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| View Larger Image | Transistor | Audio CDby 311
| List Price: | $8.99 | | | Available: | Usually ships in 24 hours |
| | Binding: | Audio CD | | Format: | Explicit Lyrics, Original recording reissued | | Studio: | Volcano | | Release Date: | August 05, 1997 | | Sales Rank: | 7,483th |
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TRACK LISTING | Disc: 1
- Track 1: Transistor
- Track 2: Prisoner
- Track 3: Galaxy
- Track 4: Beautiful Disaster
- Track 5: Inner Light Spectrum
- Track 6: Electricity
- Track 7: What Was I Thinking
- Track 8: Jupiter
- Track 9: Use Of Time
- Track 10: Continuous Life, The
- Track 11: No Control
- Track 12: Running
- Track 13: Color
- Track 14: Light Years
- Track 15: Creature Feature
- Track 16: Tune In
- Track 17: Rub A Dub
- Track 18: Starshines
- Track 19: Strangers
- Track 20: Borders
- Track 21: Stealing Happy Hours
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EDITORIAL REVIEWS | Amazon.com With Sublime and Sugar Ray having made whitewashed reggae a hot commodity on the pop charts, it makes sense that the prime movers of the genre are making a headlong comeback into the fray. With Transistor, 311 goes for the jugular, cramming the disc with over 20 songs, and just as many angles on its melange of rock, hip-hop and Caribbean musical styles. There are hyper rap-metal rehashes of the hit "Down" ("Tune In," "Starshines," and "Borders"), chunky guitar tracks ("Beautiful Disaster"), and lots of frivolous reggae-lite songs ("Light Years," "Stealing Happy Hours"). --Aidin Vaziri |
CUSTOMER REVIEWS (Average Customer Rating: 4.5 based on 151 reviews)
| Best album ever made. Hands down! by Frank Wallace (St.louis MO) 5 Stars December 30, 2008 311 is my favorite band and this album sums it up!
When 311 released Transistor music for me forever changed.
This is by far their best cd to date and i hope the new album in 2009 will be half as good hopefully better we will see.
311s transistor is the best cd ever made. Just listen to it.
It has reggae,rock,punk,trip hop,rap,electronica,jazz, its just the most amazing record ever. 5 stars forever.
| | Exhaustive Work, 311 Through and Through by K. Dowdell (Seattle, WA) 5 Stars December 12, 2007 With their 4th studio release the boys from North Hollywood really leave a mark on their legacy by stringing out 21 tracks on a whirlwind tour of an album. The disc is solid throughout and there are your rockers (Beautiful Disaster, Borders, Jupiter) to go along with the mellow grooves of Stealing Happy Hours, Inner Light Spectrum, and Running and the melodic voyages of Prisoner, Use of Time, and the title track. 311 always has a few existential bones to pick and the messages of songs like Prisoner ("I'm floating in the dark alone and/Is there any love out here let me know"), No Control ("A rich rock star you are/And yet you still complain/That's insane"), and The Continuous Life ("It's not ambiguous/It be continuous/It's all about us/It's for real my man") one by one tackle the issues of being an individual in today's multi-tiered, corporate society.
Probably the most diverse and expansive of 311's albums, and a good place to start...you'll find that although their other works me be a little more exclusive-sounding they're still solid all the way throughout and 311 stands above as a group that consistently finds ways to rock while being musically fresh and adventurous.
| | You're a transistor, lightning resistor, conducting to the Mother Star by Will Mindspin (I commute between Central Ohio and the Center of the Universe) 5 Stars October 27, 2007 THE TRILOGY OF DEBUT ALBUMS, 1993-1996
Music (1993)
Debut Trilogy Part 1: An original, energetic, raw, explosive fusion of rock, hip hop, funk, reggae and rap. About two-thirds of the songs are re-worked versions of the band's best songs from the Omaha years. The other third are butt-kicking new songs made just for this release. This album says, "This is what we can do."
Grassroots (1994)
Debut Trilogy Part 2: An exploration of their roots, a musical journey of growing up from the ground up. This album says, "This is where we came from."
311, "self-titled" or "the blue album" (1995)
Debut Trilogy Part 3: A crisp, tight, bold, definitive, well-oiled machine. This album says, "This is what we are."
THE TRANSITION YEARS, 1997-2001
Transistor (1997)
4th Studio LP: The next phase in 311's evolution begins with this ambitious and psychedelic exploration of their unique style. This is their longest album, and it shows a substantial decrease in the rap/sing ratio. Transistor is my 4th favorite release (or 2nd fave if you count the first three LPs as one).
311 Live (1998)
A complilation of live versions of songs from the 1993-97 releases. BTW, if you only get into 311's first four studio albums and you enjoy listening to music that was recorded live in concert, then you will probably like this CD. However, I recommend the 311 Day DVD (2004) instead.
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Enlarged to Show Detail #2 (2001)
A "behind the scenes" DVD Epilogue to the Transition Years containing interviews, music videos, concert footage, etc. - with a bonus EP of outtakes from 1999 and 2001. I actually like this well-produced DVD better than the original ETSD (96).
| | Enter Space... by Untitled (nowhere) 5 Stars June 04, 2007 This is where 311 was here to stay, and to make music for themselves and their loyal fans. Those who jumped on the bandwagon when 311 released 311 were knocked straight off. 311 left the close minded people in the dust. And for those who were introduced to 311 with 311 and know that artists progress, were in bliss.
This album flows like a cloud. It explores. All these songs have an aura of space, the mind, the sky, even the ocean (at least on Rub A Dub). Wherever you want, it takes you. This is one of the reasons why I am a total 311 fanatic. Soundsystem, Grassroots, they had some flavor, but the moods, auras, whatever you call ambiance, conjuring, whatever, it can't be broken down as easily. Case in point. Galaxy seems like somebody stuck in space, and it ain't pretty. Stealing Happy Hours, it seems like somebody is the exact opposite. But it is as earthy as it is spacey. Much of a Hawaii vibe as a summer day in the neighborhood. It's stuff like this that makes Transistor such a joy. Listen and cherish it. Little detail emerge as well. Once put into context and all, you won't want to stop listening.
Simply put, all 311 fans need this album. Oh, and 311 kill the shins (see comment box for one of the reviews of their new album).
10/10
| | Renegade Soundsystem 311 by Monty5 4 Stars August 16, 2006 First of all, to the guy who recited the chorus of "beautiful disaster" and submitted it as a review-pretty chill, man, u should write it down in your journal. The link says "write an online review." Stick to that.
Okay to the review. This album would get 5 stars, no question, just like the self-titled and "from chaos." I really would. It's just that there are a total of 21 songs on just one disc, clocking at 67:59. And that's not including the bonus tracks (there's actually a bonus track before the first track, pretty chill!) I really haven't found a bad song on this cd, but I just haven't gotten a chance to focus on everything here. I just don't have that time. I love the fact that they are doing something different. I love "Beautiful Disaster," as well as "Use Of Time," "Electricity," and many others but I can't think of what they are because the cd is so damn long! Maybe as I listen to it more, I can honestly move it up to a 5-star album. Actually, I'm kinda rootin' for that. It's okay though, because I would still recomend this to someone who likes other works by 311, but don't start out with this one. Save it as an afterthought. In school, you can't take Algebra II before you have taken Algebra I. Same rule applies here.
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