With Maybe I’m Wrong, Luxembourgish singer-songwriter Jeremy Engel trades studio gloss for something far more visceral. From the opening bars, the track announces itself as a live-blooded indie/alternative rock rush: uptempo, kinetic, and deliberately left a little rough around the edges. It doesn’t feel engineered to impress; it feels built to move.
There’s a restless propulsion running through the song, driven by live-band dynamics that never quite settle into comfort. Guitars bite and shimmer in equal measure, the rhythm section keeps things airborne, and Engel’s vocal delivery carries a candid urgency, as if the song is being discovered in real time. That sense of immediacy is no accident. The track’s philosophy is simple: if it works on stage, don’t sanitize it in the studio. The result is a recording that breathes, stumbles slightly, surges forward, and stays thrilling because of it.
The song hovers in uncertainty, sketching emotional fragments rather than tidy conclusions. Doubt isn’t framed as a problem to solve, but as a state to inhabit. That unresolved tension mirrors the production itself: nothing overly corrected, nothing neatly wrapped up. Instead, there’s a raw honesty that feels increasingly rare in an era of hyper-polished indie releases.
Having been shaped on stages across multiple countries, the song carries the confidence of something already tested against real audiences. You can hear the crowd-energy embedded in its bones.
This release, Maybe I’m Wrong, stands as a declaration of intent from Jeremy Engel: unpolished, unresolved, and utterly unstoppable!








