Archive for August, 2009
Kanye West’s label, Universal, scored a legal victory last week in securing partial dismissal of a lawsuit concerning Kanye’s 2007 hit song “Good Life.”
Dayna Staggs, a singer and songwriter, filed a copyright infringement action in the United States District Court for the District of Maryland claiming that “Good Life” was identical in sound and melody to the chorus of Staggs’ song, “Volume of the Good Life.” On August 14, the Court granted, in part, Universal’s request to dismiss the case. Read the rest of this entry »
I’ll be in Atlantic City for the International DJ Expo on Monday August 10 through Wednesday August 12.
On Tuesday, I’ll be conducting a seminar on music copyright law: The Top 10 Things DJs Should Know about Copyright Law. The seminar will be at 2:30 in Diamond Room D at the Trump Taj Mahal. I’ll also be conducting free 30 minute one-on-one legal consultations throughout the Expo. Read the rest of this entry »
Now that you’ve written and recorded a song, how do you protect it? How do you copyright it?
The good news is that as long as it is your original song and you’ve written it down or recorded it, the song is entitled to copyright protection. Under the Copyright Law, a song is immediately entitled to copyright protection upon the satisfaction of the following criteria:
- It must be an “original work[] of authorship”; and
- It must be fixed “in any tangible medium of expression, now known or later developed,” such as written sheet music or a CD, MP3, or other recording. Read the rest of this entry »
So, here’s an interesting case pending in Federal Court in Texas: EsNtion, a dance music record label, has sued TM Studios, the maker and distributor of PrimeCuts, HitDisc, and other “Promotional Use Only” CDs, alleging copyright infringement for copying and distributing EsNtion’s songs (US District Court, Northern District of Texas, Dallas Division, Civil Case No. 07-CV-2027-L). Read the rest of this entry »