Copyright issues
an impression of dejà vu on this forum ...
first of all it's not a sample.
You can tell it's been inspired by it but it is different
chic's bass line is a 4 bar cycle, queen is a 2 bar.
the first bar is similar but what is it ?
3 quarter notes of the same note...
Captain sensible's WOT is much closer.
Rapper's delight IS a sample
first of all it's not a sample.
You can tell it's been inspired by it but it is different
chic's bass line is a 4 bar cycle, queen is a 2 bar.
the first bar is similar but what is it ?
3 quarter notes of the same note...
Captain sensible's WOT is much closer.
Rapper's delight IS a sample
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jeskola wrote:good times - chicChris J wrote:not that one again.jeskola wrote:surley "another one bites the dust"
thats what makes the track - the bassline.
the sample is blindingly obviuos.
what sample ?
Technically it wasn't a sample as The Sugarhill Gang had session musicians to play the backing tracks. For Rapper's Delight it was actually the band Positive Force. On some later tracks the Sugarhill house band included some of the core members of Tackhead; Doug Wimbush, Keith LeBlanc and Skip McDonald. Rapper's Delight was actually recorded some years before the widespread availability of sampling technology.
Ah ok, I thought it was 2 vinyls looping the bass, but the strings are from the original, no ?palimpsest73 wrote:jeskola wrote:good times - chicChris J wrote: not that one again.
what sample ?
Technically it wasn't a sample as The Sugarhill Gang had session musicians to play the backing tracks. For Rapper's Delight it was actually the band Positive Force. On some later tracks the Sugarhill house band included some of the core members of Tackhead; Doug Wimbush, Keith LeBlanc and Skip McDonald. Rapper's Delight was actually recorded some years before the widespread availability of sampling technology.
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explain (without giving us your usual marx brother's in jail example please) ?computo wrote:Are freaking DAFT?jahnlay wrote:There's no copyright on basslines, only on the melody or lyrics of songs.
ever heard of Vanilla Ice?
Queen?
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Particularly because the vocal on the chorus (the title phrase) is the same as the bass line, hence it is considered as the melodyjeskola wrote:surley "another one bites the dust"
thats what makes the track - the bassline.
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While on the subject of plagiarism and similarity, has anyone felt a ressemblance between Gorillaz " feel good inc" and the Kinks "sunny afternoon" ?
windmill windmill for the land
The Taxman’s Run off with my dough
Hold on, checked the web on this subject and it's old news. it's so obvious...
windmill windmill for the land
The Taxman’s Run off with my dough
Hold on, checked the web on this subject and it's old news. it's so obvious...
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remember, Vanilla Ice used the bassline from Under Pressure?
Without permission?
there was a big stink about it?
Queen didnt sue, but its publicly accepted that they didnt sue, because Van Winkle agreed to pay them.
Basslines are definetly copyright-able.
I think you meant, hooks can be copyrighted, not chord structure. Basslines certainly are integral parts of songs, and can be considered the hook of a song.
Any characteristic that makes a song unique is copyrighted, its just the harmony that cant be.
Without permission?
there was a big stink about it?
Queen didnt sue, but its publicly accepted that they didnt sue, because Van Winkle agreed to pay them.
Basslines are definetly copyright-able.
I think you meant, hooks can be copyrighted, not chord structure. Basslines certainly are integral parts of songs, and can be considered the hook of a song.
Any characteristic that makes a song unique is copyrighted, its just the harmony that cant be.
Computo, we're talking about re-creating basslines and what are the risks, not sampling.computo wrote:remember, Vanilla Ice used the bassline from Under Pressure?
Without permission?
there was a big stink about it?
Queen didnt sue, but its publicly accepted that they didnt sue, because Van Winkle agreed to pay them.
Basslines are definetly copyright-able.
I think you meant, hooks can be copyrighted, not chord structure. Basslines certainly are integral parts of songs, and can be considered the hook of a song.
Any characteristic that makes a song unique is copyrighted, its just the harmony that cant be.
Vanilla Ice sampled the Queen/Bowie record. Whatever bit you're sampling off a recording needs a licence to use (in principle). interestingly here's what he says on how and why it was settled out of court :
Ice claims Suge Knight forced the issue at gunpoint: "He took me over to the balcony, and he had me look over. He says to me, 'You're gonna sign these papers'... I signed it. I gave millions away."
Recreating a bassline doesn't require licencing. All you risk is being accused of plagiarism, but because like I said, tons of complaints are filed each year for plagiarism, only the ones with a similar melody are considered and not all of them (mostly none) are won by the plaintiff.
It often takes years over the rip-off of a melody, imagine for a bass line...
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Various courts have implied that taking a riff or bass line (simply playing it, not sampling) can infringe the copyright in a composition if the riff is central to the song. The classic example is the riff from Pretty Woman, though the Supreme Court declined to state if using the riff constituted excessive copying because it wasn't relevant to the issue of parody.
More recently, James Newton lost his argument against the Beastie Boys that a four note flute riff qualified as a protectible composition. I wouldn't bet on the outcome, though, if the riff to Satisfaction (for example) was at issue instead of four random notes taken out of context.
More recently, James Newton lost his argument against the Beastie Boys that a four note flute riff qualified as a protectible composition. I wouldn't bet on the outcome, though, if the riff to Satisfaction (for example) was at issue instead of four random notes taken out of context.
but again the Pretty woman riff is bass AND guitar, and the guitar is playing the melody. (and if you're talking about the same case I'm thinking of, they had credited Orbison and the other writer in the first place, it was a case of prejudice as it was a parody,)Submersible wrote:Various courts have implied that taking a riff or bass line (simply playing it, not sampling) can infringe the copyright in a composition if the riff is central to the song. The classic example is the riff from Pretty Woman, though the Supreme Court declined to state if using the riff constituted excessive copying because it wasn't relevant to the issue of parody.
More recently, James Newton lost his argument against the Beastie Boys that a four note flute riff qualified as a protectible composition. I wouldn't bet on the outcome, though, if the riff to Satisfaction (for example) was at issue instead of four random notes taken out of context.
And the newton case proves like I said that even in the case of a melody, the plaintiffs not often wins.
So, any case of bass considered as central in a court case ?
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The 2 Live Crew case is as close I think you're going to get. Supreme Court justices aren't exactly known for their golden ears, so the riff in Oh Pretty Woman is referred to as the "bass riff" by the Court. You can debate whether it really was a bass riff, but the Court thought that it was.Chris J wrote: So, any case of bass considered as central in a court case ?
Further, it's pretty clear that the Court did not consider the bass riff to be any part of the "melody" of the song. It's absolutely clear that the appeals court did not consider the bass riff to be the melody, but nonetheless thought it was the "heart" of the song.
You're right that the Supreme Court did not use that conclusion (because it's not germane to the issue of parody), but they didn't reject it either. This leaves open the possibility that a riff can be protectible even if it is not the melody.
Bottom line is that I would be cautious when recreating a bassline that a non-musician could easily recognize as being part of a copyrighted song. I wouldn't want to be a test case.
I wouldn't be particularly worried as you have programmed it yourself and aren't using sampled "loop material".
I mean how many psytrance or trance tunes have virtual identical bassline structures.
Let alone 4 bar boogie progressions for blues or certain similarites between basslines in D'n'B , Reggae , Dub and pop music for example.
How many "original variations" can you have on a rolling 16th note bassline anyway.
I mean how many psytrance or trance tunes have virtual identical bassline structures.
Let alone 4 bar boogie progressions for blues or certain similarites between basslines in D'n'B , Reggae , Dub and pop music for example.
How many "original variations" can you have on a rolling 16th note bassline anyway.
My aren't the wings of butterflies beautiful and do they not make wonderful perturbations.....
The same reason that basslines aren't copyrighted is given for Sting receiving the royalties for the guitar line (Every Breathe You Take) sampled for the Puff Daddy B.I.G. tribute. It's completely played by Stuart Townsend and yet Sting gets the royalties because he wrote the song. Contentious, yes, should it be changed, yes, but that's how it is!
"It's better to burn out than to fade away!"
why should it be changed ? It's his song, (chord changes, and the arpeggio pattern) it was totally ripped off, why would somebody else take the credit (and $$$) ?jahnlay wrote:The same reason that basslines aren't copyrighted is given for Sting receiving the royalties for the guitar line (Every Breathe You Take) sampled for the Puff Daddy B.I.G. tribute. It's completely played by Stuart Townsend and yet Sting gets the royalties because he wrote the song. Contentious, yes, should it be changed, yes, but that's how it is!
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