311 - MOSAIC (2017) [Hi-Res]

  • 26 May, 17:47
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Artist:
Title: MOSAIC
Year Of Release: 2017
Label: BMG Rights Management (US) LLC
Genre: Rock
Quality: flac 24 bits - 44.1 Khz
Total Time: 01:00:40
Total Size: 732 mb
WebSite:

Tracklist
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01. Too Much To Think
02. Wildfire
03. The Night Is Young
04. Island Sun
05. Perfect Mistake
06. Extension
07. Inside Our Home
08. 'Til the City's On Fire
09. Too Late
10. Hey Yo
11. Places That the Mind Goes
12. Face in the Wind
13. Forever Now
14. Days of '88
15. One and the Same
16. Syntax Error
17. On a Roll

American rock quintet 311 fused reggae, hip-hop, funk, and metal in a rhythmic blend that carried them from the rap-rock boom and into the 2000s. The band was formed in Omaha, Nebraska, by singer/guitarist Nick Hexum, DJ/singer Doug "S.A." Martinez, guitarist Tim Mahoney, drummer Chad Sexton, and bassist Aaron "P-Nut" Wills launched the group in 1990. Taking their name from the Omaha Police Department's code for indecent exposure, the quintet began performing locally and soon moved to Los Angeles, signing with Capricorn Records in 1991. 311 then translated their regional success into national recognition with several key albums, including 1992's Music, 1993's Grassroots, and 1995's eponymous 311 (aka The Blue Album), the latter of which reached number 12 on the Billboard 200, sold three million copies in the U.S., and sported the hit tracks "All Mixed Up" and "Down."

In 1996, following a nonstop year of touring in support of 311, the band released Enlarged to Show Detail, a home video of live performances taken from amphitheater shows in Kansas City and Denver. Transistor, a double album of new songs sandwiched onto one CD, arrived one year later and prompted the group's most ambitious tour yet. The album soon achieved platinum status, and the resulting show dates provided ample material for Live, which was released in 1998 and captured the band's strength in concert. A year later, 311 returned with Soundsystem before jumping to the Volcano label for the release of From Chaos, which appeared in summer 2001 and featured their hit, "Amber." Evolver appeared two years later; unlike its predecessors, however, the album failed to go gold or platinum.

At that point, 311 had been together over ten years, and the band celebrated its decade-plus existence with the Greatest Hits compilation. Released in July 2004, the album included all of 311's hit singles, several new tracks, and the band's reggae-tinged cover of the Cure's "Love Song," which had originally appeared on the soundtrack to the Adam Sandler film 50 First Dates. 311 presented new material in August 2005 with the Don't Tread on Me LP, followed by an additional round of touring. Upon its completion, the road-weary musicians took a hiatus, their first break in nearly ten years. 311 soon returned to the studio, however, this time partnering with mega-producer Bob Rock. Heralded by frontman Nick Hexum as "the heaviest 311 has ever been," the resulting Uplifter arrived in 2009. Rock returned to the helm in 2011 for the band's tenth studio album, Universal Pulse.

On March 11, 2014, 311 self-released their 11th studio effort, the Scott "Scotch" Ralston-produced and independently released Stereolithic. A live album and four-disc Archive set filled the time until album number 12, which arrived in the summer 2017. The 17-track Mosaic featured the singles "Too Late" and "Too Much to Think."



  • mufty77
  •  13:51
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Many thanks for HD tracks.