Tue October 27, 2026

Violet Grohl - Be Sweet To Me Tour

at Rickshaw Stop (8pm)
The first years spent entering adulthood come with a lot of big life decisions, and for Violet Grohl, that was seeking producers and collaborators for her debut album, Be Sweet To Me.

"Going into the studio and recording felt like the path that I was supposed to be on," the 19-year-old says. Grohl immediately clicked with producer Justin Raisen (Kim Gordon, Yves Tumor, Angel Olsen).

"My first impression was that she's beyond her years. She has a golden voice, and she's unapologetically herself," says Raisen.

Be Sweet To Me was recorded from late 2024 into early 2025 at Raisen's Los Angeles home studio alongside musicians assembled in the spirit of the Wrecking Crew session players in the '60s and '70s. The first song Violet wrote with her collaborators, a fuzzy ripper called "Thum, was influenced by the old-school packaging of anti-nail-biting polish that Grohl brought into the studio. "Self help me/Self help myself/Chew my bitter fingers," she snarls in a honeyed voice over ecstatic squall.

Like "Thum," the songs on Be Sweet To Me were conjured from the immediate present and tend to be impressionistic, colored by Grohl's love of film, particularly the work of David Lynch. Inspired by a vintage t-shirt advertising a phone sex line, "595" is a sly and sexy slasher filled with jolts of noise and a killer chorus: "I'll be your 1-900 G spot, baby/595 I'm on the line/You won't last." The slippery and melodic "Bug In A Cake" recalls the paranormal activities surrounding Grohl's recent move into the home of her late paternal grandma, a beloved "guiding force" in her life. "Turn the TV off so it turns back on/Come on, grandma, play me your favorite song," Grohl roars."Everything was written in the studio," Grohl says. "I would come in with an inspiration playlist, we would hang and listen for a little while, and then start writing." "Violet is so well-versed in all styles of music; every playlist was different," says Raisen, describing trip hop, new wave, Scandinavian black metal, '70s acoustic folk, and vocal jazz. "She showed me a number of things that I wasn't familiar with; her encyclopedic knowledge of music is crazy," she continues. Alternative music from the late '80s and early '90s is a perpetual influence. "There's something so powerful about that period of music, from the messaging to the visuals, it's authentic and raw." Pixies, Soundgarden, Cocteau Twins, The Breeders, PJ Harvey, The Muffs, Björk, Alice in Chains, L7, Juliana Hatfield: "I've listened to that stuff since I was a kid," Grohl says. "That's what my dad was playing in the car on the way to school.
The first years spent entering adulthood come with a lot of big life decisions, and for Violet Grohl, that was seeking producers and collaborators for her debut album, Be Sweet To Me.

"Going into the studio and recording felt like the path that I was supposed to be on," the 19-year-old says. Grohl immediately clicked with producer Justin Raisen (Kim Gordon, Yves Tumor, Angel Olsen).

"My first impression was that she's beyond her years. She has a golden voice, and she's unapologetically herself," says Raisen.

Be Sweet To Me was recorded from late 2024 into early 2025 at Raisen's Los Angeles home studio alongside musicians assembled in the spirit of the Wrecking Crew session players in the '60s and '70s. The first song Violet wrote with her collaborators, a fuzzy ripper called "Thum, was influenced by the old-school packaging of anti-nail-biting polish that Grohl brought into the studio. "Self help me/Self help myself/Chew my bitter fingers," she snarls in a honeyed voice over ecstatic squall.

Like "Thum," the songs on Be Sweet To Me were conjured from the immediate present and tend to be impressionistic, colored by Grohl's love of film, particularly the work of David Lynch. Inspired by a vintage t-shirt advertising a phone sex line, "595" is a sly and sexy slasher filled with jolts of noise and a killer chorus: "I'll be your 1-900 G spot, baby/595 I'm on the line/You won't last." The slippery and melodic "Bug In A Cake" recalls the paranormal activities surrounding Grohl's recent move into the home of her late paternal grandma, a beloved "guiding force" in her life. "Turn the TV off so it turns back on/Come on, grandma, play me your favorite song," Grohl roars."Everything was written in the studio," Grohl says. "I would come in with an inspiration playlist, we would hang and listen for a little while, and then start writing." "Violet is so well-versed in all styles of music; every playlist was different," says Raisen, describing trip hop, new wave, Scandinavian black metal, '70s acoustic folk, and vocal jazz. "She showed me a number of things that I wasn't familiar with; her encyclopedic knowledge of music is crazy," she continues. Alternative music from the late '80s and early '90s is a perpetual influence. "There's something so powerful about that period of music, from the messaging to the visuals, it's authentic and raw." Pixies, Soundgarden, Cocteau Twins, The Breeders, PJ Harvey, The Muffs, Björk, Alice in Chains, L7, Juliana Hatfield: "I've listened to that stuff since I was a kid," Grohl says. "That's what my dad was playing in the car on the way to school.
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  • Tue Oct 27 (8pm)
Rickshaw Stop 56 Upcoming Events
155 Fell Street, San Francisco, CA 94102

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