Jared Leto is safekeeping the eyeliner on for the foreseeable future.
The actor-musician-ladies' man has released a statement addressed to friends and fans making absolutely clear that his band, 30 Seconds to Mars, has no design of breakage up�despite Virgin Records America suing the group for $30 zillion for failing to save on a five-album get. (View the lawsuit.)
"We are incredibly well-chosen, healthy and very a great deal together here, in Los Angeles, transcription our new record," the 36-year-old Leto says in a forum posting on 30 STM's website. "Besides this ludicrously overblown suit...we ar having one and only of the most inspiring, wonderful and exciting multiplication that we've experienced to date."
The courtship claims that in July Leto and drum-banging bro Shannon "repudiated" a 1999 deal inked with the now-defunct indie label Immortal Records (which Virgin bought in 2004), obligating them to make three more albums beyond their 2002 self-titled debut and 2005 follow-up, A Beautiful Lie.
"So, as you may possess heard we are existence sued by our former record company for the ridiculously outsize, totally unrealistic and pretty silly (only slightly cagey) sum of $30,000,000. Insane? Yea that's what we said excessively," says Leto, the band's singer, guitar player and chief songwriter.
He cites in their defense a California childbed law that allows entertainers the right to dismiss an accord after seven years. The legislation was enacted to prevent the kind of indentured servitude that used to triumph in the movie and music biz.
"We had been signed to our record contract for 9 years," Leto continues. "Basically under California law of nature, where we live and signed our deal, one cannot be bound to a contract for more than 7 years. This is wide known by all the record companies and has been for years. In fact, so aware of it are they that they desperately try to make deals outside of California whenever possible. It is a law that protects people from prolonged, unfair, career-spanning contracts."
After expressing his eternal gratitude toward Mars devotees, Leto alleges he was being sued "NOT for failing to deliver euphony or for 'quitting'...[only] simply because roughly 45 days agone we exercised our legal right to terminate our old, out of date contract, which, according to the jurisprudence is zip and void."
Even though the band never fulfilled the terms of its original pact, Leto claims the group, which also includes guitarist Tomo Milicevic, had "sold in excess of 2 million records" and never adage a penny. Leto says 30 Seconds to Mars' next record would've simply gone to paying off a $1.4 million debt.
"Shouldn't a record company be capable to turn a gain from merchandising that many records? Or at the very least, break even? We think so."
Leto blames the suit on the new owners of Virgin's cash-strapped parent company, EMI, which he says has fired virtually of the employees wHO were instrumental in Mars' success.
Leto, world Health Organization launched his Hollywood career on ABC's teen dramatic event My So-Called Life, has averaged around one film a year. He appearead in 2004's Alexander and 2005's Lord of War and played John Lennon killer Mark David Chapman in lowest year's Chapter 27.
A rep for Virgin/EMI was non immediately available for scuttlebutt on Leto's remarks.
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