Blending psychedelic jazz with modern rock sensibilities, the music of The Wrong Object (2002-) is influenced by a vast array of artists ranging from Canterbury Scene prog rock à la Soft Machine and Gong to Béla Bartok, Aka Moon, Charlie Mingus and Frank Zappa. While their repertoire contains mainly original compositions, they also play a special set of Zappa covers on demand. The band's current line-up features Michel Delville on guitar, guitar-synth, voice & compositions, Damien Polard on bass and electronics, Laurent Delchambre on drums, Fred Delplancq on tenor sax and Jean-Paul Estiévenart on trumpet.
Since its creation in early 2002, The Wrong Object has played some sixty gigs in various venues ranging from small pubs to big festivals. Some of them were augmented by guest performances by the likes of Ed Mann, Elton Dean, Harry Beckett, Annie Whitehead, Marc Mangen, Domguè, Marco Maurizi, Nicolas Ankoudinoff, Clementine Gasser, Frogg Café, Jaap Blonk, and pataphysician-poet-vocalist Andrew Norris, whose work with the band culminated in a show held at the Galerie 2016 in Brussels on the occasion of Serge Vandercam's 79th birthday.
After a successful mini-tour of the UK, they performed at the 2004 “Zappanale” festival where they played a special gig featuring Zappa's percussionist Ed Mann. Their next projects “Elton Dean & The Wrong Object” and “The Wrong Object feat. Annie Whitehead and Harry Beckett” were documented by two CD releases issued by Moonjune Records and Voiceprint in the Spring of 2007.
A new live project involving Lol Coxhill and Alex Maguire will see the light in the Fall of 2007.
Discography
* Platform One (Voiceprint, 2007) Elton Dean and The Wrong Object,
* The Unbelievable Truth (Moonjune Records, 2006)
* Stories from the Shed (Moonjune Records, January 2008)
Website
Since its creation in early 2002, The Wrong Object has played some sixty gigs in various venues ranging from small pubs to big festivals. Some of them were augmented by guest performances by the likes of Ed Mann, Elton Dean, Harry Beckett, Annie Whitehead, Marc Mangen, Domguè, Marco Maurizi, Nicolas Ankoudinoff, Clementine Gasser, Frogg Café, Jaap Blonk, and pataphysician-poet-vocalist Andrew Norris, whose work with the band culminated in a show held at the Galerie 2016 in Brussels on the occasion of Serge Vandercam's 79th birthday.
After a successful mini-tour of the UK, they performed at the 2004 “Zappanale” festival where they played a special gig featuring Zappa's percussionist Ed Mann. Their next projects “Elton Dean & The Wrong Object” and “The Wrong Object feat. Annie Whitehead and Harry Beckett” were documented by two CD releases issued by Moonjune Records and Voiceprint in the Spring of 2007.
A new live project involving Lol Coxhill and Alex Maguire will see the light in the Fall of 2007.
Discography
* Platform One (Voiceprint, 2007) Elton Dean and The Wrong Object,
* The Unbelievable Truth (Moonjune Records, 2006)
* Stories from the Shed (Moonjune Records, January 2008)
Website
Michael Frogley graduated from Kingston University in 1993 with a BSc (Hons) in Geology.
His doctoral research, carried out at the University of Cambridge (1993-97), was primarily concerned with the multi-proxy analysis of a long (319m, half a million year-old) sedimentary sequence from the Ioannina lake basin in NW Greece.
On gaining a Research Fellowship in Earth Sciences at St John's College, Cambridge (1996-2000), his post-doctoral work continued these investigations, focusing in particular on the character of climatic variability in the Eastern Mediterranean during the last interglacial period (Marine Isotope Stage 5e).
He joined the University of Sussex in October 2000 as a Lecturer in Physical Geography and has since been extending the geographical range of his research by looking at Late Holocene lake sites in Peru. He became Senior Lecturer in October 2005.
Michael Frogley is a Quaternary palaeoecologist whose research interests currently include: (1) the use of stable isotope geochemistry to help determine the climatic histories of lake basins; (2) the analysis of changes in Quaternary palaeobiogeographical patterns of selected invertebrate faunal groups, particularly around the Mediterranean; and (3) the relationship between rapid-scale climatic change and societal collapse in the Andean highlands of Peru.
He is a member of the ISOMED working group, involved in the analysis and synthesis of Mediterranean isotopic climatic records; he is also a founding member of the ECCUZ working group, concerned with examining the links between Late Holocene environmental and cultural change in the Cuzco region of Peru.
His doctoral research, carried out at the University of Cambridge (1993-97), was primarily concerned with the multi-proxy analysis of a long (319m, half a million year-old) sedimentary sequence from the Ioannina lake basin in NW Greece.
On gaining a Research Fellowship in Earth Sciences at St John's College, Cambridge (1996-2000), his post-doctoral work continued these investigations, focusing in particular on the character of climatic variability in the Eastern Mediterranean during the last interglacial period (Marine Isotope Stage 5e).
He joined the University of Sussex in October 2000 as a Lecturer in Physical Geography and has since been extending the geographical range of his research by looking at Late Holocene lake sites in Peru. He became Senior Lecturer in October 2005.
Michael Frogley is a Quaternary palaeoecologist whose research interests currently include: (1) the use of stable isotope geochemistry to help determine the climatic histories of lake basins; (2) the analysis of changes in Quaternary palaeobiogeographical patterns of selected invertebrate faunal groups, particularly around the Mediterranean; and (3) the relationship between rapid-scale climatic change and societal collapse in the Andean highlands of Peru.
He is a member of the ISOMED working group, involved in the analysis and synthesis of Mediterranean isotopic climatic records; he is also a founding member of the ECCUZ working group, concerned with examining the links between Late Holocene environmental and cultural change in the Cuzco region of Peru.
I oppose the deletion of this page as the multicultural movement of our society need individual groups to be able to identify with different portions of our world culture. I will continue to work on this as time permits. (Gus Burk)
A "Pub",is a shortening of the term public house. A pub is an establishment which serves alcoholic drinks — especially beer — for consumption on the premises, usually in a comfortable setting. Pubs originated in English-speaking countries, particularly in the United Kingdom and Ireland and are now found globally.
In North America, drinking establishments with a British or Irish name or theme are called pubs as well. Although the terms may have different connotations, there is no definitive difference between pubs, bars, taverns and lounges where alcohol is served commercially.
Traditionally, a pub which offers lodging may be called an inn or (more recently) hotel in the UK. Today many pubs, in the UK and Australia in particular, with the word "inn" or "hotel" in their name no longer offer accommodation, or in some cases have never done so. Some pubs often bear the name of "hotel" because they are in countries where stringent anti-drinking laws were once in force. Until 1976 in Scotland only hotels could serve alcohol on Sundays;.
One of the most common form of pub around the world is the Irish Pub, highlighted by its association with Guinness Stout and renowned for its 'Craic'.
_
Locations of Irish Pubs around Tucson, Az.
Irish Pub,
9155 Tanque Verde
Tucson, AZ 85749
520-749-2299
http://www.irishpubtucson.com/
O'Malleys On Fourth,
247 N 4 Av
TUCSON, AZ 85705 - 8440
520-623-8600
http://www.oconnorspub.com/
Bennigan's,
350 S Freeway Rd
Tucson, AZ 85745
Phone: (520) 882-7701
Bob Dobbs,
2501 E 6TH St
Tucson, AZ 85716-4403
Phone: (520) 325-3767
Frog & Firkin,
874 E University Blvd
Tucson, AZ 85719-5047
Phone: 520-623-7507
Firkin & Friar,
6958 E Tanque Verde
Tucson, AZ 85715
Phone:(520)-885-8277
http://friartucson.firkinpubs.com/default.aspx?pub=58
Auld Dubliner,
800 E. University Blvd
Tucson, AZ 85719
phone:(520) 206-0323
http://www.aulddubliner.com/Tucson/
_
References:
http://en. .org/wiki/Public_house ,
http://www.azroundup.com/bars/irish/index.html ,
http://tucson.citysearch.com/yellowpages/results/Tucson_AZ/page1.html?flavor_id2&cw152 ,
http://tucsonrestaurantguide.com/display-n/id/a8b79627a/rtn_page/reviews ,
http://www.google.com/search?hlen&qIrish+pubs+tucson&btnG=Search
A "Pub",is a shortening of the term public house. A pub is an establishment which serves alcoholic drinks — especially beer — for consumption on the premises, usually in a comfortable setting. Pubs originated in English-speaking countries, particularly in the United Kingdom and Ireland and are now found globally.
In North America, drinking establishments with a British or Irish name or theme are called pubs as well. Although the terms may have different connotations, there is no definitive difference between pubs, bars, taverns and lounges where alcohol is served commercially.
Traditionally, a pub which offers lodging may be called an inn or (more recently) hotel in the UK. Today many pubs, in the UK and Australia in particular, with the word "inn" or "hotel" in their name no longer offer accommodation, or in some cases have never done so. Some pubs often bear the name of "hotel" because they are in countries where stringent anti-drinking laws were once in force. Until 1976 in Scotland only hotels could serve alcohol on Sundays;.
One of the most common form of pub around the world is the Irish Pub, highlighted by its association with Guinness Stout and renowned for its 'Craic'.
_
Locations of Irish Pubs around Tucson, Az.
Irish Pub,
9155 Tanque Verde
Tucson, AZ 85749
520-749-2299
http://www.irishpubtucson.com/
O'Malleys On Fourth,
247 N 4 Av
TUCSON, AZ 85705 - 8440
520-623-8600
http://www.oconnorspub.com/
Bennigan's,
350 S Freeway Rd
Tucson, AZ 85745
Phone: (520) 882-7701
Bob Dobbs,
2501 E 6TH St
Tucson, AZ 85716-4403
Phone: (520) 325-3767
Frog & Firkin,
874 E University Blvd
Tucson, AZ 85719-5047
Phone: 520-623-7507
Firkin & Friar,
6958 E Tanque Verde
Tucson, AZ 85715
Phone:(520)-885-8277
http://friartucson.firkinpubs.com/default.aspx?pub=58
Auld Dubliner,
800 E. University Blvd
Tucson, AZ 85719
phone:(520) 206-0323
http://www.aulddubliner.com/Tucson/
_
References:
http://en. .org/wiki/Public_house ,
http://www.azroundup.com/bars/irish/index.html ,
http://tucson.citysearch.com/yellowpages/results/Tucson_AZ/page1.html?flavor_id2&cw152 ,
http://tucsonrestaurantguide.com/display-n/id/a8b79627a/rtn_page/reviews ,
http://www.google.com/search?hlen&qIrish+pubs+tucson&btnG=Search
The A830 was the first 3G/UMTS handset released by Motorola. It featured Bluetooth, UMTS (3G) access and services, tri-band GSM for travel and a detachable VGA camera which replaced the battery cover of the handset. The handset was mostly distributed by Hutchison's 3 network.
Released in late 2002, the A830 was later replaced by the superior A835. While quite advanced for the time, some users expressed concern that this model was plagued by issues common to first-generation products, including limited battery life, software lockups and awkward implementation of text editing.
Specifications
* Technology: WCDMA/UMTS 2100 and GSM/GPRS 900/1800/1900
* Dimensions: 135 x 53 x 23 mm
* Weight: 156 g
* Talk time: Up to 1.2 hours
* Standby time: Up to 42 hours
Features
* Display: 176x220 pixel 4096 color display
* 2MB shared memory plus included 32MB SD external memory card
* Connectivity: Bluetooth v1.1, Infrared
* Messaging: SMS, EMS, MMS, E-Mail
* Integrated video and audio media player.
* Optional detachable camera accessory.
Released in late 2002, the A830 was later replaced by the superior A835. While quite advanced for the time, some users expressed concern that this model was plagued by issues common to first-generation products, including limited battery life, software lockups and awkward implementation of text editing.
Specifications
* Technology: WCDMA/UMTS 2100 and GSM/GPRS 900/1800/1900
* Dimensions: 135 x 53 x 23 mm
* Weight: 156 g
* Talk time: Up to 1.2 hours
* Standby time: Up to 42 hours
Features
* Display: 176x220 pixel 4096 color display
* 2MB shared memory plus included 32MB SD external memory card
* Connectivity: Bluetooth v1.1, Infrared
* Messaging: SMS, EMS, MMS, E-Mail
* Integrated video and audio media player.
* Optional detachable camera accessory.