Posts Tagged ‘songwriting credits’

5th February
2010
written by Ray Schuck

Nearly 30 years after it topped the charts, an Australian judge ruled yesterday that the Men at Work song “Down Under” copied the song “Kookaburra Sits in the Old Gum Tree.”  The claim revolves around the flute riff from the Men at Work song.  Men at Work now face paying 60% of the song’s income to the rightholders for “Kookaburra.”  Throughout the history of popular music, these kinds of instances have popped up here and there.  The Beach Boys were required to give Chuck Berry writing credit on “Surfin’ USA” when a court ruled that it was a copy of Berry’s “Sweet Little Sixteen.”  Later, George Harrison had to surrender royalties for the song “My Sweet Lord” when a court found that he unintentionally copied The Chiffons’ song “He’s So Fine.”  And, of course, with the rise of sampling in the 1980s and 1990s, determination of what constitutes being copied and what doesn’t became murkier.

What do you think?  Is each of these songs a copy of the other?  What should count as copying?  And what other pop songs sound like previous ones?

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