Glasgow Times

After grief at death of brother, Frightened Rabbit drummer toasts a brighter future

In life after Frightened Rabbit, Grant has found a new life at the bottom of a barrel

- BY CARLA JENKINS

MORE than a year ago Grant Hutchison’s life changed overnight.

The devastatin­g loss of his brother Scott saw Grant wrestle with his own identity.

The Frightened Rabbit drummer opened up to the Evening Times and revealed he didn’t know what to do.

“When Scott died, I stopped completely.

“I wasn’t just his brother, or the drummer in Frightened Rabbit, and anyone who did see me like that saw me in a different light.

“I was trying to get through general life.

“I’ve wrestled with a total loss of identity in the last year.

“All of a sudden I wasn’t who I had been for 10 years, pretty much overnight. I thought, what do I do?”

Grant decided to take a different path away from music.

This week he announced the opening of his new cider company, re:stalk.

It aims to educate a nation of drinkers on the nuances of natural cider, selling and distributi­ng unique and well curated brands to wholesale businesses all over the country.

The firm may have once began as a pipe dream of a side hustle, but after the unexpected death of Grant’s brother Scott last year, it became a reality.

And so re:stalk was born – but it was always there, Grant stresses. Making music wouldn’t last forever.

“Earlier this year I wanted to start bringing money back in.

“This plan didn’t just come about in six months since Scott died,” Grant admits.

“It was always in my head.

“I feel less drawn to music now. When people start getting married and having families, being in a band becomes very difficult.

“We knew we weren’t the Rolling Stones, and wouldn’t go into our 70s making a living from it. Who wants to do that?”

This news becomes all the more potent upon learning that Grant and his wife Jaye are expecting their first child next year.

“I am doing this for myself because I want to do it for Jaye and our child. I’ve discovered who I am again which for a year and a half.

“I feel so lucky that I have Jaye who has been so supportive and encouragin­g. This feels like me, and it’s an exciting thing to share with people,” Grant says.

Grant will source, sell and distribute – it is a labour of love born from a passion for cider that was carefully curated over years of world tours with the band.

“I just wanted to get a place to drink good ciders in the city that I live in,” explains Grant. “So often people think cider is just an alternativ­e to beer, or associate it with teenage memories of drinking three litre bottles of white cider or your Dad on holiday tanning cans of Scrumpy Jacks and never touching it again.

“I want to educate people on what cider can be, and the many different ways and situations you can enjoy it. In reality, cider is made the exact same way as wine, and can be extremely natural. There is no reason why you cannot drink a fine cider like you do a fine wine.”

Grant’s life-long love affair with the apple-based alcohol started when he worked in

Peckham’s on Byres Road, before Frightened Rabbit became successful enough to quit the day job.

“We toured the US more than we toured anywhere else and the cider world there is way ahead of what’s happening here.

“There are so many different styles and ways of presentati­on, like in a 750ml wine bottle. I’ve never been a beer drinker so I always sought out cider wherever I went, and everywhere we went we’d try a new bar or type. I think to have a cider-specific bar in Glasgow at one

‘‘I’ve wrestled with a total loss of identity in the last year

point would be a great thing to have.”

In a city as trendy as Glasgow, which is filled with new bars and restaurant­s, it makes sense that cider, or a more natural way of drinking alcohol would be the next big thing.

One of which is Vin Cru, an ‘all-natural’ wine bar that the Evening Times reported last week is set to open in Glasgow this month.

“It’s nice to work in a nicer, friendlier industry,” says Grant. “Most people in music want to get to the point where it is your living, but it comes with a lot of stuff alongside it which can make it difficult to cope with.”

“People in Glasgow don’t rest on their laurels.

“The scene is always changing and evolving and this is exciting and different, perfect for it.

“I didn’t really expect it to happen so fast, but once the business plan was done it happened quickly. There is a trend already.

“People are now more interested in where their products

Grant’s brother Scott, inset, took his own life last year at the age of 36 after a long battle with depression come from and what the story is behind it, and they don’t want additives and colouring. Cider is vegan and mostly gluten free. You get less of a hangover,” Grant laughs.

The cider community is a friendlier industry than the ones Grant belonged to previously, and that warmth is a big part of re:stalk’s ethos.

“I only want to work with people that have the same love and care and passion that I have for it and there are plenty of them out there,” says Grant. “It’s going to be good.”

 ?? PICTURE: JAMIE SIMPSON ??
PICTURE: JAMIE SIMPSON
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 ?? Pictures: Jamie Simpson ?? Grant Hutchison, former Frightened Rabbit drummer, has opened a new cider company
Pictures: Jamie Simpson Grant Hutchison, former Frightened Rabbit drummer, has opened a new cider company
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