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30 mag 2013

JARED Interview on MR PORTER

THE INTERVIEW: MR JARED LETO

MAY 28, 2013


  • Photography by Mr Boo George
  • Styling by Mr Dan May, Style Director, MR PORTER
  • Words by Mr Dan Cairns

  • "The Race"
    THIRTY SECONDS TO MARS
    0.00 | 3.43
    For Mr Jared Leto, leading a double life as a Hollywood film star and lead singer of the platinum-selling rock band Thirty Seconds to Mars - whose new album, Love Lust Faith + Dreams, has just been released - is the most natural thing in the world. His peripatetic, "food stamp-poor" upbringing, as the younger son of a mother who surrounded herself and her two boys with artistic influences, instilled in the Louisiana-born 41-year-old a passion for the arts. "I did grow up in a very creative world," Mr Leto says. "It was the 1970s, the age of the artist and the hippy, and my exposure to that shaped me in a really deep way. I was raised among people who made things to make them, and with the idea that if you're a creative person, then of course you're going to do something creative with your life - whether you're an artist, a performance artist, a potter or a photographer. I had no concept of the word 'fame'; or a notion of success or money. We grew up very poor, so our world wasn't anywhere near that kind of stuff. You have to do what is important to you and protect that."

    There are always going to be people
    who go, 'F*** that guy, he shouldn't
    make music, he makes movies'



    The history of Tinseltown talent trying its hand at pop is, for the most part, a sorry one. The music turned out by Mr Keanu Reeves and Mr Russell Crowe offers a reminder of why the public tends to like its stars to stay in their allotted boxes. If Mr Leto is an exception to this rule - and the multimillion-strong sales notched up by Thirty Seconds to Mars' albums say he is, his musical forays have nevertheless met with real resistance over the years. "There are always going to be people who don't like you," he says, with a wry chuckle, "who go, 'F*** that guy, he shouldn't make music, he makes movies'. It's a bizarre attitude; it's like saying Julian Schnabel should never have directed films because he's an artist, or Jeff Koons used to work on Wall Street, what's with the art? I'm not saying I'm Schnabel or Koons, but you know what I mean. What I was faced with as well was a line of dilettantes who set a very bad example; there was a precedent set by people who, let's be honest, didn't do a very good job of making good, meaningful work. So that career switch got a bad rep, and it was inevitable that we needed to clean up a lot of crap."

    The album artwork for Love Lust Faith + Dreams, featuring
    "Isonicotinic Acid Ethyl Ester" by Mr Damien Hirst




    Mr Leto clearly isn't one to shy away from plain speaking. Yet he has about him a serene air that is positively Zen-like when compared to the needy melodramatics that are a hallmark of so many of his peers in both the film and music worlds. The fact that his elder brother, Shannon, the drummer and occasional actor, has been at his side throughout Thirty Seconds to Mars' career speaks volumes about the importance of family to Mr Leto. As doesLove Lust Faith + Dreams' delicate coda: when "Depuis Le Début" draws the album to its close, a music box plays the famous theme from Tchaikovsky's Swan Lake. "My mother used to put my little brother and me to sleep by playing that exact music box," Mr Leto recalls. "And we wanted to put a little bit of our life on there. The whole record is very personal and I hope it is an album that can be transformative. There are people out there who may think they have an idea of who we are, but I think this record can change some perceptions. It's not just a rock record, it's more expansive. We've been doing this for a long, long time - we first signed a deal in 1998, and we'd been making music for 10 years before that. It's hard to complain: on the tour for our last album we sold out Wembley and the O2 arena, and we started out at the Barfly in Camden in 2001 or 2002. It's a slow, steady climb to the middle, as they say."
    Before the band released its debut album in 2002, Mr Leto had already established himself as a Hollywood player. Supporting roles in films such as Fight Club and The Thin Red Line led to acclaimed lead performances, such as his portrayal of a heroin addict in Requiem for a Dream, and Mr John Lennon's killer Mr Mark David Chapman in Chapter 27. The former role required him to starve himself until he achieved a skeletal frame; for the latter, he had to gain 67lbs, which he managed by drinking pints of microwaved ice cream into which he mixed olive oil and soy sauce. You or I may call a halt after such drastic readjustments; Mr Leto, who last autumn resumed acting after a five-year break, chose to mark his return by embarking on yet another regime of speed-dieting. To prepare for his comeback role, playing an HIV-positive transsexual woman in Dallas Buyers Club, Mr Leto again shed a huge amount of weight and, on the day we meet at a London hotel, is only just returning to his normal size. "I lost about 30lbs and waxed my body," he says. "But I'll tell you, gaining weight is much more brutal than losing it. When you lose that much weight, you lose fat, sure, but you start to lose muscle too. And you can't just eat to gain that back, you have to work out, or all you're putting on is fat."


                                    THE WORK

    REQUIEM FOR A DREAM
    Mr Leto as heroin addict Harry Goldfarb in the acclaimed 2000 movie


    MR NOBODY
    Mr Leto as Nemo Nobody, who is both 34 and 118 years old, in the 2009 sci-fi drama

    GIRL, INTERRUPTED
    Mr Leto with Ms Winona Ryder in the 1999 film dealing with a girl's 18-month stint in a mental asylum

    ALEXANDER
    Mr Leto in Mr Oliver Stone's 2004 epic about Alexander the Great



    Mr Leto doesn't look remotely fat today, damn the man. He is instead almost preternaturally handsome, with chiselled features, jet-black hair and piercing blue eyes, as a woman's magazine profile might put it. Maybe his features are a touch skull-like, I suggest to my girlfriend when I return home, only to be remonstrated, "No, babes, he's hot. You just don't understand." A handsome face can be a double-edged sword, of course; concentrating on good looks is both reductive and runs the risk of overshadowing genuine artistic achievement. Mr Leto admits that this has posed a challenge to the ethos with which he grew up with: that art matters, and everything else is essentially froth. But he's the opposite of po-faced on the subject. I ask him how it felt to be included, as he was in 2009, in People magazine's Best Chests category. "Did I really win Best Chest?" he asks, looking both appalled and delighted. (Actually, he was ninth of 11.) "I never knew that. I should have won that when I was in drag for Dallas Buyers Club - I had a great chest then."
    Love Lust Faith + Dreams is comfortably Mr Leto and his band's best album to date - episodic, polemical, texturally complex, and balancing contemplation, defiance, recklessness and huge choruses and riffs in a way that classic, pre-iTunes concept albums managed to do. Between music and film, he continues to surround himself with art, making things purely to make them. "If, ultimately, my albatross is getting people to take my music seriously because I happened to be in Requiem for a Dream," he concludes, "that's a pretty good problem to have. Anyway, after selling 20,000 tickets in London the last time we played here, how many people do you need to love you in the world?" That's easy for him to say.

    Love Lust Faith + Dreams is out now. thirtysecondstomars.thisisthehive.net

    29 mag 2013

    BEHIND THE SCENES : JARED LETO FOR CRASH MAGAZINE


    Photography: Charles Guislain
    Styling: Armelle Leturcq
    Itw : Céline Rey
    More on : http://www.crash.fr


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    Thirty Seconds to Mars: The Google Play Mini-Doc


    Listen to "Love Lust Faith + Dreams" from Thirty Seconds to Mars: http://goo.gl/PyJS9

    In this Google Play Mini-Doc, Jared, Shannon and Tomo speak about sunset recording sessions in the Thar desert, artist provocateur Damien Hirst and a Richard Simmons rollerskate contest video that never came to be.


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    24 mag 2013

    The World Reflected Through Soap Bubbles
    April 29th, 2013


    Photographer Richard Heeks skillfully captures the reflections of images on bubbles that he creates.
    He has also managed to capture other bubble-related photographic feats, including the precise moment a bubble bursts and the easily-missed moments of bubbles bursting within other bubbles.
    Heeks mentioned that his inspiration stems from the cult 1982 movie, ‘Blade Runner’ by Ridley Scott, which featured a close-up shot of a landscape reflected in an eye.
    With regard to his photographic methods, Heeks commented that he tends to “use the sun or bright buildings for light,” and “dark and shadowed or secluded areas for a dark background.” Notably, he also loves “relying on nature” as he feels that “the best shots tend to be natural.”
    Long Exposure Neon Waterfalls
    April 27th, 2013


    Like a freak midnight rainbow, this ongoing series of lit waterfalls titled Neon Luminance is part of a collaboration between Sean Lenz and Kristoffer Abildgaard over at From the Lenz. The duo dropped high-powered Cyalume glow sticks in a variety of colors into various waterfalls in Northern California and then made exposures varying from 30 seconds to 7 minutes to capture the submerged trails of light as the sticks moved through the current. To accomplish some of the more complicated shots they strung several sticks together at once to create different patterns of illumination. For those of you concerned about pollution, the sticks (which are buoyant) were never opened and were collected at the end of each exposure, thus no toxic goo was mixed into the water. See more from the project on their website.
    Bottoms Up
    April 27th, 2013


    French graphic artist Romain Jacquet-Lagreze has created a stunning photo series—entitled ‘Vertical Horizon’—that provides an unusual perspective from which to view the ever-growing metropolis of Hong Kong.
    Shooting from between the towering buildings in the Chinese city, these pictures give the viewer a sense of being dwarfed on all sides by monumental structures.
    Diving deep into the city’s concrete jungle, the series showcases a diverse range of Hong Kong’s buildings, from congested public housing to glamorous glass-clad offices.
    Miniature Melbourne
    April 27th, 2013




    Street Artists Descend Upon Closed Parisian Nightclub
    April 25th, 2013


    Built as a municipal bathhouse in the late 19th century, Les Bains-Douches would eventually become one of the hottest night clubs in Paris known simply as Les Bains, a destination for the likes of Kate Moss, Mick Jagger, Johnny Depp and even Andy Warhol. Due to some faulty construction in 2010 the building was declared a safety hazard and is now slated for complete renovation in just a few days to pave way for La Société des Bains, a new space that will open in 2014. In the meantime, owner Jean-Pierre Marois turned over the building to 50 street artists commissioned by Magda Danysz Gallery who have been working since January to turn the decaying building into an endless canvas of artwork.
    While the entire space will unfortunately remain closed to the public, photographers Stephane Bisseuil and Jérôme Coton were allowed in to shoot many of the artworks in progress. Above is just a small selection, head over to Les Bains “One Day One Artist” page to see much more.
    Sightseeing Tunnel by Jakob Wagner
    April 25th, 2013



    Laser Forest by Marshmallow Laser Feast
    April 25th, 2013


    Laser Forest is the lastest creation from a creative studio known as Marshmallow Laser Feast comprised of Memo Akten, Robin McNicholas, and Barney Steel who have focused almost exclusively on creating interactive experiences over the past two years. This latest installation involves a forest of 150 interactive rods installed in an empty factory space that when touched trigger both light and audio cues, effectively creating a large interactive instrument. Laser Forest was commission for the STRP Biennale in Eindhoven last month, and you can learn much more about at the Creators Project.
    Smeared Sky by Matt Molloy
    April 24th, 2013


    As the sun slowly but surely sets and clouds move along, each time Ontario, Canada-based photographer Matt Molloy points his camera up to capture the sky, he takes hundreds of pictures at a go.
    His ‘Smeared Sky’ series is an experiment with time-lapse sequences, and is created by digitally stacking 100 to 200 photographs—to reveal that the blue yonder isn’t always blue in his picturesque, painting-like photographs.
    The “timestack” technique brings about brush stroke effects, caused by moving cloudscapes, to make it seem like the sky is smeared.
    “Sometimes the clouds are moving quick and there’s lots of them. If I stack too many photos from a timelapse like that, it can get a little messy,” Molloy told Bored Panda.
    JARED Interview with Los Angeles Time 24th May 2013


    Times music writer August Brown chats with actor and 30 Seconds to Mars frontman Jared Leto on the band's fourth studio album, "Love Lust Faith + Dreams," a rebirth after EMI label woes.

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    ♪ My Daily Song!!! ♥

    Dishwalla - Angels or Devils

    30STM Aussie Tour Dates
    15 May, 2013

    Jared Leto and band back to unleash their blockbuster show


    Thirty Seconds To Mars have confirmed they'll be unleashing their blockbuster show across in Perth, Sydney, Melbourne and Brisbane.
    Lead singer Jared Leto revealed the band's intention to return to Australian shores whilst here earlier this month to promote the hugely-anticipated fourth offering, Love Lust Faith + Dreams, which is out this Friday.
    The boys are primed for a big tour, having last been here in 2011 for the Soudnwave Festival.
    "No. We did that last time [with] Soundwave which was unforgettable. My God, what an amazing tour that was and the audience was just spectacular. We had the best time."
    30 Seconds To Mars new album, Love Lust, Faith + Dreams, is out May 17. The new single is called "Up In The Air".

    Tickets On Sale

    Frontier Members pre-sale via www.frontiertouring.com 2pm AEST Tue 21 May to 2pm AEST Wed 22 May. General public on sale from 9am local time, Mon 27 May 2013.

    TOUR DATES

    August
    10 - Rod Laver Arena, Melbourne (All Ages) -
     www.ticketek.com.au or 132 849
    11 - Sydney Entertainment Centre, Sydney (All Ages) - www.ticketmaster.com.au or 136 100
    13 - Brisbane Entertainment Centre, Brisbane (All Ages) - www.ticketek.com.au or 132 849
    16 - Challenge Stadium, Perth (All Ages) -
     www.ticketmaster.com.au or 136 100

    Official Links


    23 mag 2013

    The PV Q&A: Thirty Seconds to Mars' Jared Leto - "It Feels Like a Brand New Beginning For Us"
    20th May 2013


    You’ve got to hand it to Thirty Seconds to Mars frontman Jared Leto. When he wanted to announce his outfit’s return with an apocalyptic new fourth salvo, Love Lust Faith + Dreams, he really went the astronomical distance—and quite literally, by sending the set’s flagship single “Up in the Air” into the stratosphere aboard a Falcon rocket headed straight for the International Space Station, where it had its recent premiere. 

    And the singer was even present for lift-off. “We had this crazy idea to send our music to space, to launch the single, to launch the video and then the album, and to launch this new chapter in our life,” Leto explains. “So we went to NASA and put our CD in a rocket, and it shot 261-miles up to the station. And we debuted our song in space!” 

    And it does mark a new genesis for Thirty Seconds to Mars: “Love Lust” opens with the jazzy, swinging horns of “Birth,” then keps upping the sonic ante with the marching “Conquistador,” a furious, string-buttressed “The Race,” the morbid piano dirge “End of All Days,” a huge coliseum rocker called “Bright Lights,” and the serpentine, rattlesnake-percussion perambulator “Northern Lights,” with Leto intoning “They don’t believe that I have a soul left to be saved.” He finishes the thought on the closing acoustic ballad “Depuis L Debut,” wherein he coldly notes that “I dance with a billion devils” and “Died from a life of sin,” then chorus promises “There will be blood.” 

    What’s been going on in his life since 2009’s tortured This is War? Quite a lot, as he related last week, after opening his Church of Mars Tour at—where else?—St. Peter’s Church in Chelsea, New York City. 
    PureVolume: You actually got Damien Hirst to do your album cover? How?
    I begged! And I was really, really psyched that he said yes. And it was great—we used it in the video, and we used it as the album cover. And not only one Damien Hirst painting, but actually two—there’s one on the CD itself. And I’ve always been inspired by his work. He’s a mad scientist, a provocateur, so it was really great to use some of his art, really wonderful. He’s pretty legendary, and the thing I like about his art is, it makes you think. It makes you reconsider the possibilities. And not just about art, but about love and death and beauty. And that was in line with Love Lust Faith + Dreams, an album that’s really about all of those things.
    There’s an apocalyptic feel to this record, an end-of-days kind of feel. What were you going through?
    Hmm. Good question. I don’t know ... but I think that the last album was about conflicts: We had a giant battle with our record company, they sued us for $30 million, we fought them for two years and subsequently made a film about it as well, calledArtifact. But it was an album about conflict and survival. And this is an album that’s much more reflective. And it was made without the burden of a giant war on our shoulders, and it was actually really a lot of fun. It was exactly how it should be.


    In “The Race,” you talk about lessons you’ve learned and you promise "never again." What are you referring to?
    I think just learning. And life. Growing up, taking what you’ve learned and applying it, and hoping that you become a better version of yourself.
    What do you know now that you didn’t a few years ago?
    I think all of us in the band, I think we have a greater understanding of who we are. As people, as musicians, with what we have to offer and what we have to say. So there’s probably a greater sense of who we are as Thirty Seconds to Mars and less of our influences this time. And I think probably a greater sense of confidence as a songwriter—I think it’s all of those things.
    In “Up in the Air,” you say “Is this the end I feel?” Could be. It certainly seems like humanity has doomed itself to extinction.
    Well, I guess I just can’t write a pop record. But I think that with every end comes a new beginning, and that’s kind of how I feel about the album. It feels like a brand new beginning for us. You know, I was in India, and I wrote a song called “Pyres of Varanasi,” and it was inspired by a place where they have been cremating bodies on the Ganges river for about 5,000 years. And it’s an incredibly intense place. There were bodies being burned everywhere, bodies going through a funeral procession and being left in the river Ganges. So although it’s about death, there’s something beautiful about it as well, and something that makes you think about life itself and how magical life can be. I don’t necessarily intend those things to be grim. Like “Do or Die”—it’s more about standing up and living out your dreams. It’s not necessarily on the dark side.
    And you’re also looking back and assessing your own life, as on “City of Angels.”
    Yeah, I think so. That was a very personal song, obviously, about a specific place: Los Angeles. But it could be ... well, when I was a younger kid, it was New York City. That was the place where I went to make my dreams come true, at that time to be a painter, an artist. I was in art school and New York was the place where you went to makes those things come alive. And as I got older, I started studying film and I came out to Los Angeles. But it could be Paris, it could be Shanghai, it could be San Francisco, Palo Alto, anywhere. A place where you go to realize yourself and your dreams.
    I like the fact that you use your website to showcase other artists and photographers, not really yourself.
    Yeah. I like to share things that I find are interesting. If I stumble upon something online, I like to pass it on. And I get inspired quite a bit by visual art, and I just like to share the wealth.
    There were all these gaunt photos of you that started appearing for awhile, and at first it looked like you were really ill. But of course, it was for a movie role in Dallas Buyers Club. How much weight did you lose?
    A little over 30-pounds. It was the first film that I’d made in about five years, and I played a transgendered person who was dying of AIDS, and who was also battling drug addiction. And losing weight was part of the process of bringing the character to life.


    But the film is based on the true story of Ron Woodruff, played by Matthew McConaughey, who was diagnosed as HIV positive in 1985 and given 30 days to live. But he establishes a "buyers club" for AIDS medications that weren’t readily available at the time.
    Yeah. In 1985 and 1986, there really wasn’t a lot of medication around. I learned a lot from that role: it was an education and it took me on a journey. And that’s one of the things that’s nice about making a film like that—it was a really intense commitment, and I’m really glad that I did it. And it was towards the end of making the album, so it was nice to have a little bit of something else to experiment with. You know, you learn one thing, you apply it to another.
    Do you still paint?
    Yeah. I do still make art. Most of my creativity I kinda channel into the music and these bizarre little videos that we do, these short films for the songs. Which is really just a way to paint with a camera, especially this latest one for “Up in the Air”—I’m working with Damien Hirst and Dita Von Teese and the US Olympic Gymnastics Team. And it was a lot of fun—it was this hallucinogenic journey through this massive space in Los Angeles, this million-square-foot hangar in Long Beach.
    Was your album title inspired by the Rolling Stones song “Shattered”?
    No, I’d never heard that before! So no, it wasn’t an homage to that. But what a great song.
    PV: Well, the Stones are still out there, rocking harder than ever. At 41, you should take that as a good sign that the rock and roll spirit never leaves you.
    Yeah. I still feel a spirit to create and share things with people. And to work really hard and make something great—something that people will be excited about and enjoy. I still feel the passion to do that, for sure, and to get onstage and play these songs. It’s a wonderful thing. It’s a very magical and unique thing to be able to do, so I feel really grateful. And I think gratitude really helps keep you inspired, helps keep you going.


    MARS  Live from Loveline 22nd May 2013


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    MARS Instagram Memories on ANDPOP 21st May 2013


    http://www.andpop.com/2013/05/21/maki...
    Just in time for the release of their new album Love, Lust, Faith and Dreams, ANDPOP's @SimonMohos turn the clock back with Jared Leto, as his Instagram photos trigger some fond memories about the first time he travelled to LA, Coachella 2013, getting inked, and his role in Dallas Buyers Club. Also, Tomo completely loses his shit laughing right at the beginning. That was kinda funny.

    Thanks for watching guys, and let us know who you want Simon to interview next!

    http://www.twitter.com/@SimonMohos
    http://www.twitter.com/ANDPOP
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    http://www.instagram.com/ANDPOP


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