I never really loved the blogs, cause I don't like talk about myself and my interests, I prefer show and share them. This is like a book, it was created to let the world know my great passions: Music, 30 SECONDS TO MARS that are my life,Favourite Artists, Movies and TV Series, All Arts etc. Enjoy and have fun on MARS! ♫
♥ "Labels are for cans, not for people" ~JL
“And all I loved, I loved alone.” ~E.A.Poe
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8 mar 2013
Under the launch pad during our @NASA visit last week. #ISS #MARSisComing
JARED LETO, VOLTO DELLA NUOVA FRAGRANZA HUGO RED: IL VIDEO DEL BACKSTAGE
04 mar 2013
Leader dei Thirty Seconds to Mars, ama gli pseudonimi, con cui ha firmato un documentario contro la Emi. Ora ne sta girando un altro. Intanto posa per un profumo e pubblica un nuovo album
Corporatura esile, è vegano; dita affusolate, suona pianoforte e chitarra; carnagione pallida e sguardo da seduttore. Jared Leto, 41enne della Louisiana, frontman dei Thirty Seconds to Mars, è ironico e sicuro di sé. L'abbiamo incontrato in un ex caveau all'interno dell'Hotel de Rome a Berlino per il lancio di Hugo Red. A luci soffuse e a bassa voce gli abbiamo chiesto...
Producer, regista di videoclip e documentari, attore di cinema, testimonial, sostenitore attivo di Barack Obama. Cosa ti riesce meglio? Un po' tutto, credo di essere bravo perché amo la creatività e la tecnologia, mi piace imparare cose nuove, le sfide, soprattutto se mi aiutano concretamente nel lavoro.
All'ultimo Toronto Film Festival hai vinto un premio per il documentario Artifact contro la casa di produzione EMI che contestava alla tua band di aver cambiato etichetta per l'album This is War. Com'è finita? Non è ancora finita. E mai finirà. Lo confermano le testimonianze che ho raccolto per questa causa di chi ha vissuto l'esperienza simile alla nostra e ha deciso di raccontarla, condividerla.
First Copy Of Single Travels From Cape Canaveral To
International Space Station In SpaceX Dragon Cargo Capsule
“Up In The Air” Set For March 19 Release
Thirty Seconds To Mars new single “Up In The Air” will be launchedinto space tomorrow. The band memberswill be in Florida to watch the launch ofthe second SpaceX cargo mission to the International Space Station. The company's Falcon 9 rocket carrying its Dragon cargo capsule is scheduled to lift off on Friday, March 1, at 10:10 a.m. EST from Space Launch Complex 40 at Cape Canaveral Air Force Station. The capsule will be filled with more than 1,200 pounds of scientific experiments and cargo – and the first copy of “Up In The Air.” Fans can watch the launch at http://www.nasa.gov/multimedia/nasatv/index.html. Full details and updates on the mission are also available on NASA’s website at http://www.nasa.gov/station.
The band will visit Mission Control Houston for a Q&A with Tom Marshburn, one of the astronauts aboard the space station. The Q&A, scheduled for Monday, March 18, will be broadcast live online with details available shortly at www.thirtysecondstomars.com. “Up In The Air” will premiere worldwide that day and be commercially available at all digital retailers the following day, March 19.
“Up In The Air” is the first single from the band’s fourth studio record, which will be released later this year. The album follows This Is War, which contained the No. 1 Modern Rock radio hits “This Is War” and “Kings and Queens.” In the course of its two-year tour in support of This Is War, the band sold out arenas around the globe, playing over 311 shows in nearly 60 countries on six continents to an astounding three million people – and breaking the Guinness World Record® for most shows played during a single album cycle. This Is War was hailed as “an artistic triumph” (Alternative Press) and “a shimmering epic” (MTV.com). Entertainment Weekly observed: “[Lead singer] Leto doesn’t just shoot for the moon, he practically colonizes it.”
Thirty Seconds To Mars – comprising brothers Jared Leto and Shannon Leto as well as Tomo Milicevic – has sold over 5 million albums worldwide and the band’s videos have more than 300 million views on YouTube. The group has received numerous awards, including a dozen MTV awards worldwide, a Billboard Music award and honors from NME, Kerrang! and Fuse. Artifact, a documentary about the making of This Is War, won the People’s Choice documentary award at the 2012 Toronto International Film Festival and the Audience Award at the 2012 Gotham Independent Film Awards. The film will be screened at SXSW on Wednesday, March 13.
30 SECONDS TO MARS RELEASE NEW SINGLE INTO OUTER SPACE
2013-03-01
JARED LETO-FRONTED 30 SECONDS TO MARS ARE LAUNCHING THEIR LATEST TRACK INTO SPACE
Alternative rockers30 Seconds to Marsare gearing up for the release of their new album, and they’re doing it up big. This morning (March 1), the band launched their new single, “Up in the Air,” literally up in the air.
Specifically, the debut copy of the single waspacked inside the 1,200 pounds of cargo and other scientific gearbeing transferred from Florida’s Cape Canaveral to the International Space Station, according toRolling Stone. This is certainly a first, and the guys in the band — Jared Leto, Shannon Leto and Tomo Milicevic — were all slated to appear in Florida to stare into the air as the Space Exploration Technologies cargo capsule holding their track, the magazine reports.
“Up in the Air” will officially premiere to the world on March 18. The band has announced they will premiere the track and conduct a live online interview with none other than astronaut Tom Marshburn, who will be on the space craft. Find more information about the event on 30 Seconds to Mars’ official website. “Up in the Air” will be released via all the major digital outlets on March 19.
He said that the record has been mastered, but the band still haven't decided yet when the release date will be.
Speaking to MTV, Leto said, "This is the first time I'm really talking about the album, and when you talk about these things it helps you put them into perspective. I just mastered it two days ago, and we're still toying with it, but it's been turned in and it's finished.
"I wrote and recorded about 70 songs for this album, and I think there's a feeling that all of us in the band have that, especially after touring as long as we did last time, that this is a really important album for us; it's a critical album for us."
He continued, "It's an evolution, this album is more of who we are than we have ever been before, and we've gone to an entirely new place, which is incredibly exciting. And it's provocative at the same time, because changes bring new opportunities, new challenges, a chance to learn."
Leto went on to talk about the release date, saying that it was 'TBD' (to be decided)'. 'The Kill' singer told MTV, "So much of the stuff is TBD, but we've shot a video, we've launched a single, we've finished an album, we have the most incredible things to share with our fans. It's brand-new territory for us, both musically and creatively."
Jared Leto performing on stage with 30 Seconds From Mars
Speaking to Kerrang! magazine previously, Leto described the album as 'intimate' and 'dark'.
He said, "It's at times the most intimate, most bombastic and darkest record we've ever done. It also has some songs that are the biggest and most celebratory.
"This is a whole new beginning for us. We're still 30 Seconds to Mars; we're never going to write a pop album per se. I think that you can explore dark territory without having a dark life."
JARED LETO: 'NEW 30 SECONDS TO MARS ALBUM IS FINISHED'
Tuesday, 05 March 2013
Jared Leto, frontman of American rockers 30 Seconds to Mars has confirmed that the band’s brand new album is finished, though no release date has yet been confirmed. The LA outfit have been working on their fourth record - the follow-up to 2009’s ‘This is War’ - for over a year, and they’ve now finally finished. It’s currently going through the mastering stage and a release date is expected to be announced in the near future. Speaking to MTV, Leto said of the record: “This is the first time I'm really talking about the album, and when you talk about these things it helps you put them into perspective. I just mastered it two days ago, and we're still toying with it, but it's been turned in and it's finished.” The vocalist continued: “I wrote and recorded about 70 songs for this album, and I think there's a feeling that all of us in the band have that, especially after touring as long as we did last time, that this is a really important album for us; it's a critical album for us.
“It's an evolution, this album is more of who we are than we have ever been before, and we've gone to an entirely new place, which is incredibly exciting. And it's provocative at the same time, because changes bring new opportunities, new challenges, a chance to learn.” He added finally: “So much of the stuff is TBD, but we've shot a video, we've launched a single, we've finished an album, we have the most incredible things to share with our fans. It's brand-new territory for us, both musically and creatively.” The band recently revealed that new single ‘Up in the Air’ will be premiered on March 18th - via the International Space Station. You can check out a video of the CD being launched into space below - stay with Stereoboard to stay up-to-date on the band.
First a single in space, now an album done, thought this lot were taking it easy?
Jared Leto has spoken to MTV News about the new 30 Seconds To Mars album. It's mixed, mastered and delivered apparently!
In the same interview the frontman also said that album four is an important milestone for the band: "I wrote and recorded about 70 songs for this album, and I think there's a feeling that all of us in the band have that, especially after touring as long as we did last time, that this is a really important album for us; it's a critical album for us," he explained."It's an evolution, this album is more of who we are than we have ever been before, and we've gone to an entirely new place, which is incredibly exciting. And it's provocative at the same time, because changes bring new opportunities, new challenges, a chance to learn."
No firm release date or title but plenty of juicy hints at what is to come from 30STM, to read the whole piece head to this link.
Jared Leto: front man of post-grunge band 30 Seconds To Mars, investor in burgeoning tech companies, campaigner on the Barack Obama trail and avid art collector. This is a man who has been busy during his three-year hiatus from the acting career that made him famous.
It began with a breakout role in My So-Called Life, the Nineties show that also propelled Claire Danes up the Hollywood ladder, and continued with memorable roles in Fight Club, American Psycho and Darren Aronofsky's bleak tale of drug addiction,Requiem For A Dream. His look has been as eclectic as his CV: from corn rows and a bleached mullet to ponytails or an impulsive mohawk. Attacked and applauded for his personal style, he is not afraid to experiment, even if that includes a full-body wax and drag make-up for his upcoming role as Rayon inThe Dallas Buyers Club. It's the story of Ron Woodroof, the Texan HIV sufferer turned drug smuggler of illegal AIDS medication at the start of the epidemic.
Leto is in Berlin to talk about his new project for Hugo Boss, which he approaches with typical gusto...
On Looking 31 at 41: "I still have plenty of vices, but alcohol isn't one of them. It's probably just down to sleep and diet. If you travel long haul a lot or don't sleep much, it's not going to last very long, that's for sure. I'm pretty healthy so I think that helps a lot. I've been that way for a long time - 20 solid years of eating vegetarian/vegan and taking care of myself. That probably helps the preservation process."
On Pulling Off Any Hairstyle: "You have to be willing to make mistakes. I don't have to show up at an office every day; I'm fortunate in that sense. I don't have to conform to someone else's dress code. Usually it's dictated by the film that I'm making, or being on tour, or doing something silly. So I don't take it too seriously. A couple of years ago I went to [photographer] Terry Richardson's house and I needed a haircut. So I asked him if he wanted to cut it. He gave me a mohawk. So it was pretty spontaneous. At the moment, I haven't had a haircut in almost a year."
On How To Get Out of a Style Rut: "Shave your head. Get a neck tattoo. I think it's all about just being you - even if that means having a wild and wacky haircut every so often. Just be yourself and express who you really are: don't worry about conforming, making other people happy or fitting in. That's usually when people don't feel their best."
On Being Front Row at Fashion Shows: "Fashion shows are fun because all the energy and excitement gets packed into 15 minutes, all that hard work. I remember I'd gone to see Karl Lagerfeld at the Chanel couture show in Paris, and it's pretty mind-blowing to see that - especially from my viewpoint as someone who doesn't know much about fashion. But you can just see the craftsmanship, the care and the creative thinking that goes into it. As a performer I put on shows every night, so it's interesting to see how other creative people use music, light and sound."
On Music to Work Out to: "I'm a pretty adventurous hiker, so I like to crawl through the brush. I like to be outdoors and do that sort of thing. I never use an iPod. I like to hear the sounds of nature. I use it to get away from music. I make music so often I don't actually listen to it very much. But I am currently listening to Sigur Ros and Fever Ray."
On Piling On the Pounds: "To get into character [as John Lennon's killer, Mark Chapman, in Chapter 27] I just ate giant pizzas and everything you know you're not supposed to eat, that's what you eat to gain weight like that. If you're a young actor reading this, you should never do that - it's really stupid. It's a mental and physical challenge. Putting on the weight was very difficult and very weird; I started every meal completely stuffed."
On Hugo Red: "It's fun to be involved with Hugo Boss. It's been a brand-new experience and a blast for me. Hugo Red is a new chapter. It's exciting to see things come together: from the product design to the olfactory elements. I think it's really fun to be a part of it and watch it come to life."
On Returning to the Big Screen: "It would have to be for something really special, something I couldn't say no to. A part or story or a director that I just felt was an opportunity of a lifetime, like a Jonathan Glazer or a David Fincher. The films that I've liked recently areA Prophet,Gomorrah and Animal Kingdom, but none of them had parts that I thought I would have been great for or that would have been a challenge for me. They were foreign films and suited for the people that made them. I don't pine for someone else's role, or song or art. But it can still be inspiring."
Thirty Seconds to Mars Launching Single to Space Station on SpaceX Rocket
28 February 2013
Thirty Seconds to Mars' single art for "Up in the Air." The first copy of the new song is being launched to the International Space Station on SpaceX’s Dragon spacecraft. On March 1, 2013.
It's more than half-a-minute away and not quite the Red Planet, but the International Space Station is about to play host to Thirty Seconds to Mars.
The American rock band, fronted by actor Jared Leto, is sending their first new single in four years to the orbiting laboratory on Space Exploration Technologies' (SpaceX) Dragon capsule as part of a cargo mission contracted by NASA. The first copy of "Up in the Air" — Thirty Seconds to Mars' first single from the band's fourth studio record — will lift off with more than 1,200 pounds (540 kilograms) of science experiments and crew supplies on Friday (March 1) at 10:10 a.m. EST (1510 GMT).
The band, who will be at NASA's Kennedy Space Center in Florida to watch the launch, will visit Mission Control at the Johnson Space Center in Houston on March 18 where they will take part in a question and answer session with Expedition 35 flight engineer and NASA astronaut Thomas Marshburn live from onboard the space station. The orbital downlink will serve to "launch" the music single on Earth, which will premiere worldwide that day and be available at all digital retailers the following day, March 19.
Thirty Seconds to Mars are just the latest musicians to interact with the space station's residents. The astronauts recently spoke with singer Peter Gabrieland Expedition 35 commander and Canadian Space Agency astronaut Chris Hadfield collaborated with Ed Robertson, the frontman of the band Barenaked Ladies, to record the first duet of an original song performed simultaneously in space and on the ground.
The SpaceX mission carrying the copy of "Up in the Air" is the second of 12 unmanned resupply flights contracted by NASA using the California company's Falcon 9 rockets and Dragon capsules. The private spacecraft is part of a new fleet of U.S. commercial vehicles that are taking the place of NASA's now retired space shuttle program.
In addition to the single, the CRS-2 (or SpX-2) mission is also packed with a surprise snack for the space station crew from the orchard of a SpaceXemployee's father. The gumdrop-shaped capsule is slated to arrive at the orbiting complex the day after its launch, where it will stay through March 25. The spacecraft will then return to Earth packed with science results and spent equipment, splashing down in the Pacific Ocean.
Thirty Seconds to Mars — comprising brothers Jared and Shannon Leto, as well as Tomo Milicevic — has sold over five million albums worldwide and the band's videos have more than 300 million views on YouTube. During the 2009 release of their previous album, "This is War," the group broke the Guinness World Record for most shows played during a single album cycle.
Thirty Seconds To Mars' New Album Is 'An Evolution'
Mar 4 2013
'We've gone to an entirely new place,' Jared Leto tells MTV News about Mars' upcoming album.
Thirty Seconds to Mars' new single hadn't even reached the International Space Station when Jared Leto got on the phone with MTV News to discuss its rather epic (and quite literal)launch on Friday morning... but, as is often the case with him, he was already moving on to the band's next project: their new album.
"This is the first time I'm really talking about the album, and when you talk about these things it helps you put them into perspective," he said. "I just mastered it two days ago, and we're still toying with it, but it's been turned in and it's finished."
And perspective is definitely necessary; after all, there was a time when it seemed like the album would never happen at all. Thirty Seconds to Mars spent much of the past year recuperating from the whirlwind ride that followed 2009's This Is War, and very openly discussed the idea of calling it quits entirely. But, recharged from their time off the road, they regrouped and got to work on the record that Leto said will come to define them.
"I wrote and recorded about 70 songs for this album, and I think there's a feeling that all of us in the band have that, especially after touring as long as we did last time, that this is a really important album for us; it's a critical album for us," he explained. "It's an evolution, this album is more of who we are than we have ever been before, and we've gone to an entirely new place, which is incredibly exciting. And it's provocative at the same time, because changes bring new opportunities, new challenges, a chance to learn."
Leto added that, though the record has been mastered, there's still no firm release date, and if there's a title, he wasn't ready to reveal it just yet. But all of that will be announced over the coming months ... and once again, Thirty Seconds To Mars are ready to bring their mission to the masses.
"So much of the stuff is TBD, but we've shot a video, we've launched a single, we've finished an album, we have the most incredible things to share with our fans," Leto said. "It's brand-new territory for us, both musically and creatively."
Thirty Seconds To Mars Blast New Single Into Orbit
Mar 1 2013
'Putting your music into space is no easy feat,' frontman Jared Leto tells MTV News.
Thirty Seconds to Mars spent Friday (March 1) morning literally launching their brand new single ... sending the first copy of "Up In The Air" into orbit on board a SpaceX rocket.
And an hour after liftoff, MTV News spoke to frontman Jared Leto from Cape Canaveral, Florida, where he was still trying to wrap his head around everything that had happened. And, for a guy who's witnessed no shortage of amazing things with his Mars mates, well, that's saying something indeed.
"It was a phenomenal morning; it's been a mind-blowing experience, sending our music up into space, where it's pushing into orbit and going around the earth, that's a pretty amazing thing to think about," Leto said. "It seemed impossible; for a moment I played with the idea of a weather balloon, but I had been speaking with NASA for quite some time about ways to find something creative to do together. And I presented them with this idea and here we are."
Leto said the process of getting a copy of the single aboard the SpaceX cargo capsule began months ago — "It wasn't easy," he laughed, "but most worthy things aren't." — and that the decision to launch it into orbit had nothing to do with the song's title. Instead, he and his bandmates were looking to kick off the next chapter of their career in an appropriately massive manner.
"From the beginning, it was clear this was a special song for us. I wrote and recorded about 70 songs for this album, and I think there's a feeling that all of us in the band have that, especially after touring as long as we did last time, that this is a really important album for us ... and 'Up in the Air' is the first step, the beginning of a conversation," he said. "It's a song that has a lot of energy, a lot of optimism, a lot of life in it. And it's incredibly important to me and Shannon and Tomo.
"A core part of what Thirty Seconds To Mars is about is dreams ... creativity and dreams are one in the same," he continued. "And so it's inspiring and challenging to try to make the impossible into reality. And this has certainly been an example of that; putting your music into space is no easy feat."
Are you excited for the return of Thirty Seconds To Mars? Let us know in the comments below!
Thirty Seconds To Mars Begin Their Mission Into Space
March 1, 2013
Thirty Seconds To Mars have lift off. The band’s new single “Up In The Air” is officiallyon its way to the International Space Station.
The song, featured on their upcoming fourth album, hitched a ride on the second SpaceX Drag Cargo Capsule, which along with the very first copy of “Up In The Air” is carrying 1,200 pounds of supplies for the space station crew and experiments being conducted aboard the laboratory.
Jared Leto and the rest of his Thirty Seconds To Mars bandmates got a chance to watch the ship blastoff from Cape Canaveral this morning (March 1), tweeting their excitement throughout the launchand posting photos of them in frontof the Cape Canaveral sign, along with a snapshot of the band with NASA Commander Mark Kelly.
They later tweeted out a short video ofthe actual space launch with a bit of their own commentary.
Fans will get a chance to hear the new song on March 18 when the band’s interview with Tom Marshburn, one of the astronauts aboard the space station, is broadcasted live online. Visit the band’s websitefor more details on where to watch the livestream. “Up In The Air” will be available to buy on March 19.
Thirty Seconds To Mars aren’t the only current rockers interested in space exploration.Blink-182and UFO enthusiast Tom DeLonge produced the2011 sci-fi flick Love, which takes a look at an astronaut’s demise as he gets ready to come back to earth. His side projectAngels & Airwaves, known for their space-themed songs, also created the musical score for the film.
Muse frontman Matt Bellamy told Guitar Worldlast year that he would like to someday record a song or a music video in space. Bellamy is even trying to convince Richard Branson to give him a seat on Virgin Galactic.
Broken Bells’ 2010 video for “The Ghost Inside”tried to recreate the living conditions of space using Mad Men actress Christina Hendricks as the guinea pig. Unfortunately, she proves the black abyss isn’t easy on the body or the mind, something Bellamy might want to know before heading into the new frontier.