Unregistered Nurse


CALENDAR



6.18 Golden West
BBQT
Mt. Carmel
Hard Dads


6.20 Metro Gallery
Bleeding Rainbow
Fat Creeps
Shark Week


6.21 Golden West
Baltimore Animal Rights Federation (BARF) / Humane League Benefit!!
with
Friendbeast
Night Moves
Enemy Insect


6.22 Fraziers
Dope Body
Mt Royal
Clock
Whoarfrost


6.23 Ottobar Upstairs
Juniper Rising
Adam Lempel and the Heartbeats

+ DJs Nolen Strals & J.Mo


6.26 Ottobar Upstairs
Wymyns Prysyn
Wet Brain
Thee Lexington Arrows

+ DJ Alex Hagen


6.30 Ottobar Upstairs
Coming Soon!


7.6 Club K
The Mantles
Expert Alterations
Juan Waters (of The Beets)
Foul Swoops


7.12 Golden West
La Luz
Andrew Cedermark (of Titus Andronicus)
TBA


7.16 Metro Gallery
inc. (4AD Records)
Braider
Kelela
DJ Total Freedom


7.22 Club K
First in a series of shows with Southpaw Records... coming soon!


7.29 Metro Gallery
Coming Soon!


7.31 Golden West
Coming Soon!


8.2 Metro Gallery
Ducktails
TBA


8.4 Ottobar Upstairs
Coming Soon!


8.11 Ottobar
Hunx & His Punx
Chain and the Gang
Hunters
TBA


8.14 Golden West
Coming Soon!


8.15 Ottobar
THE OBLIVIANS
The Shirks
Advlts
Sick Thoughts

+ DJ Windian Records


8.21 Ottobar Upstairs
Coming Soon!


8.27 Ottobar
CSR 7th Anniversary!!!
with
Zero Boys
Night Birds
Give
WarXGames
Ravagers


9.5 Metro Gallery
Suuns
Rose Windows
TBA


9.11 Metro Gallery
Scout Niblett
Dope Body
TBA


9.29 Ottobar Upstairs
Coming Soon!


10.13 Ottobar
Coming Soon!


10.17 Metro Gallery
U+Nfest preparty


10.18 & 19 Ottobar
U+Nfest




Booking Inquiries

unbooking@gmail.com



Hype

UNREGISTERED NURSE NAMED BALTIMORE'S BEST MUSIC PROMOTER 2012!!!

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Booking + promo, shows + tours

Advance tickets added

for the Widowspeak/ Boyhood/ Hollows show on 7.5 at Golden West!

CLICK HERE TO BUY ADVANCE TICKETS

CONFIRMED! 7.5
++ CLICK THE PICTURE TO RSVP!! ++

Widowspeak ( Captured Tracks, from NY… FACEBOOK) Boyhood (mem White Wires, from Canada… BANDCAMP) Hollows (Trouble in Mind Records, from Chicago… WEBSITE)  +1

 Pitchfork; 7.5 “It usually takes years of practice and several albums for bands to reach the crestfallen state Brooklyn trio Widowspeak showcase on their debut. Here, the music’s poignant rush came quickly: We’re told their debut single “Harsh Realm” was recorded after the band played a total of six shows. The fatalistic croon of singer/songwriter Molly Hamilton has already garnered plenty of Hope Sandoval comparisons. It would be remiss not to mention those here, as Hamilton’s phrasing is often nearly identical to her most obvious influence, but there’s enough variation in mood and texture to give this project a weight and balance all of its own. Much of the credit is due to the versatile guitar lines traded between Hamilton and Robert Earl Thomas. At times there’s a hollowed-out starkness and foreboding to the playing reminiscent of Ennio Morricone’s spaghetti western soundtracks (“Puritan”); at others there’s a meshing of hippy idealism and influences extracted from bad-vibes garage rock not dissimilar to Love at their peak (see the pleasingly atonal guitar solo that ripples through “Nightcrawlers”). The latter even bears a moody 1950s tenor that sounds like Alex Zhang Hungtai of Dirty Beaches with the filth cleaned out of his fingernails. Anyone looking to wallow in 1990s nostalgia will find much to gorge on, too— touchstones from that decade come thick and fast. For instance, when Hamilton’s not channeling Sandoval, and when the band crawls out of the doldrums into more upbeat territory (“Gun Shy”, “Half Awake”), she often resembles Madder Rose singer Mary Lorson. The skill with which Widowspeak assimilates those parts into alluring song structures is what prevents this from being an exercise in tributary. There’s an ache to “Harsh Realm” that’s all their own, the central vocal line (“I always think about you”) bearing a downplayed creepiness that suggests Hamilton knows a thing or two about the ill effects of obsessive love. The one-two punch of “Gun Shy” and “Hard Times” are where the band hits its peak, the former combining their natural wistfulness with bouts of polished-up Link Wray guitar twang that wouldn’t sound out of place on the soundtrack to Tom DiCillo’s Johnny Suede. On “Hard Times” they bend everything around a featherlight pop framework that provides a perfectly melancholy backbone to Hamilton’s naturally listless demeanor: It has the right amount of sun and shade much of Widowspeak possesses, the lightness of touch in the arrangement preventing the songwriting from toppling over into unpalatable sorrow.” Full review; HERE

CONFIRMED! 7.5

++ CLICK THE PICTURE TO RSVP!! ++

Widowspeak ( Captured Tracks, from NY… FACEBOOK)

Boyhood (mem White Wires, from Canada… BANDCAMP)

Hollows (Trouble in Mind Records, from Chicago… WEBSITE)

+1



Pitchfork; 7.5
“It usually takes years of practice and several albums for bands to reach the crestfallen state Brooklyn trio Widowspeak showcase on their debut. Here, the music’s poignant rush came quickly: We’re told their debut single “Harsh Realm” was recorded after the band played a total of six shows. The fatalistic croon of singer/songwriter Molly Hamilton has already garnered plenty of Hope Sandoval comparisons. It would be remiss not to mention those here, as Hamilton’s phrasing is often nearly identical to her most obvious influence, but there’s enough variation in mood and texture to give this project a weight and balance all of its own.

Much of the credit is due to the versatile guitar lines traded between Hamilton and Robert Earl Thomas. At times there’s a hollowed-out starkness and foreboding to the playing reminiscent of Ennio Morricone’s spaghetti western soundtracks (“Puritan”); at others there’s a meshing of hippy idealism and influences extracted from bad-vibes garage rock not dissimilar to Love at their peak (see the pleasingly atonal guitar solo that ripples through “Nightcrawlers”). The latter even bears a moody 1950s tenor that sounds like Alex Zhang Hungtai of Dirty Beaches with the filth cleaned out of his fingernails. Anyone looking to wallow in 1990s nostalgia will find much to gorge on, too— touchstones from that decade come thick and fast. For instance, when Hamilton’s not channeling Sandoval, and when the band crawls out of the doldrums into more upbeat territory (“Gun Shy”, “Half Awake”), she often resembles Madder Rose singer Mary Lorson.

The skill with which Widowspeak assimilates those parts into alluring song structures is what prevents this from being an exercise in tributary. There’s an ache to “Harsh Realm” that’s all their own, the central vocal line (“I always think about you”) bearing a downplayed creepiness that suggests Hamilton knows a thing or two about the ill effects of obsessive love. The one-two punch of “Gun Shy” and “Hard Times” are where the band hits its peak, the former combining their natural wistfulness with bouts of polished-up Link Wray guitar twang that wouldn’t sound out of place on the soundtrack to Tom DiCillo’s Johnny Suede. On “Hard Times” they bend everything around a featherlight pop framework that provides a perfectly melancholy backbone to Hamilton’s naturally listless demeanor: It has the right amount of sun and shade much of Widowspeak possesses, the lightness of touch in the arrangement preventing the songwriting from toppling over into unpalatable sorrow.”

Full review; HERE

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