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Plagiarism laws are killing music The industry is hampered by an absurd system that strangles the artistic process

Haters gonna hate and laywers gonna lawyer (Photo by Kevork Djansezian/Getty Images For dcp)

Haters gonna hate and laywers gonna lawyer (Photo by Kevork Djansezian/Getty Images For dcp)


October 27, 2020   6 mins

In 1838, a young English poet named Eliza Cook published “The Old Arm Chair”, a maudlin verse about mourning her mother. A sensation on both sides of the Atlantic, it was set to music by several composers, including Henry Russell in London and Samuel Carusi in Baltimore. Seven years later, the American copyright holder of Russell’s version sued Carusi for plagiarism under the 1831 Copyright Act. Although the melodies were substantially different, a Maryland jury found in the plaintiff’s favour; one of Carusi’s attorneys described the landmark case as “entirely novel in its features” and that it “presented some very perplexing questions as to what constituted ‘originality’ in musical composition”.

Here we are 175 years later, and those questions are more contested in the courts than ever. This month alone the US Supreme Court finally dismissed a long-running claim that Led Zeppelin plagiarised the introduction of “Stairway to Heaven” (1971) from Spirit’s instrumental “Taurus” (1968) but high-stakes copyright lawsuits against Katy Perry, Ed Sheeran and Taylor Swift continue to move through the legal system. Even in the midst of a pandemic, the vital business of deciding whether some songs sound too much like other songs goes on.

There is something inherently ludicrous at the best of times about judges and juries assessing copyright infringement claims based on the testimony of rival musicologists (“proverbially discordant among themselves,” as Carusi’s attorney put it) and their own inexpert understanding of the creative process, and these are not the best of times. The business of sueing over plagiarism — and it is a business — has been in overdrive since 2015, when a jury found that Robin Thicke’s and Pharrell Williams’ hit “Blurred Lines” (2013) had stolen from Marvin Gaye’s 1977 hit “Got to Give It Up”.

Even though the two basslines used different notes, rhythms, phrasing and scales, the jury decided, to the tune of $7.4m, that having a similar vibe was enough. It was a shocking, chilling verdict, and when Thicke and Williams lost an appeal in 2018, the author of the dissenting opinion stated that the verdict “allows the Gayes to accomplish what no one has before: copyright a musical style”. The judge added that the decision “establishes a dangerous precedent that strikes a devastating blow to future musicians and composers everywhere”.

Musicians and legal experts agree that this lousy decision has created a climate of fear, with artists awarding credits left, right and centre in order to fend off the faintest possibility of a lawsuit. Almost as soon as some listeners noticed that the chorus of Taylor Swift’s “Look What You Made Me Do” (2017) was amusingly similar to that of Right Said Fred’s “I’m Too Sexy” (1991), Swift credited the British band, even though nobody seriously thought that she plundered 90s novelty hits for melodies. If you’ve ever wondered why modern hits seem to have so many songwriters, then this neurotic credit inflation is one reason. Credits are becoming more a legal fiction than an accurate account of a song’s creation because it is easier to settle even a frivolous claim than to risk years of costly litigation.

The “Blurred Lines” verdict was unusually hostile but it exposed the underlying weaknesses of copyright law as it relates to music. Other artforms have a much more mature relationship with the nature of influence. While a screenwriter or director can’t just plagiarise someone else’s work wholesale, the likes of Quentin Tarantino and Ryan Murphy are free to stuff their work with homages and allusions. Nobody would claim that a Mexican stand-off, or a socially awkward detective, or a pram rolling down steps, or a serial killer who makes costumes from human skin are legally-protected concepts. And every Shakespeare-lover knows that he took raw material from extant sources without being a mere copyist. Art should be a lively conversation between past and present, with the minimum of obstacles.

Not so for music, where litigation has little to do with the reality of creativity. For a start, most instances of “plagiarism” are unintentional. Songwriters are human jukeboxes whose instinct for realising when a new melody resembles an old one can never be infallible. After Sam Smith gave a cut of “Stay with Me” (2014) to Tom Petty for its inadvertent resemblance to “I Won’t Back Down” (1989), Petty was sympathetic: “All my years of songwriting have shown me these things can happen. Most times you catch it before it gets out the studio door but in this case it got by… A musical accident, no more no less.”

Unfortunately, the judge who ruled in 1976 that George Harrison had plagiarised the Chiffons on “My Sweet Lord” (1971) set a precedent that did not allow for accidents: “Did Harrison deliberately use the music of ‘He’s So Fine’? I do not believe he did so deliberately. Nevertheless… this is, under the law, infringement of copyright, and is no less so even though subconsciously accomplished.”

Some elements of copyright law are hopelessly outdated. The old defence that the defendant did not have “access” to the plaintiff’s song is meaningless in an era of streaming. The song is on Spotify or YouTube? Then you have access, whether or not you know it exists. Nor has the law kept pace with songwriting norms. Most hits are now constructed by several specialists: the beatmaker, the topline melody writer, and so on. Yet when a jury ruled (dubiously) that Katy Perry’s “Dark Horse” (2014) had copied the beat from Flame’s “Joyful Noise” (2008), even the lyricists were ordered to pay damages. The ongoing suit against Taylor Swift is of a different order of stupidity: her song “Shake It Off” (2014) bears no resemblance to 3LW’s “Playas Gon’ Play” (2000) except the common phrases “Players gonna play” and “haters gonna hate.” The writers of Playas Gon’ Play are claiming ownership of figures of speech.

The history of popular music skews towards the free flow of ideas, from the melodic recycling of the folk tradition to the cheerful repurposing of old songs in sample collages and mash-ups. Yet the law keeps getting in the way. The notorious 1991 case Grand Upright Music, Ltd. v. Warner Bros. Records Inc. destroyed the tradition that gave us freewheeling, sample-happy records like the Beastie Boys’ Paul’s Boutique and De La Soul’s 3 Feet High and Rising. Even now, uncleared samples bar De La Soul’s classic work from streaming services. Samples are at least demonstrably someone else’s work but how can you own a generic beat or common chord progression? As Katy Perry’s lawyer Christine Lepera complained in court, the writers of Joyful Noise were “trying to own basic building blocks of music — the alphabet of music that should be available to everyone”.

Who benefits from strangling creativity in this way? Certainly not music fans. The most compelling case for copyright law is protection for the little guy. It feels ethically right that struggling blues musicians won songwriting credits from Led Zeppelin in the 1970s and tragic that the drummer Gregory Coleman died homeless in 2006 even as his performance on the Winstons’ “Amen, Brother” (1969) became the most sampled breakbeat of all time. The idea that songwriters shouldn’t starve while others grow fat off their work has an instinctive moral appeal.

Most plagiarism suits, however, have less uplifting consequences. Bridgeport Music, the second plaintiff in the Blurred Lines case, has made millions of dollars from hundreds of suits over unlicensed samples without any benefit to the original songwriters. The 2005 case Bridgeport Music, Inc. v Dimension Films (2005) overturned the de minimis defence of sampling, making even an unrecognisably altered two-second sample a matter for litigation, yet the composer of the sampled song, George Clinton, didn’t get a cent because, he claimed, Bridgeport “stole” his publishing rights (although the courts ruled it legal).

Copyright acquisition can lead to Kafkaesque scenarios. John Fogerty was sued by his former record label over a resemblance between his song “The Old Man Down the Road” (1985) and one of his hits for Creedence Clearwater Revival 15 years earlier. Because the label owned Creedence’s publishing rights, Fogerty became the only person ever to be sued for plagiarising himself. “It was very cruel,” he reflected.

This year’s economic turbulence has seen a boom in investors scooping up song catalogues. While this is primarily to profit from streaming revenues (“Music and booze are only two industries that flourish when people are both happy and sad,” one wealth manager told Billboard), the potential for a bonanza lawsuit will not be lost on them. One of the plaintiffs sueing Ed Sheeran is a company called Structured Asset Sale. So much for the little guy.

There needs to be some legal deterrence against bad actors flooding Spotify with note-for-note replicas of classic songs, or big stars stealing demos submitted by hopeful young songwriters, but the bar should be extremely high. Currently, the typical case is a cynical waste of time and money which gives the public the false impression that artists are amoral thieves without two original ideas to rub together. A successful song is both an artwork and a commercial asset but the plagiarism-suit racket perverts the art. Old songs become roadblocks to new ones. The natural process of being influenced, consciously or subconsciously, is recast as larceny.

This was never the intention. “The immediate effect of our copyright law is to secure a fair return for an ‘author’’s creative labour,” said Supreme Court Justice Potter Stewart in 1975. “But the ultimate aim is, by this incentive, to stimulate artistic creativity for the general public good.” The post-“Blurred Lines” epidemic of litigation and nervous celf-censorship makes a travesty of that aim by suppressing creativity. Enough. Throw all of these cases out, reform copyright legislation, and let art do what it does. And you know what? Carusi’s version of “The Old Arm Chair” was better.

 


Dorian Lynskey is an author, journalist and UnHerd columnist.

Dorianlynskey

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G Harris
G Harris
3 years ago

Crazy, but inevitable, I suppose.

A brilliantly laid out article with various great examples demonstrating how a self-proclaimed ‘creative’ industry is ceasing to be just that.

A business slowly but surely consuming itself and its children aided and abetted by the legal profession in pursuit of profits, the bulk of which will surely be enjoyed by the very rare few.

Basically, anyone writing a piece of music today is not only duty-bound to be aware of every other piece of music literally ever written, however seemingly completely different, particularly to the ‘untrained’ ear, but also extremely wary that the recognition that they likely crave for it might be a cruel double-edged sword should it succeed.

Very sad.

G Harris
G Harris
3 years ago

‘Plagiarism laws are killing music’

I’m still ‘young enough’ to remember when ‘Home Taping’ was in the frame.

croftyass
croftyass
3 years ago
Reply to  G Harris

Followed by Napster!

Kiran Grimm
Kiran Grimm
3 years ago
Reply to  G Harris

The slogan used by the music industry’s copyright police was:
“Home taping is killing music – and it’s illegal”.

Pop music, I have noticed, did not die. Performers of moderate talent continue to get rich. In the era of the MP3, Spotify, YouTube etc, where a vast catalogue of the world’s music is widely available, pop music is more repetitive and derivative than ever.

G Harris
G Harris
3 years ago
Reply to  Kiran Grimm

‘In the era of the MP3, Spotify, YouTube etc, where a vast catalogue of the world’s music is widely available, pop music is more repetitive and derivative than ever.’

Maybe a bit unfair, but I partly blame the Scandanavians, the Germans and, more specifically, the Swedes for this.

Around about the beginning of the Britney era, much sought after, highly talented producers there seemed to have pretty much nailed the formula for the perfect pop song in terms how the human brain reacted favourably to its tune, breaks, chorus, lyrics etc.

They inadvertently were responsible for turning an art into far more of a more of a science, seemingly lowering the risks of bombing involved by creating a template for what was, by definition previously, a creative, often random, largely serendipitous process with a famously costly, high failure rate.

The result, of course, was the ‘derivative and repetitive’, yet undeniably more consistently ‘good’ pop music we know today.

Kiran Grimm
Kiran Grimm
3 years ago
Reply to  G Harris

Your final paragraph suggests you are congratulating rather than blaming the Germans and the Swedes for their successful creation of the perfect pop song formula. In this (not very brave) new world the quality musical product can be offered to the public with minimal risk to backers’ capital.

Are you by any chance a marketing consultant?

David Barry
David Barry
3 years ago

As Branford Marsalis said when discussing improvisation in jazz: “… there’s 12 notes, what’s going to be new? You honestly think you’re going to play something that hasn’t been played already?”

robert.kaye
robert.kaye
3 years ago

I don’t think the problem really lies with plagiarism laws so much as that the use of juries and the ludicrous flexibility they have in relation to damages in the US adds a huge amount of unpredictability that creates a litigation industry.

James Pelton
James Pelton
3 years ago

This is a problem that ultimately has to do with much more than music. It has to do with there being too many lawyers with nothing better or more ethical to do. We in the West have tied ourselves in copyright knots in culture, tech industries and countless other arenas. What started out as a way to ensure that creators were fairly rewarded has become an appalling deterrent to innovation. China has no qualms about ignoring our copyright laws and laughing at the stupid things we do with them while they charge forward building on our innovations while we persecute each other legally instead.

mike otter
mike otter
3 years ago

I think this comes down to personal perceptions, subjective aesthetic taste etc for private individuals, juries and judges alike. Attitude to/knowledge of music are important too. I think the shared “minor line cliche” in Taurus, Stairway to Heaven, Freebird and All Along the Watchtower (plus many more) absolve Led Zep here. However i think Thicke/Williams DID rip off “Got to Give It Up” because to me the sound, rhythm and phrasing are lifted. I may be wrong as who knows if Thicke/Williams came up with it by co-incidence? I do know i have a lot of respect for Marvin Gaye’s work despite his short, chaotic life and not much for Pharrell/Williams. I expect most American jurors feel the same. The intellectual property aspect is pretty much un-navigable in most cases….some melodies/rhythms are so old as to be untraceable…apply thi slogic to 1-4-5 note blues progressions: Malian Lute player sues Ibo slaves who sue cotton pickers who sue gospel singers who sue Leadbelly who sues Eddie Cochrane who sues the Rolling Stones who sue George Thorogood etc etc You could also do the same thing from Mali Lute Man to Berber to Clesmatic to Jewish to Gypsy buskers to Rock n Roll etc. Bear in mind that until popular music went industrial-scale people often traded or gave away songs. I have always suspected Mozart Jnr got some of his material from earwigging Gypsy camp fire parties and using auto-didactic musical memory. I don’t doubt Slayer realise that Myxolidian, Dorian and Locrian scales are Indo/Jewish/Arab/Afro origin but are no more copywritable than a screwdriver or a hammer – didn’t stop them making some of the best music ever written IMO!

Michael Tomlinson
Michael Tomlinson
3 years ago

Quite right. Composers have been engaged in a conversation with each other, bouncing off each other’s ideas since the age of Handel and Bach. Placing this within a clunky legal framework is the enemy of creativity. As a minimum, the prosecution should have to demonstrate that harm has been caused, the original musician has suffered loss. Most of these examples would fall to the ground on this basis. The harm is being caused by the litigation of a free creative process.

Charles Rense
Charles Rense
3 years ago

All art is built upon thousands of years of art that came before it. The completely original idea is a powerful illusion because most people can barely grasp the last fifty years of artistic influences that fed into a given piece.

G Harris
G Harris
3 years ago

Funny how they barely ever go after cr@p tunes or artists no-one’s ever heard of.

‘Where there’s brass there’s muck’, to subvert a well known phrase, and in this case ‘the muck’ normally wears a sharp suit and carries a brief.

Last Jacobin
Last Jacobin
3 years ago

Great piece. And as the pot of money associated with making music has shrunk – first due to streaming and now the ending of live performances due to Covid – the problem will only be magnified.

mike otter
mike otter
3 years ago

I suppose it comes down to juries knowledge of music for the first court judgement, but with the ladder of appeals i imagine more judges can read music/musical theory the higher you go. With 6:3 for conservatives on the SCOTUS i expect the majority will have some sort of musical training. They could even form a band, perhaps Jazz, Chamber Music or whatever and leave the 3 liberals to form a Drill outfit: “Cholita” Sotomayor and “Skag” Kagan feat. “Bruiser” Breyer…..

Roger Inkpen
Roger Inkpen
3 years ago
Reply to  mike otter

No idea what that means – but it sounds hilarious.

NIGEL PASSMORE
NIGEL PASSMORE
3 years ago

Surely on this basis, in the World of Blues, every song that started #Woke up this mornin’..# and featured dah, dah, dah dah at some point would mean every second Blues track every written would be a breach of original copyright?

Regards

NHP

Brian Dorsley
Brian Dorsley
3 years ago

There was a time when people created music simply for the pleasure it brought others rather than for the dollars it raked in. We don’t need the music industry to create music, we have it already in ourselves,

Fraser Bailey
Fraser Bailey
3 years ago

Interesting – I knew there was a lot of this going on but I didn’t know that it was all-pervasive and extending to ‘a groove’ or a basic chord progression.

John Stone
John Stone
3 years ago

Perhaps it just adds to the entertainment – it is better than having to listen to them.

Kevin Henderson
Kevin Henderson
3 years ago

I am 100% with the author on this, but how do you decide if music has been plagiarised? The problem has been identified but I would like to have seen some thoughts on how to solve it.

perthside
perthside
3 years ago

As has been said many times before: all the best music has been written. Going by most of the trash released these days by so called artists does in my opinion tend to support that thesis.

mindovermud
mindovermud
3 years ago

I daresay if someone could copyright “the Wheel”, they would.

But must be difficult for “THE BLUES”…. as its about all i can play on guitar, and yes generally it is only 3 chords-ish, + the occaisional 6th, 7th or minor thrown in. Yes it comes as an 8bar, 12 bar or a 16bar, but I normally cant count that well, so alternate a bit.

But Hey! every blues song is Unique, but also every blues song has similar family roots, and some can be very similar. Songs are frequently reminescent of each other, that shouldnt be a crime.

Imitation was the sincerest form of flattery.

David J
David J
3 years ago

Just listened to these two afresh, and they really are very different.
Not the first time a judgement has seemed utterly bizarre.