Jim, Jim, Jim... emoticon! I do have a soft sport for grenache, done well anyway.
Bandol is no lowish alcohol wine, which of course you know Joe. I think warm climate wines are fine to reflect some warmth. Just seems some varieties tolerate it better than others. Grenache, mourvedre among them, zinfandel in the new world too.
But really, I think alcohol isn't the issue. It's winemaking style, including pick times. Old school hotter climate wines from southern France to central Spain can sport some high alcohols (14%+). And so what? With some roasted meats and vege, and otherwise assertively flavored food, these wines fit. But if you push it further, or simply take measures to doll up the wine with oak, and especially if you show it very little oxygen in the elevage or oddly enough MicOx things to polish the wine beyond recognition, you end up with wines disorderlies hate. Purple, fruity, oaky wines of little distinction that seem to trade the vagaries of old world outcomes for something modern, slick, predictable and, ultimately, forgettable.
To me, what's regrettable in wine isn't alcohol, it's thickness. Extraction and flavorings instead of intensity. The cellar, not the vines. And if the vines in a hot climate produce higher sugars than we might brag about in Oregon vintages like 2011 (20.3 brix! fuck yeah!), so be it.