Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Poolside is the third studio album by the American pop–Latin freestyle–electronic dance music duo Nu Shooz. It was released on May 9, 1986 through Atlantic Recording Corporation. Recording sessions took place at Sunset Sound Factory and Lorber Studio in Los Angeles, Atlantic Studios in New York, Cascade Recording and Spectrum Studios in ...
Nu Shooz is an American R&B group fronted by husband-and-wife team of John Smith and Valerie Day, based in Portland, Oregon. Nu Shooz released four albums in the U.S. during the 1980s. Poolside, their third album, brought the group's sound to a wider audience.
"Point of No Return" is the title of the second single taken from the Nu Shooz album Poolside. The song spent one week at #1 on the Billboard Hot Dance Club Play chart in September 1986. [1] It also peaked at #28 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart [2] and #36 on the R&B chart [3] in the U.S., as well as topping out at #48 on the UK singles chart. [4]
It should only contain pages that are Nu Shooz albums or lists of Nu Shooz albums, as well as subcategories containing those things (themselves set categories). Topics about Nu Shooz albums in general should be placed in relevant topic categories .
Poolside may refer to: Poolside (band), a Los Angeles "Daytime Disco" band; Poolside, 1986, by Nu Shooz; Poolsuite, formerly Poolside FM, an Internet radio service; The area surrounding a swimming pool
"I Can't Wait" is a song by American group Nu Shooz, included on the band's second album, Tha's Right (1985). [3] The song was remixed by Dutch DJ and producer Peter Slaghuis: this remixed version is the one that appears on the group's 1986 album, Poolside.
HGTV star Sarah Baeumler shared a poolside photo at her Bahamas resort. See her perfect summer outfit here.
Born in Portland, Oregon, she is a fourth-generation Oregonian, and grew up in a musical family. [1] She was the lead singer and a founding member of the 1980s dance band Nu Shooz, with her husband John Smith. [2] Day's performances with Nu Shooz had mixed reviews. She and Smith were credited with "rewriting the book" on Portland's R&B sound. [3]