"Beautiful Disaster", "Prisoner", and "Transistor" were released as singles.
"Transistor" was originally intended to be a double-album, but was condensed to 21 tracks on one CD.
The 11th track "No Control" has no relation to the Bad Religion song No Control from their 1989 album of the same name.
"Electricity" was originally called "Fuck the KKK". This further explains Nick Hexum's lyric "this song started as a rant against haters, but that'd be giving into the instigators".
Outtakes from this album are "Earth People", "Clone Me", "MTA", "Grifters", "The Quickening", "Everything", "Writer's Block Party", "Space Funk", "Old Funk", "To The Future" and "(White Man) in Hammersmith Palais".
There is a secret track before the first song, "Transistor". Play track 1, then hold down the 'back' button on your CD player. You will be rewinding the track into negative digits. Rewind until -1:43, then release the button, and let the track play. When performed correctly, you will hear the studio version of an instrumental commonly used as an opener to 311's live concerts during this era. The track is now known as the "Transistor Intro".
Until the release of From Chaos, "Transistor" had the acclaim of having mentioned the name of every 311 album in its lyrics. ("Music critics, music critics," "from these grassroots we can breathe anywhere," "renegade sound system, 311, "You're a transistor")
"Old Funk" and "Space Funk" are both downloadable at 311's official website.
Producer Scott Ralston can be heard saying "There is just no denying it, that was it" at the end of "Galaxy."
"Stealing Happy Hours" contains the lyric "You make me feel like Hank Chinaski, In war all the time war war all the time." This is referring to Charles Bukowski's alter ego Hank Chinaski; also paying homage to Bukowski's .
A recording of actual recordings from outer space can be heard after the end of the album's final track.
"Creature Feature" was written at a time when S.A. Martinez was contemplating breaking up with his then girlfriend.
Nick Hexum has described "Use of Time" as a song "about being depressed" while "Stealing Happy Hours" is "about having fun."
Additional Percussion was done by Eric Bobo from Cypress Hill on "Running", "Strangers" and "Stealing Happy Hours"
At the 1:39 mark of the track "Light Years", you can hear Wanda Coleman saying "When you comin' down?"
"Grifter" was an instrumental that didn't make the final cut. It resurfaced in 2005, remastered with vocals, as "Long for the Flowers" on the album "Don't Tread on Me".