* En anglais uniquement
Modern creative jazz-rock group
the Wrong Object was founded in 2002 in Liege, Belgium by guitarist
Michel Delville (who is also a writer and teacher), and began life as a
Frank Zappa cover band. While
Zappa tunes like "Big Swifty," "Filthy Habits," "Chunga's Revenge," and "King Kong" have been part of
the Wrong Object's repertoire over the years, and the band has performed twice (in 2004 and 2007) at the Zappanale Festival in Bad Doberan, Germany, a number of other influences have informed the group's direction, notably the jazzy side of England's Canterbury scene.
After several limited-edition private releases, the group's first widely distributed album, The Unbelievable Truth, was issued by MoonJune in 2006. A joint live album by the group --
Delville on guitar, drummer Laurent Delchambre, tenor saxophonist
Fred Delplancq, trumpeter
Jean-Paul Estiévenart, and bassist Damien Polard -- with former
Soft Machine saxophonist
Elton Dean, the album was recorded at Glaz'Art in Paris on October 18, 2005, only four months before
Dean passed away. In 2007
the Wrong Object returned with another album including the participation of British avant jazz notables: Platform One, released by Voiceprint, featured -- in addition to the core quintet lineup also heard on The Unbelievable Truth -- guest appearances from trumpeter
Harry Beckett (who passed away in 2010) and trombonist
Annie Whitehead; the album included compositions by
Delville,
Beckett, and
Whitehead, and a pair of
Zappa numbers.
The Wrong Object's second MoonJune album,
Stories from the Shed, was released in 2008. There were no guest artists participating this time, and the music consisted of all-original material composed mainly by
Delville with some contributions from the other bandmembers. The quintet of
Delville, Delchambre,
Delplancq,
Estiévenart, and Polard recorded the music live in the studio and included loops, electronics, and samples in the mix; the result was a strong electric creative jazz album that reflected
the Wrong Object's influences while emphatically asserting the band's own identity. However, five years would pass before the next
Wrong Object album arrived (although
Delville was active in a number of other outfits, including two --
douBt and
Machine Mass Trio -- that recorded for MoonJune), and it would reveal substantial changes in the group.
On 2013's
After the Exhibition only
Delville and Delchambre remained from the band's earlier quintet lineup, and the new sextet version of the ensemble featured keyboardist/vocalist Antoine Guenet (leader of another MoonJune group,
SH.TG.N, and also a new member of
Univers Zero), saxophonist/clarinetist Marti Melia, saxophonist François Lourtie, and bassist Pierre Mottet. In addition, vibraphonist/marimbist
Benoit Moerlen (
Gong, Gongzilla) appeared as a guest on a number of tracks and singer/songwriter Susan Clynes contributed vocals (along with Guenet) to the Canterbury-esque "Glass Cubes." With material composed largely by
Delville but also Guenet, Delchambre, Mottet, and
Moerlen and recorded -- again live in the studio -- with the group's most expanded instrumental palette to date (although no longer featuring a trumpeter),
After the Exhibition proved to be
the Wrong Object's most diverse and wide-ranging recording of original music thus far. ~ Dave Lynch