About the Book
This is my story; I am a musician and entrepreneur who created and co-owned nightclubs, now part of the history of music and nightlife in New York City. Starting with my first club, Sanctuary, and continuing with Mission in Manhattan's East Village and ending with the highly regarded Luna Lounge, this is the first book to cover a part of the New York rock music scene that came after punk, new wave, and no wave. Musicians and bands including Joey Ramone, The Psychedelic Furs, The Jesus And Mary Chain, Ministry, Nine Inch Nails, The Sugarcubes, The Sisters Of Mercy, and Killing Joke, among others, would party together at Mission. It was the late 1980s, a time of MTV's "120 Minutes", melodic British psychedelic guitar rock, Wax Trax industrial rock records, and a dangerous but exciting Lower East Side. Moving further ahead, my story continues with the sale of the Mission and the opening of Luna Lounge in 1995, possibly the most important venue of its size in New York. Luna was the stage where The Strokes, Interpol, The National, Longwave, stellastarr*, The Bravery, The Hold Steady, and many other bands first performed before friends and early fans of the bands. Also, Luna would host free performances from Marty Willson-Piper (The Church), Black Box Recorder, Sonic Boom, and Kid Rock. This is also a narrative about Elliott Smith as he wrote out his work for the album, XO, while sitting at the Luna Lounge bar and his subsequent launch into stardom. In addition, Luna Lounge was a well known Monday night comedy spot where cutting edge comics worked new material in front of a supportive audience as part of the "Eating It" comedy series, the room where fans could see, among others, Jon Stewart, Janeane Garofalo, Jeff Garlin, Rob Cordry, Greg Fitzsimmons, Lewis Black, Jim Norton, Lewis C.K., and Marc Maron. Finally, this is the story of the forced closing of Luna Lounge, a victim of the rising real estate values which came as a result of the quality of life initiatives set out by the Republican mayors who have controlled the city for the last twenty years. More information is available at the author's website, wakeme.net.
About the Author: Rob Sacher, Brooklyn born musician and entrepreneur, was the creator and co-owner of the Mission and Luna Lounge, two iconic New York City rock nightclubs of the late 1980s through 2005. A highly regarded person within the New York indie rock music scene, he is the author of Wake Me When It's Over: My Life As A New York City Rock Club Owner And The Story Of Luna Lounge. Rob Sacher has been featured in The New York Times, New York Press, The Observer, The New York Post, New York Magazine, Spin Magazine, New Music Express (NME), and in numerous blogs including Gothamist, Brooklyn Vegan, Brooklyn Rocks, Jezebel Music, Indie Sounds, The Morning News, on quite a number of indie rock band websites and on Wikipedia pages for The Strokes, Interpol, Elliott Smith, Longwave, and Marc Maron. He lives in the Williamsburg section of Brooklyn, New York.