Part of the relentlessly polite school of dad rock that flowered in Great Britain after
Coldplay (think
Muse,
Snow Patrol,
Travis, etc.),
Vega4 is based in London, although of the band's original lineup, only bassist
Simon Walker was an actual Englishman. The rest of
Vega4 migrated into London from the colonies: lead guitarist
Bruce Gainsford is from New Zealand, drummer Bryan McLellan is from Canada, and lead singer Johnny McDaid is from Derry, Northern Ireland, where as a teenager he took guitar lessons from local legend
John O'Neill of
the Undertones and
That Petrol Emotion. Flatmates McDaid and
Walker formed
Vega4 in 1999, adding
Gainsford and McLellan through mutual friends. The nascent band signed with indie label Taste Media in 2000, setting up distribution deals with Capitol Records in the U.S. and Festival Mushroom in Australia for their 2001 debut EP, Caterpillar, and the follow-up full-length, Satellites. Despite heavy touring and promotion, the album was not a success, and
Vega4 went into a period of dormancy while extricating themselves from their various contracts. In 2006, a slightly revised lineup of
Vega4 (with
Walker replaced by former
Idlewild bassist
Gavin Fox) signed with Columbia Records in the U.K. and Epic Records in the U.S., which promoted the single "You and Me" somewhat disingenuously as the band's debut. The following single, "Life Is Beautiful," gained exposure through its use in episodes of the TV series Gray's Anatomy and One Tree Hill.
Vega4's second album,
You and Others, was released in the fall of 2006 in the U.K. and the summer of 2007 in the U.S. ~ Stewart Mason