"Night of the Dead" - Friday Nov. 10th

topic posted Wed, October 18, 2006 - 3:49 PM by  Skip
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DECADE
The DJ Dance Club
Every hour a different decade!
FREE ~ No Cover Charge All Night
Now on the 2nd Friday of the month

Friday, November 10th, 2006
"Night of the Dead"
I Hear Dead People – All Songs By or About the Dead

"I'm all dressed up with nowhere to go
Walkin' with a dead man over my shoulder
Waiting for an invitation to arrive
Goin' to a party where no one's still alive!"
- Oingo Boingo

9-10pm
1950’s - "THE DAY THE MUSIC DIED"
DJ Skip (New Wave City)
"Put your glad rags on and look real fine,
We'll have some fun when the clock strikes nine,
We're gonna rock around the clock tonight (or at least for an hour),
We're gonna rock, rock, rock, with Buddy Holly, Ritchie Valens, Eddie Cochran, and Elvis Presley, that’s right,
We're gonna rock, gonna rock, around the clock tonight!"

10-11pm
1990's - "PRETEND THAT WE'RE DEAD"
DJ Tomas Diablo (Strangelove) pretends that he’s dead and then resurrects himself,
because like most guys, he wants a second coming. Behold; as the Dead Can Dance.
Witness; there is Death in Vegas. Testify; that "Elvis is Dead", and if we’re lucky, Nirvana
and Sublime will rock from beyond the grave too.

11-12am
1980’s - "THOSE ARE PEOPLE WHO DIED"
DJ Candy (DECADE)
"The B-52’s took a dry dive from a hotel room,
Joy Division hung himself from a cell in the tombs,
The Ramones jumped in front of a subway train,
INXS got slit in the jugular vein.
Those are people who died, died. They were all my friends, and they died!"

12-1am
Special Set – "THE CLASH vs. AC/DC"
DJ Skip (New Wave City) referees a knockdown, drag-out, no-holds-barred
death match between the best of The Clash vs. the best of AC/DC.
Only one band will be left standing, Who will it be?

1-2am
2000’s – "DEATH IN THE FUTURE"
DJ Candy (DECADE). Everyone dies, but not everyone truly listens to Dead 60's,
Miss Kittin, and Tomcraft. So, let’s make love and listen to Death from Above 1979,
and then you’ll find that death becomes her as she necro-feels-ya up!

Hostess Candy has sweet treats for you from every decade.
9pm until 2am
FREE ~ No Cover Charge All Night
21+ with valid ID

Catalyst Cocktails
(recently picked by CitySearch editors as one of the "Top 10 New Bars")
312 Harriet St. (off Bryant between 6th & 7th) San Francisco
one block from The Endup
Directions:
maps.yahoo.com/maps_result

www.catalystcocktails.com
www.strangelovesf.com
www.newwavecity.com

JOIN THE DECADE TRIBE-
decadedjdanceclub.tribe.net
posted by:
Skip
SF Bay Area
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  • Re: "Night of the Dead" - Friday Nov. 10th

    Fri, October 27, 2006 - 4:36 PM
    From today's Chron Datebook...

    Clash Honored at Rock Hall
    By TOM WITHERS, Associated Press Writer

    Armed with guitars, amps and attitude, they rocked the casbah, fought the law and hijacked a train in vain.
    The Clash were more than a four-piece band. They were rock 'n' roll revolutionaries.And now, 30 years after
    they first stormed across England and later invaded the United States with their sonic blend of rock, reggae,
    rap and righteousness, the Clash is being celebrated with an exhibit at the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and
    Museum. It's enough to give Mick Jones a case of anxiety.

    "I've got mixed trepidation about seeing it, getting to the museum stage of life and still being alive," said Jones,
    who along with the late Joe Strummer, Topper Headon and Paul Simonon formed the Clash's classic lineup.

    "Revolution Rock: The Story of the Clash" has opened to the public and will be on display until April 15, 2007.
    Among the exhibit's pieces are instruments, including Simonon's famous smashed bass from the cover of
    "London Calling" — regarded as one of rock's finest recordings. The exhibit also includes stage clothing,
    memorabilia and original manuscripts from songs like "Know Your Rights" and "Clampdown."

    Along with the Sex Pistols, the Clash erupted from London's fertile music scene in 1976 to ride the first
    wave of British punk. But while Johnny Rotten and the bad-boy Pistols vented their nihilistic rage about
    political injustice with straightforward rock, the Clash's sound was a mesh of influences. Bob Marley,
    Mott the Hoople, The Who, Eddie Cochran and others could be
    heard in the Clash's wide-ranging body of work.

    "We just played the stuff we liked," Jones told the Associated Press in an interview this month.

    Strummer was the prime source of the band's left-winged platform. He and others in London's punk
    scene engaged in squatting (inhabiting abandoned buildings) as a way of protest and formed a band
    called the 101ers, named after the address of the squat where they lived.

    "Joe was always political," Jones said. "He came from that background, but the Clash were never
    really allied to any political party. We were just having a go, really."

    But the Clash made it clear that they were making more than music beginning with their first single
    "White Riot" in 1977 and on tracks like "Career Opportunities,""Tommy Gun" and "London's Burning"
    as well as in a three-disc album "Sandinista" — titled in tribute to a Nicaraguan political movement.
    The Clash often performed in military-style clothing and were staunch supporters of political groups
    like the Anti-Nazi League and Rock Against Racism. And although they were an instant success in the
    United Kingdom, it wasn't until 1982's "Combat Rock", with its hits "Rock the Casbah" and
    "Should I Stay or Should I Go", that the band made a splash in the United States.

    "The States are so big that it took a while for people to hear us," Jones explained. "But when we first
    came over in '78, everywhere we went we saw pockets of the punk scene flowering up."

    Jones, who was kicked out of the Clash in 1983 following a dispute over the band's direction,
    went on to success with Big Audio Dynamite and is still making music. Now 51, one of punks
    pioneers has few regrets about his time with a band considered among rock's most influential
    groups.

    "I would have liked to have done more stuff," Jones said. "We never stopped learning and
    even at the end we were doing great things. I would have liked to have done more."

    Jones said he misses Strummer "terribly. I think of him a lot." Strummer died in 2002, just a few
    months before the band was inducted into the Rock Hall in 2003. The Clash were honored three
    years before the Sex Pistols. While the Clash's surviving members attended their induction ceremony,
    the Pistols turned down their honor in a profane letter that was read during the hall's enshrinement
    gala earlier this year in New York.

    "That's not the way we would have handled it," said Jones, who pushed for the Pistols' overdue
    induction. "We were proud to get in. It's a little like getting into the Baseball Hall of Fame, isn't it?"
    • Re: "Night of the Dead" - Friday Nov. 10th

      Sat, October 28, 2006 - 3:33 PM
      Did you know one of the members is now a chiropractor?

      news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_ne...6060180.stm

      My favorite is the first comment -

      ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
      My brother-in-law Anton is a classical musician, and when he and my sister still lived in London he told me that he was chatting to his chiropractor one day and the conversation went something like this:

      Chiropractor: So, what do you do for a living?
      Anton: I'm a musician.
      Chiropractor: Oh really? I used to be a musician too.
      Anton: Yeah? What did you do?
      Chiropractor: I used to be the drummer in The Clash.
      Anton: *falls off table*

      The thing is, he's always making up stupid stories to wind us up, and so I was never really sure whether to believe him. Huh. Turns out he was telling the truth.
      Darren Brierton, Edinburgh
      • Re: "Night of the Dead" - Friday Nov. 10th

        Mon, October 30, 2006 - 7:50 AM
        Who are these Clash you speak of?
        • Re: "Night of the Dead" - Friday Nov. 10th

          Fri, November 3, 2006 - 5:18 PM
          From 96 Hours:

          10 THINGS: ALL SOULS DAY (abridged)

          1. Death: "The full cessation of vital functions in a biological organism" (according to wicked Wikipedia).

          2. Bauhaus: "Bela Lugosi's Dead": "The bats have left the bell tower/ the victems have been bled/ red velvet lines the black box/ Bela Lugosi's dead" (or undead).

          3. Joy Division: "Dead Souls": "Someone take these dreams away/ That point me to another day/ A duel of personalities/ That stretch all true reality" (oh Ian).

          4. The Dead Boys: "All This and More": I'm just a dead boy/ You know that I'm just a dead boy/ I wanna be a dead boy" (sorry Stiv, you're immortal).

          5. The Dead Milkmen: "Punk Rock Girl": "One Saturday I took a walk to Zipperhead/ I met a girl there and she almost knocked me dead" (typical).

          6. Death From Above 1979: "Black History Month": "Can you remember a time when this city was/ A great place for architects and debutantes/ A nice place for midwives and crossing guards.../And on, and on..." (DFA1979's best song lives on...and on).

          7. White Zombie: "More Human Than Human": "I am the crawling dead/ A phantom in a box, shadow in your head - say" (remember kids, I'm just the messenger).

          8. The Pixies: "Ed is Dead": Enough said. ("Death to the Pixies!").

          9. Grateful Dead: "Dark Star">St. Stephen": If the Pixies = LoudQuietLoud, then Dark Star">St. Stephen = QuietQuietQuietQuietQuietQuietQuietQuietLoud.

          10. The Life of Brian: "Look on the Bright Side of Life": "For life is quite absurd/ And deaths the final word..." (so seize the day now while you still can).

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