Review – Lets Eat Grandma

The Thekla, 18th October 2022

Closer to watching performance art than a concert, Let’s Eat Grandma’s anarchic, feral approach to making music has them crawling on all fours, experimenting in real time in their pursuit to be watched.  

It’s a surprise, when one is used to listening to them through one’s headphones, how unexpectedly frantic they are live. They flip between singing in their bedrooms and walking in graveyard-shift trances. It’s all chaos, but the best kind of it.

Perhaps their most moving song – and the sincerest performance to watch – is ‘Watching You Go’, which chronicles Hollingworth’s grief after the death of her boyfriend, Billy Clayton. It’s where the band’s beating heart pulsates past mere electric brainwave. They drape over themselves and each other. They sparkle under the lights like dayglow.

Their moods are at once flimsy and tipsy, heavy and dark. One could be happy or inside Heartbreak Hotel, but Let’s Eat Grandma can – and do – provide the soundtrack. It may be erratic and eccentric, strange or shallow, but there’s a precision in their chaos that can set the world to rights.

Their penultimate song is ‘I Really Want to Stay at Your House’, which has just reached virtual acclaim after its use in the video game Cyberpunk 2077. People are surprised that it’s played, as it was created by Walton as a side project. The fact that even the song is shared with the band – and with their fans – shows how deeply friendship and collaboration are bitten into the core of their art.

Far from a typical gig, Let’s Eat Grandma provide a fresh lens to see the world through. Childlike, unpolished, and kinetic, it’s a kaleidoscopic document.

Their performance is highly visual, and totally illusory. Two ghosts singing in time with an irregular heartbeat. Two witches dancing on their day off.

📝 @katejeffrie 📸 @ilnsimages

+ posts

@thebristolnomad / @bristolnomad_gigphotography
Role: Photographer / Reviewer / Interviewer

Chief, the one that bugs the team for team for their reviews and images. Creator and founder of The Bristol Gig Guide. Can usually be found swamped in admin or getting cramp kneeling at the front of a gig.

Available for: Gig Shoots, Gig Reviews, Photo Shoots, Album and Single cover shoots, Videography work, Interviews and Touring

First attended gig: Republica, circa 1996.

First gig shot: Hands Off Gretel, at The Louisiana!

Dream gig: Huge metalhead and my ultimate dream gig would be shooting my heroes Slipknot at a huge stadium gig, or as festival headliners. And to experience shooting a headline tour outside the UK

About Adie White -911 Articles
@thebristolnomad / @bristolnomad_gigphotography Role: Photographer / Reviewer / Interviewer Chief, the one that bugs the team for team for their reviews and images. Creator and founder of The Bristol Gig Guide. Can usually be found swamped in admin or getting cramp kneeling at the front of a gig. Available for: Gig Shoots, Gig Reviews, Photo Shoots, Album and Single cover shoots, Videography work, Interviews and Touring First attended gig: Republica, circa 1996. First gig shot: Hands Off Gretel, at The Louisiana! Dream gig: Huge metalhead and my ultimate dream gig would be shooting my heroes Slipknot at a huge stadium gig, or as festival headliners. And to experience shooting a headline tour outside the UK