Dr. Dog

July 23, 2007 on 12:56 pm | In Entertainment | No Comments
10/30/2007
8:30 pmto11:45 pm



Tuesday October 30th, 2007 - $10
w/ Delta Spirit
Emily Lacy

Dr. Dog is a musical band from the greater West Philadelphia area. We are interested in three-part harmoNies, the out-of-doors, soya roti’s, baking bread and diminished chords.


Dr. Dog Live on David Letterman

Nada Surf

July 23, 2007 on 12:45 pm | In Entertainment | No Comments
10/27/2007
8:30 pmto11:30 pm



Saturday October 27th, 2007 - $12
w/ Sea Wolf

If you know your stuff, you know the story. If you dont, here it is: We begin where all good things outside of Seattle do in NYC. Matthew Caws and Daniel Lorca meet in high school and play around the city in a few short-lived bands, eventually forming a trio they call Nada Surf. Ira Elliot (Fuzztones legend) came in a little later, and in 1995 the band teamed with Elektra and later Ric Ocasek, who produced their debut LP, High/Low. The album sold nicely because of a little song called Popular that became a hit on MTV. Nada Surf toured a bunch and in 1998 recorded The Proximity Effect, the release of which was delayed due to a protracted rights battle with Elektra. Finally. after enjoying much critical acclaim overseas, the album came out stateside amid a throng of late-century cynics, skeptical of a band known primarily for a novelty single. And while reviews were generally positive, the album was sadly overlooked. Time passed during which the band continued to enjoy a rabid fan base in Europe, while stateside many believed Nada Surf had dwindled off into relative obscurity. But that wasnt the case. The band came out of nowhere and shocked everyone with 2003s critically-lauded masterpiece, Let Go (an excellent rainy-afternoon album, full of gentle and melancholic beauty Nada Surf show enough panache to leave most of their Nineties-rock peers eating hot dust.” Rolling Stone). Having had their fill of major label semantics, the band chose Seattles Barsuk Records to release the album a pitch-perfect collection of rock songs that charmed music-lovers and critics the world over with its candor and revelry, and gave Nada Surf a new life and new home in the doting arms of contemporary indie rock (”A moody rock lullaby and further proof that most bands hit their stride long after MTV stops paying attention.” GQ). Now, even after touring behind Let Go for almost two years with no further releases, they can still fill a room and a mighty big one at that in many countries, securing their place in the canon alongside folks like Spoon, The Shins and Death Cab for Cutie.


Nada Surf Music Video

John Vanderslice

July 23, 2007 on 12:28 pm | In Entertainment | No Comments
9/18/2007
12:30 pm



Tuesday September 18th, 2007 - $10
w/ TNT Dance

Dance Off + Cafe 11 five year anniversary +John Vanderslice= Awesomeamazingness

Sept 18th- Yes!!! 5 Glorious Years

It has been declared that “IT IS ON”, meaning that there is now a dance contest, TNT DANCE versus the best dancers in world (or North Florida). Exceptional dance moves are the norm. Dance Troup Challengers are WANTED! Can you handle that?

Dance Dance Revolution champion John Vanderlice will be the Judge. And will rock out new Emerald City tunes post dance off.

Ballons, Cake, $1 PBR, Human Pony Rides

Its only $10!

Dance troupe challengers drink free all night. If you have a dance troupe contact us at cafeeleven@hotmail.com to challnge. Check out TNT Dance Youtube on Cafe 11 Myspace page.

John wrote the bulk of his new album, emerald city (out July 24), while knee-deep in legal limbo after a visa application for his girlfriend, a French national he met in Paris, was rejected by US Immigration. The songs and themes are fueled by an era of deep insecurity and paranoia; they develop in front of a backdrop of ritualized and mythologized current events. Lyrically, JV’s characters and storytellers track Manifest Destiny from burning wagon wheels to two-bedroom homes with full amenities in Bakersfield, California. Along that rough road, there are bewildered commemorations, peace-lovers and revenge-lusters, psychotic reactions to unnamed episodes, and the grief-stricken and the vengeance-hungry wrapped up in the same skin. Weaving throughout the entire album is the ever present danger of opposition. But at its simplest, emerald city is made up of JV’s love songs — confused and angry, afraid and defeated. The red tape tie-up for JV and his girl remains unresolved.


John Vanderslice “Exodus Damage”

Powered by WordPress with Pool theme design by Borja Fernandez.
Entries and comments feeds. Valid XHTML and CSS. ^Top^