Anthems for the Bad and the Baddest: MEGG to release new EP ‘Low Life Club’.

South Bay brat MEGG has created a soundtrack for smashing headlights, last calls, and drinking in public with her upcoming EP entitled Low Life Club. She has adapted the bad times, and transposed them into 6 new anthems about the power of being your baddest self. 

Marking her first EP release since 2021, MEGG has raised the bar for herself with unapologetic lyrics laden with lived experience, and delivered with a youthful energy that knows it has purpose…but not concerned with what that purpose is quite yet. 

Preceded by singles ‘The End’, ‘Get Over It’, ‘IDC’, and ‘Clarity’, Low Life Club is MEGG at her most empowered. Every track is streamlined with purposeful post-breakdown energy that feels fresh and ready to be shouted aloud. 

The gritty riffs, punchy drums, and vocal attitude spanning the entirety of Low Life Club perfectly support the edgy, honest lyrics that MEGG weaves. There are gems of lyrics in each song that could definitely be tattooed remnants of a night (or week) of wild debauchery. Some favourites include “Getting high on the low, low life”, “I know we’re all gonna die/It’s fine/Wanna enjoy the sick ride”, and “If your Mama hates it/You’re initiated.”

The first 5 electric tracks highlight that living through the lowest of times can offer a fresh perspective and be an opportunity to find the self-worth that the rest of the world is too blind to recognize. Capping off the EP is the acoustic bar room sing along ‘Low Life Club’. It is a well-deserved end to the raucous and edgy 5 tracks before it. 

Photo: Sarah Rosin

One of the most refreshing elements of Low Life Club is that MEGG is not looking for sympathy, and is certainly not a victim. She has found her style of pragmatic pop-punk for the down, but never out. 

Pre-Save Low Life Club here.

Connect with MEGG:

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Website
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Apple Music

Bio:

With high socks, Vans, and a middle finger in the air, MEGG has become punk-pop’s next “it” girl—authentic, relatable, and defiantly real. Whether it’s screaming along to a track about messy love or moshing to an anthem of self-empowerment, her songs are a celebration of chaos, catharsis, and truth. Low Life Club captures that spirit perfectly: bratty, bold, and built to be played loud.

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