Love & Peace Japan 3rd Tour is the third concert tour by South Korean girl group Girls' Generation to promote their third Japanese album, Love & Peace. It gathered an audience of 200,000 attendees.[1] This is the final tour to include former member Jessica Jung, who left the group on September 30, 2014.
It was announced on November 29, 2013, that Girls' Generation would embark on their third nationwide Japan tour on April 26, 2014, with an initial total of 17 stops in support of their third Japanese studio album, Love & Peace.[2][3]
The tour attracted a total of 200,000 people. Through three concert tours in Japan since 2011, the group attracted a cumulative total of 550,000 spectators, setting the record for a K-pop girl group.[1] At their latest three-day concert series held in Tokyo from July 11, the group performed "Gee," "I Got a Boy," "Mr. Mr," as well as tracks such as "Motorcycle" and "Gossip Girls" on their third Japanese full-length album. The group also unveiled a new track titled "Indestructible" from their compilation album The Best, which was released on July 23, 2014.
TV Media Wowow filmed, once again, the group's July 13, 2014, performance at Yoyogi National Stadium. The show aired on Wowow's music channel on September 23, including many shows from the girls.
Encore
Double Encore
Double encore was only performed at Tokyo, July 2014 as the last concert of the tour.
The present of "Indestructible" only it was a "Lyric Video" of this song.Girls' Generation Love & Peace Japan 3rd Tour is the tenth DVD and Blu-ray release from South Korean girl group Girls' Generation. It was released on December 24, 2014, in Japan.
The DVD and Blu-ray features their third nationwide tour, visiting seven venues for a total of 17 shows. There will be four different versions: a DVD and Blu-ray version, both with a regular and limited edition. The limited editions will come with special footage content, a 44-page photobook pamphlet, and a tour documentary.[5]
Limited Edition DVD
attracting an estimated 200,000 spectators, and the tickets had already been sold out, bringing in NT$574.2 million.