MARS IS COMING! Big Concerts announced on Wednesday that Thirty Seconds to Mars will be returning to South Africa to perform 2 concerts – on 13 June 2014 at the Grand Arena in Cape Town and 16 June 2014 at the Coca-Cola Dome in Johannesburg. Coming off the back of an outstanding European festival circuit and some scintillating performances, this is one band that you do not want to miss!
Tickets go on sale for Johannesburg and Cape Town on Friday, 13 December 2013, at 9am from Big Concerts and Computicket.
Tour Itinerary
Cape Town
Friday, 13 June 2014
Grand Arena, GrandWest
Tickets from: R310 – R510
Johannesburg
Monday, 16 June 2014
Coca-Cola Dome
Tickets from: R310 – R510
About the band
Thirty Seconds to Mars have gone on to scale the heights of rock and roll stardom and are known for their energetic live performances and their fusion of different genres.
Although they found modest success with their self-titled debut, it was their second album, ‘A Beautiful Lie,’ which announced them as bonafide rock and roll superstars. Released in 2005, the platinum selling album broadened the band’s sound and garnered them frequent spots on MTV while also spawning two top 10 modern rock hits, ‘They Kill’ and ‘Bury Me.’ ‘They Kill’ set a record for the most weeks on the US Modern Rock Chart and the album’s success opened the doors to numerous successful tours and spots at major rock festivals such as Roskilde, Pinkpop, and Download.
The band’s third album, ‘This is War,’ released in 2009 garnered them another three top 10 singles, the first two of which peaked at the number 1 spot on the US Alternative Songs chart. Additionally, ‘Closer to the Edge’ was the fastest selling rock single in the UK and topped the UK rock chart for eight consecutive weeks. The subsequent tour set a ‘Guinness World Record for the longest concert tour by a rock band’ and helped to establish Thirty Seconds to Mars’ reputation as one of the hardest working rock bands.
This period also serves as source material for their documentary, Artifact, which tells of the band’s struggle to renegotiate their recording contract with record label Virgin/EMI. The film premiered at the Toronto Film Festival where it won the People’s Choice Documentary award.
‘Love, Lust, Faith and Dreams,’ the band’s fourth studio album marked an evolution in their distinctive sound and was positively received both critically and commercially. The album reached the top ten in fifteen different countries and the first single, ‘Up In The Air,’ peaked at number 3 on the Billboard ‘Hot Modern Rock Tracks.’ Kerrang called the new album bigger than this planet while Allmusic’s Stephen Thomas Erlewine called it their boldest, brightest, most imaginative record yet.
Don’t miss the highly anticipated MARS IS COMING tour! If you’re coming to see the concert from out of town, visit TravelGround to book your Johannesburg and Cape Town accommodation the easy way.
Images courtesy of the Thirty Seconds to Mars Facebook page.