Nu Shooz
04/20/2026
As you can see in the photo below, the Nu Shooz archive project is in full swing, taking over the art room in our house. It’s been humbling, this look in the rearview mirror. Look how young we were! How did the years fly by so fast? So many memories to sift through.
One of the memories that surfaced was tied to an envelope stuffed with reviews from our 1986 press junket in the U.K. As we shuffled through the stack, we remembered the first time we opened it, back in our kitchen on N.E. Broadway in Portland. The press clippings read like whiplash. Some were sweet. Some were savage. A few were… genuinely weird.
That story (and a couple current movie recommendations for music lovers) are in the Spring 2026 Nu Shooz newsletter. You can read the whole thing here: https://bit.ly/NS-April-News
If you want these little bits of news in your inbox, are you signed up yet? If not, hop on the list! Just head to our website and scroll down to the subscribe box. Tasty tidbits sent to your inbox quarterly. https://www.nushoozmusic.com/
04/03/2026
We got a new little blaster for the studio. (HelloKitty!) Thought we’d try out one of our older cassettes on it to see how it would play. Miraculously, even though the cassette is over 40 years old, it didn’t break! Not bad! 😂
Wishing you all a very Merry Christmas and Holiday Season with one of our favorite memories from years past. Here’s Valerie and the I-Lets — (L to R) Tracey Harris, Margaret Linn, and Haley Horsfall. Watch all the way through as hilarious improv moments ensue!
12/07/2024
Here's the latest featured FAN QUESTION:
Dear NU SHOOZ, can you talk about some difficult recording studio experiences?
Anthony
Tampa, FL
Hi there Anthony,
We’ve got three different experiences for you.
1. This doesn't come under the category of 'difficult,' but it was formative. When we recorded the original 'American' mix of "I Can't Wait," the audio engineer Fritz Richmond said, "Is this going to be a single?"
And we were like, "Single? What's that?"
He ended up cutting the intros and verses and "middle-8s" in half and made some breakdowns without which the famous version of "ICW" wouldn't have been possible. He did this by cutting up the 2" master tape with a razor blade on an editing block. There was no digital audio back then, and that's how it was done.
Fritz Richmond was this incredible, super-humble guy. You'd never know he was part of the Greenwich Village folk scene and actually started the whole 'granny glasses' thing. He never brought any of that up while we were recording - that's just the kind of person he was.
He’s deserving of a whole blog post of his own. Someday soon, we’ll write it.
2. We were down in L.A. at Sunset Sound Factory recording "Should I Say Yes." We couldn't get a vocal take that I liked better than the demo. Eventually we decided to use the vocal from the demo tape. The problem was the demo vocal was on 1/4" four track and the master was 2" 24 track. Also, they were running at slightly different speeds. And there was no time code. So we had the demo FedExed down from Portland, set up a machine, and 'flew in' the vocal one phrase at a time. To do this, Jeff Lorber marked a place on the demo tape with a grease pencil, played the master, and hit go on the other machine. It would take several attempts before it landed in the right place. We did the whole song like that.
3. At some point in the making of a record, we'd have to make a cassette and take it to the A&R department at the Label. The problem was the people at the label always had the crappiest stereos, and *no two cassette players ran at the same speed.* This was way before CDs or DATs. So we're sitting with whoever and the tape is either running too slow or too fast, quaaludes or helium, and everything sounds stupid.
There you go. Thanks for the question. There are so many more. Like the all-nighter I pulled for a band I was producing. Next day I found out it was the *wrong tune!* Like the pet rabbit who liked to chew on the cables and eventually died for his bad lifestyle choices.
All the best,
John R. Smith
Nu Shooz
P.S. For more Fan Questions and Nu Shooz Stories from back in the day, head on over to our website page: The Nu Shooz Chronicles: https://www.nushoozmusic.com/news
P.S.S. And if you made it this far and have a question or two of your own, please leave them in the comments below. See you next time!
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12/04/2024