorations. Their leader Ginger loves horror B-movies, and it is what the band sounds like. One song may contain so many hooks, melodies and styles (which some albums fail to do), but it is also not something that can be appreciated by everyone. Still it is always refreshing and unexpected to stumble upon a gem like this. So I implore you, give The Wildhearts a chance. Who knows, you may like it.



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user ratings (28)
3.6
great


Comments:Add a Comment 
SitarHero
March 15th 2022


14699 Comments

Album Rating: 3.0

Thanks for reviewing. I never got around to listening to this last year but this reminded me to rectify that. Pos.



Also, true to form, the band has broken up yet again due to personal differences.

Batareziz
March 16th 2022


314 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0

What? No! Come on, guys! Now I need to wait for another 10 years for a new album?

And my pleasure, Sitar. The album was surprisingly awesome after somewhat lackluster Renaissance Men.

Kingdok
March 16th 2022


151 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0

If this is it for the 'hearts (and let's be honest, anything is always possible with these guys), this is a much better epitaph than RM. My Head Wants Me Dead sounds like an audio description of a mental breakdown, it kinda sums up their whole career too.



Great review, this def deserved one

Batareziz
March 16th 2022


314 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0

Thanks, Kingdok. Agree, if this is their last album, they would leave on a high note.

DoofDoof
March 16th 2022


14996 Comments

Album Rating: 3.5

I actually preferred the previous one

Kingdok
March 16th 2022


151 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0

I enjoyed Renaissance Men a lot, Dislocated and My Kinda Movie are amongst their best tracks, but with time the album felt kind of disjointed, especially compared to their others, and the lesser tracks weighed it down a bit. This one doesn't really feel as varied as they usually are, but it's grown on me to feel really solid front to back.

Batareziz
March 17th 2022


314 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0

I found Renaissance Men somewhat lacking the things I love the most about The Wildhearts. It feels like for a moment they were unsure how they sound. It starts quite strong but quickly looses steam. So for me it is somewhere at the bottom of their discography together with Must Be Destroyed.

But again, whatever floats our boats, right

DoofDoof
March 17th 2022


14996 Comments

Album Rating: 3.5

Think they made it too joke’y and scrappy - it has some cool bits that sound a bit like the Cardiacs I guess



Renaissance def sounds more like trad Wildhearts to me



This sounds like it was more fun to record, so cool, but less fun for me to listen to

Batareziz
March 17th 2022


314 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0

Interesting how we appreciate and feel different things in the same stuff

Voivod
Staff Reviewer
March 17th 2022


10702 Comments


Band is in the list of bands that I want to check out, but I always forget to do so.

Will read the review tomorrow.

SitarHero
March 18th 2022


14699 Comments

Album Rating: 3.0

Yeah this is definitely a cut below Renaissance Men for me. The riffs and arrangements are a bit more adventurous, but the hooks don't hit nearly as hard.

Batareziz
March 18th 2022


314 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0

Please do, Voivod

Ha, curious. And I find Renaissance Men lacking hooks. Maybe I need to re-listen, who knows if I hear something new.

Sowing
Moderator
March 18th 2022


43943 Comments


I probably won't check this, but this is a nice review.

Batareziz
March 18th 2022


314 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0

Thank you, Sowing.



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