During the release of debut album Culling Culture, Megan’s life was turned upside-down. “My grandpa who raised me – I basically called him dad – was diagnosed with a terminal illness,” she recalls. The singer then took the decision to quit her job to care for him at home. “We thought we’d have another sort of two years with him, but he actually only lasted three months, and so the whole campaign [for Calling Culture] was just awful.”
Megan was not the only one dealing with loss in this time, as Vexed’s drummer Willem Mason-Geraghty and guitarist Jay Bacon were experiencing sadness close to home. “The boys were also going through great losses in their own families,” Megan sighs.
What happened next was a moment that remains an outburst of pure cathartic energy, with all three members sitting down as friends rather than bandmates to really open about how they were feeling. Negative Energy started life as an “everything happens for a reason” album, but once they admitted they were not okay, the real creative juices started to flow.
“We just sat down as a group of friends and were just like, ‘Yeah, we’re not okay, we can’t keep doing this,’” admits Megan. “None of us could write an album, we were all absolutely miserable and really struggling. But then we suddenly trusted each other and knew exactly what we needed to write about. The second that we admitted to each other that none of us were okay the creativity just started coming out.
“So, we just decided that we were going to write about how painful the last couple of years have been,” she continues. “How terrible things have been, and that we did not try and put a positive spin on it – we just put all our negativity into it. It was the most cathartic, therapeutic thing that we could have done as a group of friends.”