The music industry can be both delicate and cutthroat. And quite a few different lawsuits through the years changed the way the industry operated for good. Letโs take a look at just a few music industry lawsuits and copyright suits that blew the whole thing wide open.
1. Spirit vs. Led Zeppelin
Just because youโre one of the biggest bands in the world doesnโt mean you get to steal music. However, some bands seem to get away with itโฆ and other bands get accused of stealing songs that they did not actually steal.
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The band Spirit famously sued Led Zeppelin for allegedly stealing the guitar solo from their 1968 song โTaurusโ for their infamous 1971 track โStairway To Heavenโ. It took years to launch the suit, but they finally launched the lawsuit in 2014. Sadly for Spirit, despite proving that Led Zeppelin had access to their song during a tour the two bands were part of, it was eventually ruled that the songs were not actually similar in 2016. The case was appealed, turned down, and eventually closed for good in 2020.
2. Chuck Berry vs. The Beach Boys
Chuck Berryโs guitar riffs have been sampled probably hundreds of times by now. Some bands, though, got a little too handsy with Berryโs music. The Beach Boys famously took Berryโs famous 1958 track โSweet Little Sixteenโ and altered the lyrics slightly before releasing it under their name as โSurfinโ USAโ in 1963. After a lawsuit threat, the bandโs manager handed over publishing rights to the song to Arc Music. Both Brian Wilson and Chuck Berry are now credited for the song.
While no lawsuit came to fruition, this is one of the very first big plagiarism cases in modern music history.
3. Queen and David Bowie vs. Vanilla Ice
You canโt just sample another bandโs song, not credit them, not pay them royalties, and expect to not have to deal with potential lawsuits. One-hit wonder Vanilla Ice famously sampled Queen and David Bowieโs bassline in the song โUnder Pressureโ for his 1990 hit song โIce Ice Babyโ.
Naturally, the powerhouse musicians werenโt happy about it. After launching a case against Ice, all parties settled the matter out of court and Ice had to pay them an undisclosed amount of money. Now, Bowie and Queen have songwriting credits on the track, despite initially wanting nothing to do with that particular โcollaborationโ.
4. CCRโs Label vs. John Fogerty
Well, this was a weird case of music industry lawsuits. John Fogerty was quite literally sued for sounding too much like John Fogerty.
Fogerty wrote songs and sang for much of Creedence Clearwater Revivalโs lifespan. After leaving the band, the record label Fantasy sued him for plagiarizing his own work and sounding too much like CCR. After releasing the solo track โThe Old Man Down The Roadโ in 1985, Fogerty was sued by Fantasy on the grounds that he plagiarized the 1970 CCR tune โRun Through The Jungleโ.
Thankfully, the courts took Fogertyโs side. But he still had to pay some hefty legal fees.
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