Nicholas Valensi (born January 16, 1981) is an American guitarist, singer, and songwriter, best known as the lead and rhythm guitarist of the influential rock band The Strokes.[1] Born in New York City to a Tunisian Jewish father and a French mother, Valensi grew up in Manhattan and began playing guitar at a young age.[2]He attended the Dwight School, where he met future bandmates Julian Casablancas and Fabrizio Moretti, helping form The Strokes, which debuted with the critically acclaimed album Is This It in 2001.[3] As a key songwriter and performer, he contributed to the band's signature garage rock revival sound across six studio albums, including Room on Fire (2003), Angles (2011), and The New Abnormal (2020), helping revitalize indie rock in the early 2000s.[1] Beyond the band, Valensi fronts the power pop outfit CRX, which released its debut album New Skin in 2016 and the EP Interiors in 2024.[4][5]Valensi has expanded his session work, including guitar on Ringo Starr's 2024 EP Crooked Boy.[6] In 2025, The Strokes resumed live performances, headlining the Austin City Limits Music Festival in October.[7] He has been married to photographerAmanda de Cadenet since 2006 and is a father to two children.[2]
Early life
Family background
Nicholas Valensi was born on January 16, 1981, in New York City to Paul Valensi, a Sephardic Jew born in Tunisia who later studied in Paris before immigrating to New York in the 1960s, and Danielle Delburg, a woman of French origin from near Bordeaux in southwestern France who was raised in a Catholic family and converted to Judaism in the mid-1970s before meeting his father.[2][8]He grew up on the Upper East Side of Manhattan alongside two sisters in a household shaped by his parents' diverse heritages.[8] Valensi's father, deeply religious and part of a Tunisian Jewish family that had relocated to the United States, died when he was nine years old, leaving a lasting impact on the family's dynamics.[2]The family's Jewish practices, including weekly synagogue attendance and fasting on holidays, stemmed from his father's Sephardic traditions, while his mother's French roots influenced daily life through language and cultural ties.[2] Valensi developed a childhood-level fluency in French, complete with a Parisian accent noted by others, reinforced by annual three-month summers spent with his mother's family in southern France until he was 16.[2] His initial exposure to music occurred within this familial environment, where an acoustic guitar was kept in the apartment and tuned by his father, who taught him basic chords around age five or six; after his father's passing, Valensi turned more intensely to the instrument as a means of preserving that connection.[2][9]
Education
Valensi attended The Dwight School, a prestigious private college preparatory institution located on Manhattan's Upper West Side, beginning at age 13.[10] It was there that he met Julian Casablancas, with whom he quickly formed a close friendship; soon after, he connected with Fabrizio Moretti, another future bandmate.[10][11] These encounters in the mid-1990s fostered key social networks among peers who shared a passion for music, setting the foundation for Valensi's later pursuits.[12]At Dwight, Valensi's early musical interests were significantly sparked through interactions with classmates, including casual jamming sessions and explorations of rock influences like Nirvana and 1970s punk, which he discovered alongside Casablancas and Moretti.[11] Having received his first guitar from his father at age five, Valensi was already an adept player by high school, often the most skilled among his group, and these school-based experiences deepened his commitment to guitar and songwriting.[10] The school's environment, characterized as a haven for affluent "rich fuck-ups" in a high-society neighborhood, exposed him to a privileged socioeconomic context that shaped his worldview, blending urban New York sophistication with a rebellious artistic streak.[11][12]Following high school, Valensi briefly enrolled at Hunter College in New York City, where he met Nikolai Fraiture, a childhood acquaintance of Casablancas, and continued some musical explorations amid his studies.[13] However, he dropped out after a short period to dedicate himself fully to music, prioritizing his creative ambitions over formal higher education.[14] This decision reflected the intensifying pull of his school-formed peer connections and burgeoning rock influences.[15]
Career
Formation and role in The Strokes
Nick Valensi, who had attended the Dwight School with Julian Casablancas and Fabrizio Moretti during their school years, reconnected with Casablancas after high school and joined the nascent band alongside bassist Nikolai Fraiture.[16] In late 1998, the group officially formed as The Strokes in New York City when guitarist Albert Hammond Jr. was recruited by Casablancas, solidifying the lineup with Valensi on guitar, Casablancas on vocals, Hammond Jr. on guitar, Fraiture on bass, and Moretti on drums.[17] The band began rehearsing in a small space on the Lower East Side, focusing on a raw, garage-rock sound influenced by New York City's underground scene.[16]The Strokes played their first live performance on September 14, 1999, at the now-defunct venue The Spiral in New York City, drawing a small crowd of about six people in an intimate, low-key setting that marked the start of their grassroots ascent. Over the following months, they built a local following through frequent gigs at clubs like HiFi Bar and Luna Lounge, honing a tight, energetic live show that blended post-punk urgency with melodic hooks.[17]As a founding member, Valensi served as the band's lead and rhythm guitarist, often providing interlocking riffs and angular, staccato patterns that defined The Strokes' sound, while also contributing backing vocals.[18] His guitar work featured short, punchy phrases and dynamic interplay with Hammond Jr., creating tension through precise, riff-driven structures rather than extended solos.[18] Valensi earned his first co-writing credit on "Ask Me Anything" from the 2006 album First Impressions of Earth, and later shared credits on tracks like "The Adults Are Talking" and "Bad Decisions" from The New Abnormal (2020), receiving co-writing credits on several tracks alongside Casablancas.[19][20][21]The band's debut album, Is This It (2001), captured their early energy with Valensi's sharp riffs propelling tracks like "Last Nite," achieving critical acclaim for revitalizing indie rock and peaking at No. 33 on the Billboard 200 and No. 2 on the UK Albums Chart. Their follow-up, Room on Fire (2003), built on this with more polished production, reaching No. 4 on the Billboard 200 and No. 1 in the UK, praised for its concise songcraft though noted as slightly less innovative. First Impressions of Earth (2006) expanded their scope with ambitious arrangements, including Valensi's tense guitar lines on "Heart in a Cage," debuting at No. 4 on the Billboard 200 and No. 1 in the UK but receiving mixed reviews for its uneven experimentation.[18]Angles (2011) marked a fragmented creative process amid tensions, peaking at No. 4 on the Billboard 200 and earning moderate acclaim for its synth-infused evolution.[22]Comedown Machine (2013) experimented further with lounge elements, reaching No. 4 on the Billboard 200 but drawing criticism for inconsistency.[23] The sixth album, The New Abnormal (2020), reunited the band with producer Rick Rubin and showcased Valensi's matured riffing on tracks like "Bad Decisions," debuting at No. 2 on the Billboard 200, earning widespread praise, and winning the Grammy for Best Rock Album.[24][21]In 2013, amid a period of internal creative differences, The Strokes transitioned toward greater independence by aligning with Casablancas's Cult Records label, co-founded in 2009, which facilitated more band-driven production decisions; Valensi contributed input on arrangements during this shift, helping steer sessions away from external producers.[25] This move culminated in releases like the 2016 EP Future Present Past and The New Abnormal through Cult/RCA, emphasizing collaborative dynamics.[26]The Strokes toured extensively post-Is This It, headlining global arenas from 2002 to 2004 and supporting acts like the Rolling Stones; after First Impressions of Earth, they entered a hiatus from 2007 to 2010 due to solo pursuits and burnout.[27] They resumed with a 2010 festival appearance, followed by the Angles tour in 2011, a brief 2013 run for Comedown Machine, and another hiatus until 2019.[28] The 2020 tour, supporting The New Abnormal, included North American dates starting in Vancouver and expanded spring shows in cities like New Orleans, blending high-energy sets with classics and new material before pandemic interruptions.[29] The band resumed touring in 2025, headlining events such as Austin City Limits Festival in October.[7]
CRX
In 2013, Nick Valensi founded the rock band CRX in Los Angeles, serving as its primary songwriter, lead vocalist, and guitarist, a marked shift from his rhythm guitar role in The Strokes.[30] The initial lineup featured drummer Ralph Alexander, keyboardist Brad Oberhofer, and bassist Marty O'Leary, allowing Valensi to explore frontman duties and direct creative control over the band's direction.[31]CRX released its debut album, New Skin, in October 2016 through Cult Records—the same label associated with The Strokes—produced by Queens of the Stone Age frontman Josh Homme at his Pink Duck Studios.[32] The record blended power pop, new wave, and punk influences, with singles like "Ways to Fake It" showcasing Valensi's snarling vocals and swaggering riffs.[33] Critics praised its energetic hooks and Valensi's confident shift to frontman, though some noted its reliance on familiar garage rock tropes, earning mixed reviews averaging around 60-70% on aggregate sites.[34] To support the album, CRX embarked on an extensive North American tour, including headline shows at venues like The Hi Hat in Los Angeles and EXPRESS LIVE! in Columbus, Ohio, where the band delivered high-energy sets emphasizing live guitar interplay.[35]The band's follow-up, Peek, arrived in August 2019 on Headless Records, delving deeper into garage rock fused with synthpop and dance elements, highlighted by Valensi's prominent lead guitar and vocals on tracks exploring obsession and isolation.[36] Reviewers highlighted its infectious '80s-inspired new wave vibe and punk edge, though some critiqued the ordinary lyrics amid strong riffs, positioning it as a stylistic evolution from the debut's rawer sound.[37]CRX's latest release, the EP Interiors, emerged as a surprise self-released project on July 10, 2024, marking the first new material in five years and produced by Shane Olivo with a core lineup of Valensi, bassist Jon Safley, and guitarist Darian Zahedi.[38] The five-track set delves into introspective themes of inner turmoil and relationships through bright, funky indie rock arrangements, receiving positive feedback for its solid songwriting and Valensi's matured frontman presence.[39] With minimal promotion beyond a sudden digital drop, it underscored the band's low-key evolution toward more polished, synth-infused introspection post-2020. Live activity remained sparse after 2019, limited to occasional streams like a 2020 performance and a 2024 show at U Street Music Hall in Washington, D.C., reflecting CRX's intermittent pace amid Valensi's Strokes commitments.[40]
Other projects and collaborations
Beyond his primary roles in The Strokes and CRX, Valensi has contributed as a session guitarist and songwriter to a diverse array of artists, spanning indie rock, pop, and alternative genres. One of his earliest notable outside collaborations was providing guitar on Regina Spektor's track "Better" from her 2006 album Begin to Hope, where his electric riffs complemented her piano-driven style under producer David Kahne.[41] This work marked an early foray into supporting singer-songwriters, showcasing Valensi's ability to adapt his raw, angular guitar tone to more introspective arrangements.[42]In the early 2010s, Valensi expanded into pop production and songwriting, playing guitar on several tracks from Sia's 2010 album We Are Born and co-writing the energetic "Hostage" for her 2014 release 1000 Forms of Fear.[43] The collaboration with Sia, which began during live performances as early as 2011, highlighted Valensi's versatility in crafting upbeat, synth-infused hooks outside rock contexts.[44] He also contributed guitars to Brody Dalle's 2013 solo project, aiding the former Distillers frontwoman in blending punk energy with melodic elements on her debut tracks.[45]Valensi's mid-2010s work included co-writing "Bottoms Up" with Sia for Kate Pierson's 2015 solo album Guitars and Microphones, where his fuzzy guitar lines and nimble riffs drove the song's grungy, waltz-like rhythm.[46] This track, featuring Pierson's signature quirky vocals, underscored Valensi's skill in bridging new wave influences with modern pop production. Around the same period, he participated in one-off festival performances, such as joining Kesha, Johnny Depp, and Black Keys drummer Patrick Carney at the 2012 Petty Fest to cover Tom Petty's "Mary Jane's Last Dance," delivering raucous guitar work in a tribute setting.[47] In 2014, Valensi guested on a cover of George Harrison's "Wah-Wah" at the George Fest tribute concert, performing with a supergroup that emphasized his rhythmic precision in ensemble contexts.[48]Entering the 2020s, Valensi continued exploratory collaborations, including uncredited session work with Kesha around 2019, where he contributed to her evolving sound amid her personal and artistic transitions.[19] His most prominent recent project was playing guitar on all four tracks of Ringo Starr's 2024 EP Crooked Boy, produced by Linda Perry, blending rockabilly and country elements with Starr's vocals on songs like "Gonna Need Someone" and the title track.[6] These efforts, from intimate indie sessions to high-profile pop and veteran rock outings, have solidified Valensi's reputation as a adaptable guitarist capable of elevating diverse artists beyond the indie rock sphere.[49]
Equipment and influences
Signature instruments
Nick Valensi's primary guitar is a 1995 Epiphone Riviera semi-hollowbody, acquired during the formation of The Strokes, which he has used extensively in both studio recordings and live performances with the band as well as his project CRX.[50] This instrument features custom Gibson P-94 single-coil pickups installed as a modification to enhance tonal clarity and provide a blend of jangly garage rock bite with fuller body, particularly suited for the raw, direct sound of early albums like Is This It.[51] The pickup swap, along with a trapeze tailpiece, allows for improved sustain and articulation in high-gain settings without excessive muddiness.[51]In addition to the Riviera, Valensi incorporates other key guitars such as a white Fender Telecaster Custom, purchased around 2010, which serves as his main instrument for CRX recordings and tours due to its bright, cutting tone ideal for lead work.[9] He also employs a Rivolta Combinata, an offset semi-hollow model inspired by 1950sRickenbacker designs, for its chimey highs and versatility in live settings during The Strokes' late 2010s performances.[52] Occasionally, a black Gibson Les Paul Custom appears for heavier, sustained riffs in tracks like "New York City Cops."[53]Valensi's amplification setup has evolved from the early 2000s, when he relied on Fender Hot Rod DeVille 2x12 combos for their clean headroom and natural overdrive during Is This It sessions, to more expansive rigs in the 2020s featuring a Carr Slant 6V 2x12 combo and Fender Supersonic head with matching cabinets for broader dynamic range on tours.[50] Epiphone endorsed him with a signature Riviera model in the mid-2000s, replicating his modified 1995 original with factory P-94 pickups for broader accessibility.[55]For effects, Valensi's pedalboard differs between studio and live use: in the studio, he favors minimal processing like the Pro Co RAT for gritty distortion on rhythm parts, while as of 2025 live setups include the Visual Sound Double Trouble for overdrive and sustain, EHX Deluxe Memory Man for analog delay washes, and MXR Micro Amp for solo boosts, enabling precise control over the angular riffs reminiscent of Television's style.[56][53][50] These configurations provide tonal clarity in dense mixes and adaptability for The Strokes' and CRX's high-energy shows.[50]
Musical influences
Nick Valensi has frequently cited The Velvet Underground as a primary influence on his guitar style, particularly their angular, minimalist guitar approach that emphasized texture over flash. In a 2001 interview, he expressed appreciation for the comparison to the band, stating, "Being compared to the Velvet Underground is cool because we were influenced by them."[57] This influence manifests in Valensi's precise, interlocking riffs that prioritize rhythmic drive and subtle interplay, as heard in The Strokes' early work. He has also drawn from the New York punk and garage rock scene, including the Ramones, whose raw energy and straightforward chord progressions shaped his adoption of punchy, no-frills structures in songwriting.[58]Another key inspiration is George Harrison, whose melodic lead playing Valensi has praised for its emotional clarity and phrasing. Valensi incorporates similar clean, singing lines and harmonic layering, evolving toward Beatles-inspired vocal harmonies in later compositions, such as those on The Strokes' Angles. Additionally, he has acknowledged Television guitarist Richard Lloyd's impact on his riffing style, emulating Lloyd's fluid, intertwined dual-guitar dynamics that blend punk urgency with jazz-like improvisation.[59][60]The Cars represent a significant new wave influence for Valensi, drawn to their energetic, synth-tinged power pop that balances hooks with edge. He has described CRX's debut album New Skin as inspired by "classic power pop outfits like the Cars, Cheap Trick and Elvis Costello," crediting their bright guitar tones and driving rhythms for pushing his sound toward pop experimentation.[61] This is evident in Valensi's use of techniques like double-stop riffs and barre chord progressions, which provide a clean yet propulsive foundation contrasting The Strokes' rawer garage edge—skills he honed early through influences like Guns N' Roses' iconic riffs. In interviews, Valensi has reflected on a childhood revelation when learning to move barre chords up the neck, which blew his mind and enabled fluid movement and harmonic depth in his playing.[9]
Personal life
Marriage and family
Valensi met photographer and television personality Amanda de Cadenet at a Strokes concert in 2001.[62] The couple married in a private beach ceremony on Harbour Island in the Bahamas in July 2006, during a break from The Strokes' world tour.[63][64]De Cadenet gave birth to the couple's fraternal twins, son Silvan and daughter Ella, on October 19, 2006, in Los Angeles; the twins were born five weeks premature, each weighing about 6 pounds.[65][66] Valensi became a stepfather to de Cadenet's daughter from her previous marriage to Duran Duran bassist John Taylor, Atlanta de Cadenet Taylor (born March 31, 1992).[67][68]The family relocated to Los Angeles in the mid-2000s, where Valensi has described shifting from the band's early rock lifestyle to prioritizing fatherhood, including school runs and family routines amid his touring schedule.[19] He has credited de Cadenet's support as key to maintaining his career balance, noting in interviews that their partnership allows him to navigate parenthood alongside music commitments.[2] De Cadenet, an accomplished photographer whose work has appeared in major publications, also hosts the interview series The Conversation with Amanda de Cadenet, which aired on television from 2012 to 2016 and continued as a podcast into the 2020s, focusing on women's experiences.[69][62]The couple has made occasional joint public appearances, such as at the 2017 Girlgaze: Uncensored exhibition in Los Angeles showcasing de Cadenet's photography initiatives, and they marked family milestones together, including Atlanta's September 2025 courthouse wedding to musician David Macklovitch, which de Cadenet celebrated publicly as a family event.[70][67]
Residences and other interests
In the mid-2000s, Valensi relocated from New York City to Los Angeles, seeking a shift toward family life and a fresh sense of community after years in the rock spotlight.[19] By 2007, he had established his primary residence in the city, where he continues to live and considers it his hometown, though he visits New York several times annually for personal and professional reasons.[2][19]Valensi's maternal heritage traces to southwestern France, where his mother grew up near Bordeaux; this background has given him a basic fluency in French, equivalent to that of a young child, which he has demonstrated in occasional interviews.[2] He spent childhood summers on a family vineyard in the region, fostering an early connection to French culture that influences his travel preferences.[2]In 2017, he made a brief acting appearance as a Beck bandmate in the film The Circle, marking a rare foray into on-screen work.[71] Post-fame, Valensi has emphasized privacy in his Los Angeles lifestyle, particularly amid increased media attention following his wife's 2024 appearance on The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills.[72] His family's life remains centered in the city, supporting a low-key routine focused on home and selective engagements.[19]
Discography
With The Strokes
Valensi performed lead and rhythm guitar on all tracks of the band's debut album Is This It (2001), along with backing vocals. All songs were written by Julian Casablancas.[73][74]On Room on Fire (2003), Valensi provided lead and rhythm guitar across the album. All tracks were written by Julian Casablancas.[75][76]For First Impressions of Earth (2006), Valensi contributed lead and rhythm guitar, Mellotron on "Ask Me Anything," and backing vocals. He received his first songwriting credit for the music of "Ask Me Anything."[77][78]Valensi played lead guitar, keyboards, and backing vocals on Angles (2011). He co-wrote "Under Cover of Darkness" (with Julian Casablancas and Albert Hammond Jr.), "Life Is Simple in the Moonlight," and "Games" (with Hammond Jr.).[79][80]On Comedown Machine (2013), Valensi handled lead guitar and keyboards. He co-wrote "80s Comedown Machine," "Call It Fate, Call It a Lie" (with Casablancas), "Happy Ending," and "Rats" (with Casablancas).[81][82]Valensi recorded lead and rhythm guitar for The New Abnormal (2020), the band's most recent studio album as of November 2025. He co-wrote "The Adults Are Talking" (with Nikolai Fraiture and Casablancas), "Brooklyn Bridge to Chorus" (with Casablancas), and "Why Are Sundays So Depressing" (with Hammond Jr. and Casablancas).[20]Valensi contributed guitar to The Strokes' early EP The Modern Age (2001).Among singles, Valensi provided guitar on "Reptilia" (2004, from Room on Fire) and "You Only Live Once" (2006, from First Impressions of Earth), both written by Casablancas. He also contributed to reissues and compilations such as The Singles Volume 01 (2023), with credits mirroring the original recordings. No new studio releases featuring Valensi have appeared since 2020.[83]
With CRX
Valensi serves as the lead vocalist, lead guitarist, and primary creative force for CRX, handling songwriting, arrangement, and instrumentation across their releases. On the band's debut album New Skin (2016), released via Cult Records, he performed lead vocals and guitar on all tracks while co-writing the material, often in collaboration with contributors like Richie Follin. Produced by Josh Homme, the album features Valensi's riff-driven style blending power pop and hard rock elements.[84][85]The full tracklist for New Skin is as follows:
The lead single "Unnatural" highlighted Valensi's vocal delivery and guitar work, serving as an early showcase for the band's sound.[85][86]For the sophomore album Peek (2019), also via Cult Records, Valensi continued on lead vocals and guitar while taking on production duties alongside the band. Songwriting shifted to a more collaborative process, with co-credits shared among Valensi, Darian Zahedi, and Jon Safley on most tracks, reflecting the group's evolving dynamic. The album incorporates synth elements and '80s influences, with Valensi's guitar lines providing textural depth.[87][88]The tracklist for Peek includes:
We're All Alone (written by Nick Valensi, Jon Safley, Darian Zahedi)
New Obsession (written by Nick Valensi, Jon Safley, Darian Zahedi)
Get Close (written by Nick Valensi, Jon Safley, Darian Zahedi)
Falling (written by Nick Valensi, Jon Safley, Darian Zahedi)
Criminals (written by Nick Valensi, Jon Safley, Darian Zahedi)
Wet Paint (written by Nick Valensi, Jon Safley, Darian Zahedi)
Crash (written by Nick Valensi, Jon Safley, Darian Zahedi)
Golden Age (written by Nick Valensi, Jon Safley, Darian Zahedi)
Back & Forth (written by Nick Valensi, Jon Safley, Darian Zahedi)
Love Me Again (written by Nick Valensi, Jon Safley, Darian Zahedi)
[89][88]CRX's 2024 EP Interiors, self-released, sees Valensi expanding to additional keyboards alongside his standard vocals and guitar duties. All tracks credit songwriting to Valensi, Safley, and Zahedi, with production by Shane Stoneback. No guest features appear, maintaining the core trio's focus on raw, emotive rock. The EP's promo tracks, including "Mean To Be Cold," emphasize Valensi's versatile instrumentation in creating atmospheric layers.[90][91]The tracklist for Interiors is:
Mean To Be Cold (3:28)
Fate (3:51)
Walk With Me (3:22)
Let Me Go (2:24)
Inside Dope (4:37)
Guest appearances and productions
Valensi has contributed as a session guitarist and songwriter to several artists' albums outside his primary projects. On Sia's 2010 album We Are Born, he provided guitar on multiple tracks, including "The Fight" and "I'm in Here," adding a rock edge to the pop arrangements. Similarly, for Sia's 2014 album 1000 Forms of Fear, Valensi co-wrote and played guitar on the track "Hostage," which features his distinctive riffing in an electropop context.[44]In 2006, Valensi guested on guitar for Regina Spektor's album Begin to Hope, specifically on the song "Better," where his playing complemented Spektor's piano-driven style and helped propel the track to broader recognition.[92] He also contributed backing vocals to the 2008 Little Joy track "No One's Better Sake," a side project led by Strokes drummer Fabrizio Moretti.[93]Valensi co-wrote and performed guitar on "Bottoms Up" from Kate Pierson's 2015 solo debut Guitars and Microphones, blending his guitar work with Pierson's vocals and Sia's co-writing for a quirky, upbeat sound.[94][95] On Brody Dalle's 2014 album Diploid Love, he added guitar to several tracks, including "Oh the Joy," enhancing the record's raw punk influences.[45]More recently, Valensi has collaborated with Ringo Starr on multiple releases in the 2020s. He played guitar on "Coming Undone" from Starr's 2021 EP Change the World and "Everyone and Everything" from the 2022 EP EP3.[96] In 2024, Valensi featured on all four tracks of Starr's EP Crooked Boy, produced by Linda Perry, with a prominent role in the video for "Gonna Need Someone," which captures a lively rock energy.[49][97]