Tag: robin thicke
‘Blurred Lines’ Ruling Stuns The Music Industry

‘Blurred Lines’ Ruling Stuns The Music Industry

By Victoria Kim, Randy Lewis, and Ryan Faughnder, Los Angeles Times (TNS)

LOS ANGELES — So what effect will the “Blurred Lines” verdict have on the music industry?

That’s the question being asked after a federal jury in Los Angeles found Tuesday that the 2013 hit song “Blurred Lines” infringed on the Marvin Gaye chart-topper “Got to Give It Up,” awarding nearly $7.4 million to Gaye’s children.

The case focused on the similarities between the song and the legendary soul singer’s 1977 hit. Jurors found against singer-songwriters Pharrell Williams and Robin Thicke, but held harmless the record company and rapper T.I.

SO WHAT IS THE REACTION IN THE MUSIC INDUSTRY?

Los Angeles composer and producer Gregory Butler said Tuesday afternoon that his friends and colleagues in the industry were stunned by the verdict.

“You’ve made it illegal to reference previous material,” said Butler, also a managing director at music startup WholeWorldBand. “I’m never going to come up with something so radically different that it doesn’t contain references to something else.”

Joe Escalante, an early member of the Vandals punk rock band and an entertainment law attorney, said he was concerned that the jury’s decision had been driven by emotion rather than what’s protected under copyright law.

“This may put a smile on the Gaye family’s face, but it’s a dark day for creativity, and in the end, this will be a net loss for music fans,” he said. “Good news for lawyers and the bitter everywhere.”

Industry veteran Irving Azoff, who manages the Eagles and is chairman and chief executive of Azoff MSG Entertainment, said such disputes were normally resolved between music business insiders based on how many notes in a row were shared by two songs.

“It’s never been based on a jury’s opinion,” said Azoff, whose firm represents Williams on performance rights issues. “If we’re now entering into a gray area, that’s very scary.”

On the other hand, a veteran music industry executive said that protecting creative work was just as important to musicians, and that inspiration bordering on copying was becoming too common.

“Somebody should be protecting that,” said the executive, who asked not to be named because he might work with those involved in the case in the future. “If it has a chilling effect on copyright infringement, that should happen…. Stopping theft is what we’re talking about.”

WHAT WERE THE ARGUMENTS IN THE CASE?

The Gayes contended that they instantly recognized striking similarities between the two songs when they first heard “Blurred Lines.” They called to the stand a musicologist who analyzed the songs and concluded there was a “constellation” of eight similar elements. Others outside court had also noticed similarities.

An attorney for the Gaye children, Richard Busch, said there were copied elements — including the bass and keyboard line, the hook and a repeated theme — in all but two bars of “Blurred Lines.”

Busch also repeatedly pointed to statements made by the credited writers of the song — Thicke and Williams — referencing the late Motown legend in interviews about their writing process. Thicke said in several interviews that he suggested to Williams that they write something like “Got to Give It Up,” and Williams has said he was “trying to pretend” he was Gaye when he wrote it.

Thicke, Williams, and their attorneys brushed off the statements as casual remarks designed to sell a song — and in Thicke’s case, made under the influence while he was drunk and high. Their attorneys asked jurors instead to believe what the musicians said on the witness stand: that Williams alone wrote the song with no input from Thicke, and that neither Gaye nor his song was discussed in the song’s creation.

Thicke, during his turn on the stand, played a medley of pop songs on a keyboard to demonstrate that many of them share the same chord progression and can sound similar. He painted a less-than-flattering portrait of himself, saying he’d lied repeatedly in interviews and in sworn legal documents, trying to claim credit for part of writing the song that had become the biggest hit of his career by far.

HOW BIG A HIT WAS ‘BLURRED LINES’?

It was 2013’s biggest hit. The song brought in $5.6 million for Thicke, $5.2 million for Williams and another $5 million to $6 million for the record company, as well as an additional $8 million in publishing revenue.

(c)2015 Los Angeles Times, Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC

Photo: Nona Gaye, daughter of the late Marvin Gaye, with attorney Richard Busch, right, speaks to the media after a federal jury found Pharrell Williams and Robin Thicke guilty of copyright infringement at the Roybal Federal Courthouse in Los Angeles on Tuesday, March 10, 2015. The jury awarded the Gaye family $7.4 million in damages, stating that Williams and Thicke lifted portions of Gaye’s 1977 hit “Got to Give it Up” when they penned their chart-topping smash “Blurred Lines.” (Gina Ferazzi/Los Angeles Times/TNS)

Robin Thicke Says He Didn’t Write Controversial Hit

Robin Thicke Says He Didn’t Write Controversial Hit

Los Angeles (AFP) — Robin Thicke’s blockbuster but much criticized hit “Blurred Lines” grew even more controversial as the singer revealed he never wrote it, according to court documents.

The Hollywood Reporter on Monday printed Thicke’s previously confidential disposition to a Los Angeles court where he volunteered that he had been high on the painkiller Vicodin and alcohol when he recorded the song and that he was not sober during later media interviews.

Thicke, speaking under oath, said that Pharrell Williams — who later released the smash hit “Happy” — had written “Blurred Lines” on which both perform. Thicke said he was envious and lied.

“After making six albums that I wrote and produced myself, the biggest hit of my career was written and produced by somebody else and I was jealous and wanted some of the credit,” he said.

“The record would have happened with or without me. I just was lucky enough to be there when he (Williams) wrote it and I was in the room,” Thicke said, according to the court documents reproduced by The Hollywood Reporter.

“Blurred Lines” was a worldwide hit in 2013 but faced charges it was misogynistic due to its refrain — “I’m gonna take a good girl / I know you want it” — and an accompanying video that prominently featured naked women.

The hearing in April was part of a court process over claims by Marvin Gaye’s children that “Blurred Lines” copied the late legend’s song “Got to Give it Up”. A trial is expected next year.

Thicke earlier said that “Blurred Lines” was inspired by the Motown great. In court, Thicke hinted that racial factors were at play in his earlier comments, saying he had been called the “white Marvin Gaye” and sought to “embellish” the connection.

Despite his frank admissions, Thicke said he was sober during the court appearance. He said his separation two months earlier from his wife, actress Paula Patton, had led him to clean up his lifestyle.

AFP Photo/Charley Gallay

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