Don't Tread On Me

Label
Volcano
Running length
15 tracks
Running time
49:50

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Tracklist

    Track     Duration Listeners
1 Don't Tread On Me (CD-Pro version) 3:08 50
1 Don't Tread On Me 3:06 57,148
2 Thank Your Lucky Stars 3:23 20,910
3 Frolic Room 3:34 24,244
4 Speak Easy 3:25 29,422
5 Solar Flare 3:11 17,347
6 Waiting 3:16 18,553
7 Long For The Flowers 2:48 17,046
8 Getting Through To Her 3:23 20,141
9 Whiskey & Wine 2:57 892
9 Whiskey And Wine 2:57 5,814
10 It's Getting OK Now 3:04 16,457
11 There's Always An Excuse 5:06 14,882
12 Little Brother 3:25 1,430
Don't Tread On Me - Album Version 3:07 0

About this album

Don’t Tread On Me is the eighth studio album by 311, which was released on August 16, 2005. The first single, “Don’t Tread On Me”, was released to radio on July 26, 2005. It peaked at #2 on the Billboard Modern Rock Tracks and #1 on the R&R Panel Alternative chart. The second single, “Speak Easy”, was released on November 22, 2005 and a third “Frolic Room,” was released on June 13, 2006. Despite the success of the leadoff single, the album failed to receive an RIAA certification.

This is the third 311 album recorded in 311’s recording studio The Hive in North Hollywood, California.

Track listing
“Don’t Tread on Me” – 3:07
“Thank Your Lucky Stars” – 3:24
“Frolic Room” – 3:34
“Speak Easy” – 3:26
“Solar Flare” – 3:11
“Waiting” – 3:17
“Long For the Flowers” – 2:49
“Getting Through to Her” – 3:24
“Whiskey & Wine” – 2:59
“It’s Getting OK Now” – 3:04
“There’s Always An Excuse” – 5:07
“Little Brother” - 3:27 (ITunes bonus track)


Outtakes from the album include: “Little Brother”, “Take My Money”, “Stealing My Girl”, “Wandering Around”, “Into the Flame”, & “Go”.
The song “Long For The Flowers” is a re-working of an outtake from the 1997 album Transistor. The original song was called “Grifters”.[1]
The song “Little Brother” is an outtake that didn’t make the album, but has been released on iTunes.
The song “Frolic Room” is named for lead singer Nick Hexum’s favorite Los Angeles bar. This song is not the first time he mentions the Frolic Room; it first comes up in “Guns (are for pussies)” on 311 (“Hollywood Boulevard barfly Frolic Room”), then again in lyrics to “Livin’ and Rockin’”, the final track on 1999’s Soundsystem (“with whiskey soaked Frolic Room tobacco mouth”).
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