311 (album)

311 (commonly known as the Blue Album) is the eponymous third studio album by American rock band 311, released on July 11, 1995 by Capricorn Records. The album contains the successful singles "Don't Stay Home", "All Mixed Up", and "Down", and was certified triple platinum with sales of over three million copies.

311
Studio album by
ReleasedJuly 11, 1995
Recorded1995
Genre
Length39:58
LabelCapricorn
ProducerRon Saint Germain
311 chronology
Grassroots
(1994)
311
(1995)
Transistor
(1997)
Singles from 311
  1. "Don't Stay Home"
    Released: 1995
  2. "Down"
    Released: July 9, 1996
  3. "All Mixed Up"
    Released: October 29, 1996

Reception

Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic[1]
Rolling Stone(average)[2]
The Rolling Stone Album Guide[3]

Allmusic gave the album a positive review, commenting that Nick Hexum and S.A. Martinez lends the band an edge not found in most rock bands that feature rapping.[1] Rolling Stone says the album has "ear candy with good beats" and "remarkably adept at genre juggling". They also describe the album as "Beasties-cum-Chili Peppers traits has a potent reggae undertow".[2]

Track listing

No.TitleWriter(s)Length
1."Down"Nick Hexum, SA Martinez2:53
2."Random"Hexum, Martinez, Chad Sexton3:07
3."Jackolantern's Weather"Hexum, Martinez, Sexton3:24
4."All Mixed Up"Hexum, Martinez3:02
5."Hive"Hexum, Martinez, Sexton2:59
6."Guns (Are for Pussies)"Hexum, Martinez, Sexton2:16
7."Misdirected Hostility"Hexum, Martinez2:59
8."Purpose"Hexum2:44
9."Loco"Hexum, Tim Mahoney1:53
10."Brodels"Hexum, Martinez, Sexton3:32
11."Don't Stay Home"Hexum2:43
12."DLMD"Hexum, Martinez2:13
13."Sweet"Hexum, Mahoney, Martinez3:15
14."T & P Combo"Hexum, Mahoney, Martinez, Wills2:49
Total length:39:58

"Misdirected Hostility" was written in reference to the violence between the Phunk Junkeez and their back-up vocalist K-Tel Disco.

The initial pressing of the album was distributed by "RED" and later re-pressed and distributed by Mercury Records in 1996 (note the tray card and disk updated with Mercury contact information and slightly washed out color on the disk front).

Outtakes

  • "Tribute", "Let the Cards Fall", "Gap" and "Firewater (Slo-mo)" (available on the "Enlarged to Show Detail" EP)
  • "Who's Got the Herb?" (studio version available on the "Hempilation: Freedom Is NORML" compilation, live version available on the "Live" album)
  • "Outside" (available on the "National Lampoon's Senior Trip" soundtrack)
  • "Juan Bond", "Next (Instrumental)", "Sweet (Demo)" without SA's vocal and "Firewater" at its normal speed (leaked on the internet around '96)

Personnel

  • Nick Hexum – vocals, guitar
  • Chad Sexton – drums, percussion
  • Tim Mahoney – Guitar
  • P-Nut – Bass
  • S. A. Martinez – vocals, scratches

Production

  • Ron Saint Germain – producer, recording, mixing
  • 311 – producers
  • Scott Ralston – recording, mixing
  • John Ewing Jr. – assistant engineer
  • Joe Gastwirt – mastering
  • Diane Painter – art direction
  • Terry Robertson – design
  • Catherine Wessel – photography

Charts

Album

YearChartPosition
1995 Heatseekers 1
1995 The Billboard 200 12

Singles

YearSingleChartPosition
1995 "Don't Stay Home" Modern Rock Tracks 29
1996 "Down" Hot 100 Airplay 37
1996 "Down" Modern Rock Tracks 1
1996 "Down" Mainstream Rock Tracks 19
1996 "All Mixed Up" Hot 100 Airplay 36
1996 "All Mixed Up" Modern Rock Tracks 4
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gollark: As far as I know recent designs have moved away from that, and probably just magically schedule threads really well.
gollark: I don't know many of the underlying implementation details.
gollark: They do have lots of memory bandwidth.
gollark: And are optimized for simple number-crunching workloads and not complex branchy things like CPUs.

References

  1. Allmusic review
  2. Fricke, David (1996-12-09). "Review on 311 and No Doubt's Tragic Kingdom". Rolling Stone. Archived from the original on 2008-07-26. Retrieved 2012-05-21.
  3. Cross, Charles R. (2004). "311". In Brackett, Nathan; Hoard, Christian (eds.). The New Rolling Stone Album Guide (4th ed.). Simon & Schuster. pp. 813. ISBN 0-7432-0169-8.
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