All
five members of 311 grew up in the 1970's
in Omaha, Nebraska. Nick Hexum, Tim Mahoney
and Chad Sexton lived on the west side of town
and went to Westside High School together. P-Nut
and SA Martinez lived on the south side of town
and went to Bryan High School together.
During
high school, Nick and Tim played in a rock band
together called "The Ed's." Nick was also in
the high school concert jazz band with Chad.
At seventeen, Nick graduated early
from high school and moved to downtown Los Angeles
in pursuit of a music career. When Nick returned
to Omaha for Chad and Tim's high school graduation
- the three of them jammed and realized they
had a special musical chemistry. They soon added
a keyboardist named Ward Bones and called themselves
"Unity." In late '88, Nick, Chad and Ward moved
to Los Angeles and made an unsuccessful stab
at getting a recording contract.
Disillusioned with the L.A. scene,
Chad soon moved back to Omaha and began jamming
with P-Nut and a guitarist named Jim Watson.
Months later, Chad persuaded Nick to move back
to Omaha and join them. They played their first
gig opening for Fugazi on June 10th 1990.
In 1991, they parted ways with
Jim Watson and added Tim Mahoney as lead guitarist.
At that time, SA Martinez began to make guest
appearances with the band - and was eventually
added as a full member. 311 was complete
(Nick, Chad, Tim, P-Nut and SA).
In 1990 & 1991 the band released
three independent records on their own label
(What Have You Records). The records were called
"Dammit," "Hydroponic," and "Unity." With these
records and their solid live show, the band
quickly established a following in the Midwest
and then set out for the West Coast.
They rented a small house in Van
Nuys, California and all moved in together.
These were very lean times for the band. Just
before disintegrating into total poverty, they
were signed to Capricorn Records.
311's first CD "Music,"
was released with little fanfare in February
of '93 (now Gold). The band hit the road in
support of the record and was temporarily sidelined
when their touring RV caught on fire and exploded
on the shoulder of the highway. The fire destroyed
all their equipment, clothes, money and personal
possessions. Despite losing everything - the
band members escaped the blaze with minor burns
and injuries. They decided to persevere and
they only canceled one show before returning
to the stage with equipment donated by fans
and friends who heard about the disaster on
the television news.
In July of '94 they released their
second CD "Grassroots" (now Gold). By this time
they were touring the U.S. non-stop. They moved
out of the house in Van Nuys - put their stuff
into a storage space and literally just lived
on the road. They put all their energy into
their live show and steadily developed an incredible
grassroots following nationwide.
In July '95 they released their
third CD "311" and once again set out on tour.
By '96 the shows and the fan base had grown
considerably - and the media which had basically
ignored 311 until then, began paying
attention. In September of '96 (14 months after
the release of the "311" album) the song "Down"
hit the airwaves and became an across-the-board
success at radio and MTV. "Down" went to #1
on the Billboard Modern Rock Chart and the follow-up
single "All Mixed Up" went to #2.
After the success of the "311"
album (which is now triple Platinum), 311
released a long-form home video called "Enlarged
to Show Detail" containing live concert footage,
interviews, videos, backstage footage, etc.
To make it a unique item, 311 bundled
the video with a 5 song EP containing outtakes
from the "311" CD. The home video debuted at
#1 on Billboards Music Video Sales Chart and
is now a Platinum video.
After releasing the home video,
311 went back into the studio to record
their fourth CD "Transistor." "Transistor" debuted
at #4 on the Billboard Top 200 and is now Platinum.
311's 1997 headlining
tour in support of the "Transistor" album drew
an average of 10,000 people per night in the
US. The band also toured Europe, UK, Australia,
New Zealand and Japan.
In September of 1998, 311
re-issued some old material on the "Omaha Session"
EP. The EP contains 9 songs from the bands 1989-1991
independent releases ("Dammit," "Hydroponic"
and "Unity").
In November of 1998, 311
released "311 Live" - a collection of live recordings
from the 1997 US Tour. In October of 1999, 311
released their fifth CD "Soundsystem" which
debuted at #9 and the band toured extensively
in the US and Japan.
In 2000, the band purchased a
recording studio in North Hollywood. After making
some renovations and bringing in their own equipment,
they renamed it "The Hive" (which is also the
name of their fanclub). The studio was active
in the 70's / 80's.
In 2001, the band released "From
Chaos" which debuted at #10 on the Billboard
Top 200 Sales Chart. 311 toured extensively
throughout the U.S. and Europe in support of
"From Chaos." The first single "You Wouldn't
Believe" reached #7 on the Billboard Modern
Rock Chart. The second single "I'll Be Here
Awhile" reached #15 on the Billboard Modern
Rock Chart. The single "Amber" reached #10 on
the Billboard Modern Rock Chart and #30 on the
Billboard Modern AC Chart. The album is certified
Gold.
In 2003 the band recorded and
mixed "Evolver" at their own Hive Studios in
Los Angeles.
311 band members are --
- SA Martinez - vocals, scratches
- P-Nut - bass
- Chad Sexton - drums, percussion
- Tim Mahoney - lead guitar
- Nick Hexum - vocals, guitar
Notable songs include --
- Down
- Freak Out
- Homebrew
- Hydroponic
- Omaha Stylee
- All Mixed Up
- Lucky
- Beautiful Disaster
- Feels So Good
- 8:16 A.M.
Genre: Rock
Styles:
..Rap-Rock
..Rap-Metal
..Alternative Pop/Rock
..Funk Metal
Years
active:
..90s, ..00s
Formed:
1990
..in Nebraska
..in Omaha
Based:
..in California
..in Los Angeles
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