The members of 311 found success playing 'all the types of music we like'
By Chris Nixon
Union-Tribune
Aug, 16, 2007
Reggae, rock, rap and funk: 311 boldly goes where a lot of other bands have gone before. They just do it all in one song.
Since joining forces 17 years ago in Omaha, Neb., Nick Hexum (vocals, guitar), S.A. Martinez (vocals, turntable), P-Nut (bass), Tim Mahoney (guitar) and Chad Sexton (drums) have unabashedly melded diverse genres in their music.
“Our sound stems from all the types of music we like,” guitarist Mahoney said recently after the sound check at a festival in Saratoga Springs, N.Y. “Everybody (in the band) loves reggae music. Everybody loves Led Zeppelin. Everybody loves Bob Marley. And everybody loves funk and all types of good music. It basically stems from everybody in the band wanting to play the music that they love.
“It's like chocolate and peanut butter: two great tastes that taste great together. Reggae and rock. We're big fans of Bad Brains. Bad Brains was originally who turned me on to reggae. Everyone's been into these hybrid type of bands. Why couldn't we have rap over rock? It totally made sense to us to put a hard rock guitar riff over a dancehall groove. It's just an attitude of anything goes.”
DETAILS
Summer Unity Tour: 311 with Matisyahu and English Beat
When: Saturday, 7:30 p.m.
Where: Coors Amphitheatre, 2050 Entertainment Circle, Chula Vista
Tickets: $16-$37
Phone: (619) 671-3600
Online: www.tickemaster.com
After testing their hybrid formulas on fans in their hometown of Omaha, the quintet moved to Los Angeles. With the band's sunny harmonies between vocalists Martinez and Hexum and their hard-rocking reggae tunes, 311 always sounded like a Southern California band. So Los Angeles was a good fit.
“It was a good time to leave Omaha,” Mahoney said. “I was 20, and there comes a time when you need to leave your hometown. I love Omaha. I'll always have a place there. But it was good for us to get out of there as a group and as a band. We struggled when we got to L.A., eating ramen every day. But it was great.”
And that's when their career started to take off. Nashville-based Capricorn Records signed 311 to a record contract (with major label distribution), releasing the band's 1993 debut, “Music.” The album established 311's basic blueprint for writing songs and combing genres: Add hip-hop rhyme schemes to Mahoney's edgy rock riffs, include a bit of reggae soul and James Brown funk, and encapsulate it all with positive lyrics. Like the music itself, 311 crossed boundaries, drawing fans from the jam band scene and the burgeoning rap rock movement of the mid 1990s.
Ultimately, rap rock or nu-metal gave 311 its biggest boost into the mainstream market. Giving people a softer alternative to Rage Against the Machine and Korn, 311 found a home on alternative radio with 1995's self-tited disc (with hits like “Don't Stay Home” and “All Mixed Up”) and 1997's “Transistor.”
“We always want to improve and grow, as individuals and as a band,” Mahoney said. “I think we're fortunate enough to have fans that have stuck around and stuck by us. And we're really fortunate to have people who will follow us through wherever we end up meandering with the music.”
Although sales have dropped since the band's 1990s heyday, 311 continues to develop its songwriting with more intricate song structures and a more devout fan base through constant touring. Since 2000, the band has held annual concerts on 311 Day (March 11 or 3/11) in New Orleans (except 2006 after Katrina, in which the show migrated to Memphis). The 311 Day events are epic, stretching five hours and encompassing 60-plus songs.
“It's almost exponential after you've been playing with the same guys for a while,” said Mahoney, who plays as part of the Summer Unity Tour Saturday at Coors Amphitheatre with Matisyahu and English Beat. “It's pretty rare to find a group of people you can work with like that. It's been so long, it's really all we know. Everyone has their personal lives, but we've had this bond for 17 years.
“Each record, we continue to be inspired. As long as we continue to be inspired to play music, play music together and write music that we're honest about and that we love, we'll be all right.”
Chris Nixon is a San Diego music writer.