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Super Contributor
kurdy
Posts: 2,121
Registered: ‎02-18-2004

Re: Men At Work

I've known that Kookabura song since 4th grade, and even I've never noticed the snippet in "Down Under". It clearly is the same melody, but used so subtley--I probably would never have noticed had it not been pointed out. In fact, I've heard the song come on the radio several times since hearing about that lawsuit, and even then, I wasn't able to pick it out until now.

The Beatles did a similar thing, using part of Glenn Miller's "In The Mood" at the end of "All You Need Is Love", and I believe they ran into some trouble for it. So even the Fab Four weren't immune to that sort of thing.

This is somewhat off-topic, but first time I remember hearing "Down Under", I thought the guy was Jamaican. Anyone else have that experience?
Quote Originally Posted by Walters9515 View Post
i thought is did kurby right?
"This prank is my Sergeant Pepper's"--Bart Simpson
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Super Contributor
Posts: 1,589
Registered: ‎07-04-2006

Re: Men At Work

[CENTER]Colin Hay's Acoustic version of Down Under.

A little bit of stand up from Collin at 1st.
Song kicks in at 1:19

[YOUTUBE]owAPNHiRXOg[/YOUTUBE]


.. and here is his is response to the judgement.[/CENTER]
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Trusted Contributor
Rudolf von Hagenwil
Posts: 27,786
Registered: ‎08-09-2005

Re: Men At Work

[FONT="Courier New"]
+ 9'500'000 AU$ royalties "Down Under"
- 1'100'000 AU$ two bars Kookabura flute
= 8'400'000 AU$[/FONT]
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Super Contributor
Posts: 6,659
Registered: ‎07-17-2005

Re: Men At Work

Someone suggested that Men At Work re-release the song without the flute and all royalties go toward paying off Larrikin :smileyhappy:
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Super Contributor
claveslave
Posts: 264
Registered: ‎12-19-2005

Re: Men At Work



Stick that up on gearslutz. There's an author there who thinks he's an author.
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Super Contributor
Zooey
Posts: 16,021
Registered: ‎01-10-2002

Re: Men At Work

Plagiarism suits have been lost over nonsense even subtler than this. I'm thinking of the way Bette Midler sued.....and won.... when a car commercial featured a girl singing "Do Ya Wanna Dance?" slowly and sexily. Midler claimed that her "style had been appropriated". Not her song, her "style". What's the world coming to if you can't imitate somebody else's "style" ?
Tom Waits won a similar suit, but Nancy Sinatra lost hers. AFAIK, those cases had nothing to do with copyright because the underlying musical composition was validly licensed. They involved the right of publicity.
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Super Contributor
rasputin1963
Posts: 6,580
Registered: ‎02-10-2006

Re: Men At Work

They involved the right of publicity.
And that must be a very sticky province of the law, I should think....

Every paint-stroke takes you farther and farther away from your initial concept. And you have to be thankful for that. Wayne Thiebaud


Friend me on FACEBOOK!


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Super Contributor
Posts: 2,761
Registered: ‎07-12-2005

Re: Men At Work

Plagiarism suits have been lost over nonsense even subtler than this. I'm thinking of the way Bette Midler sued.....and won.... when a car commercial featured a girl singing "Do Ya Wanna Dance?" slowly and sexily. Midler claimed that her "style had been appropriated". Not her song, her "style". What's the world coming to if you can't imitate somebody else's "style" ?


White v. Samsung (1992)

The advertisement, which prompted the current dispute was for Samsung video-cassette recorders (VCRs). The ad depicted a robot, dressed in a wig, gown, and jewelry, which Deutsch consciously selected to resemble White’s hair and dress. The robot was posed next to a game board which is instantly recognizable as the Wheel of Fortune game show set, in a stance for which White is famous. The caption of the ad read: "Longest-running game show. 2012 A.D." Defendants referred to the ad as the "Vanna White" ad. Unlike the other celebrities used in the campaign, White neither consented to the ads nor was she paid.


What the hell is a VCR? :lol:

And will "Wheel of Fortune" still be on in only 2 more years??!?!?!?
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Super Contributor
Flogger59
Posts: 9,840
Registered: ‎10-22-2008

Re: Men At Work

The Beatles did a similar thing, using part of Glenn Miller's "In The Mood" at the end of "All You Need Is Love", and I believe they ran into some trouble for it. So even the Fab Four weren't immune to that sort of thing.
While the song was in the public domain, the Beatles and George Marti were sued for using the arrangement, which was still under copyright.
Originally Posted By Trace-P38
Flogger wins.
Originally Posted by Uma Floresta View Post
Because we floggers won the music war some time ago.
Originally Posted by Mike Riley View Post
Preaching to the choir Rush in on a whole different level to quote a movie You might listen to Rush but you cant here Rush
http://www.box.net/shared/x85lhnst14
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Super Contributor
Posts: 898
Registered: ‎10-19-2009

Re: Men At Work

zooey, I get the sense you are a lawyer or have significant legal training, so I figure I'd ask U. I dig this is in australia and you are US (I assume Australia is common law) , but do you think there is an opportunity for a laches defense in the Men at Work case? I'm not knowledgeable on the practicals of laches, I dig the basic concept and that's abt the limit of my exposure to it.
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Super Contributor
Zooey
Posts: 16,021
Registered: ‎01-10-2002

Re: Men At Work

zooey, I get the sense you are a lawyer or have significant legal training, so I figure I'd ask U.
I dig this is in australia and you are US (I assume Australia is common law) , but do you think there is an opportunity for a laches defense in the Men at Work case?

I'm not knowledgeable on the practicals of laches, I dig the basic concept and that's abt the limit of my exposure to it.


I'm a practicing IP attorney, but I'm not a litigator. It certainly sounds to me like the the copyright owner sat on his rights for an unreasonably long time.
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Super Contributor
Posts: 375
Registered: ‎07-30-2005

Re: Men At Work

Lawyers At Work. :facepalm:


Hey! You stole the first third of that from Jackson Brown!!! Somebody sue Phil!!!

Steve
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Super Contributor
Posts: 898
Registered: ‎10-19-2009

Re: Men At Work

I'd say more like "executives at work" - the lawyers might bring up the opportunity, even advise the client that -in their opinion - it would be a good idea for this and that reason, and then in litigation present the best case for their client -- but it's the client, the exec, the IP owner that has to give the "go"...it's their IP, it's their claim
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Frequent Contributor
miden
Posts: 97
Registered: ‎09-28-2005

Re: Men At Work

Reminds me of an old famous (I think) cartoon, where a cows head was being pulled by a person, the tail being pulled by another person, and a lawyer sitting in the middle milking the cow into a rather large bucket :smileyhappy:
https://soundcloud.com/miden-entertainment
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Super Contributor
Posts: 898
Registered: ‎10-19-2009

Re: Men At Work

And the milk is being drunk by an exec :smileyhappy:
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Super Contributor
Posts: 3,909
Registered: ‎08-21-2005

Re: Men At Work

The theme is obvious in the flute part, but what a ridiculous lawsuit and ruling. We live in desperate times indeed. I remember singing Kookaburra in kindergarten here in the states... Mrs. Roth's morning class in case you're wondering.
Waiting for acapella.harmony-central.com...
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Super Contributor
Posts: 6,659
Registered: ‎07-17-2005

Re: Men At Work

Here's an interview with Warren Fahey who created Larrikin Music and sold it in the late 80s. It's his take on the affair. http://mpegmedia.abc.net.au/rn/podcast/2010/02/bst_20100209_0807.mp3
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Super Contributor
rasputin1963
Posts: 6,580
Registered: ‎02-10-2006

Re: Men At Work

Reminds me of an old famous (I think) cartoon, where a cows head was being pulled by a person, the tail being pulled by another person, and a lawyer sitting in the middle milking the cow into a rather large bucket :smileyhappy:
My dad, a lawyer, has that very woodcut print framed lovingly in his study....:lol:

Every paint-stroke takes you farther and farther away from your initial concept. And you have to be thankful for that. Wayne Thiebaud


Friend me on FACEBOOK!


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Super Contributor
Posts: 1,589
Registered: ‎07-04-2006

Re: Men At Work

Here's an interview with Warren Fahey who created Larrikin Music and sold it in the late 80s. It's his take on the affair.

http://mpegmedia.abc.net.au/rn/podcast/2010/02/bst_20100209_0807.mp3


So the melody for Kookaburra is not even original.
WTF?
How is it possible for copyright to exist in a work that wasn't actually
composed by the supposed author?
Well at least the music wasn't.
Seems that Marion Sinclair adapted the "original" melody and may've even
simply changed the "original" lyrics to be "more Australian".

I wonder if defense lawyers actually knew about this and played it to the court?
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Super Contributor
Posts: 6,659
Registered: ‎07-17-2005

Re: Men At Work

let's see what the appeal comes up with.
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