Now entering its third decade, 311 has cemented its status as a muscled touring machine, capable of selling out venues across the country without the assistance of high-charting singles or current albums. Uplifter, the band's ninth studio release (and first album in nearly four years), is streamlined accordingly, wielding a polished mix of tour-worthy anthems and lighter-hoisting ballads that seem destined to fare better in concert than on record. This is standard 311 fare, stuffed with the requisite flourishes of alternative rock, reggae, and frat boy funk that made the band popular some 15 years prior. Bob Rock produces the rock numbers with a beefy hand -- 311 has rarely sounded so heavy before -- while allowing the band to retain its sonic calling cards: the heavy chorus effect on Nick Hexum and S.A. Martinez's harmonies, the watery strum of Tim Mahoney's guitar, and the crispness of Chad Sexton's snare drum. Uplifter may be better suited to a concert set list than a stereo, as some of these songs lose their vitality on record. Even so, the album is strong enough to keep the flames fanned, and returning 311 fans should be pleased. ~ Andrew Leahey, All Music Guide
true evolution of musicians-this album displays a new realm of their abilities. The uplifting resonance of this album echoes on rainy days. However; I hope their next album reverts back to a rhymhic original style!
Just sampling the songs my impression is a weak start, but improving with Golden Sunlight and then even more so with India Ink and the rest after that. They really hit on each of their strengths/styles. I'm liking the variety, including the relatively new sounding Too Much Too Fast. I see what the review is saying wrt it being more for live play, but I'm looking forward to getting at least half of the songs, if not the full album. Much better than Don't Tread on Me.