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・ This Little Piggy
・ This Little Piggy (Family Guy)
・ This Little Wiggy
・ This Loud Morning
・ This Love
・ This Love (album)
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This Is War
・ This Is War (song)
・ This Is Water
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・ This Is What I Do
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・ This Is What I Know About Being Gigantic
・ This Is What It Feels Like
・ This Is What Love In Action Looks Like
・ This Is What Makes Us
・ This Is What Rock n' Roll Looks Like
・ This Is What the Edge of Your Seat Was Made For
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・ This Is What Winning Looks Like


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This Is War : ウィキペディア英語版
This Is War

| Length =
| Label =
| Producer =
| Last album = ''To the Edge of the Earth''
(2008)
| This album = ''This Is War''
(2009)
| Next album = ''MTV Unplugged''
(2011)
| Misc =
}}
''This Is War'' is the third studio album by American rock band Thirty Seconds to Mars, released through Virgin Records and EMI on December 8, 2009. Upon its release, it peaked at number 18 on the ''Billboard'' 200.
==Background and development==

30 Seconds to Mars were sued for breach-of-contract by their record label, Virgin Records, in mid-2008. The label sought $30 million in damages, claiming that the band had failed to produce three of the five records they were obligated to deliver under their 1999 contract with the now-defunct Immortal Records. In 2004, Virgin took over the contract. Jared Leto responded to some of the claims in the suit on the band's website and was coerced into dismissing rumors that the group had disbanded. He said the claims were "ridiculously overblown" and "totally unrealistic", before stating "under California law, where we live and signed our deal, one cannot be bound to a contract for more than seven years." 30 Seconds to Mars had been contracted for nine years, so the band decided to exercise their "legal right to terminate our old, out-of-date contract, which according to the law is null and void."
After nearly a year of the lawsuit battle, the band announced on April 29, 2009, that the case had been settled. The suit was resolved following a defence based on a contract case involving actress Olivia de Havilland decades before. Leto explained, "The California Appeals Court ruled that no service contract in California is valid after seven years, and it became known as the De Havilland Law after she used it to get out of her contract with Warner Bros." 30 Seconds to Mars then decided to re-sign with EMI (the parent label of Virgin). Leto said the band had "resolved our differences with EMI" and the decision had been made because of "the willingness and enthusiasm by EMI to address our major concerns and issues, (and) the opportunity to return to work with a team so committed and passionate about Thirty Seconds to Mars". He said it was "the most challenging business obstacle that we've ever gone through as a band."〔
Upon completion of the record, Leto spoke of the troubles the band faced while working on ''This Is War''; "We spent two years of our lives working on that record, and it was us against the world... There were times that it was overwhelming. Everything that was going on was brutal... It was a case of survival, to tell the truth."
Leto produced a documentary ''Artifact'', that chronicled the state of the modern music industry through their dispute with their record company. Other musicians also gave accounts of their industry experiences. The film premiered at the 2012 Toronto International Film Festival where it was well received and won the People's Choice Award for Best Documentary.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「This Is War」の詳細全文を読む



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