Liability Controversies In Entertainment


            The entertainment industry is famous for being the source for many legal controversies.  Issues dealing with plagiarism, performing licenses, and infringement are rampant throughout the entertainment world.  Considering the numerous laws and regulations protecting creative assets, it becomes easy to see how often legal cases can happen.
            In one case in Korea, the Hyundai Department Store was accused of illegally playing music throughout their store and was demanded royalties by the Federation of Korean Music Performers (FKMP) and Korean Association of Phonogram Producers (KAPP).  Normally, any place that plays music for their patrons to hear, including live music venues and shopping stores, performance licenses need to be obtained.  However, the case was dismissed because the court deemed that the music was played using an online music service provider and cannot be seen as music actually for sale.  The Hyundai Department Store was in a legal agreement to play music supplied by KT Music, a local music provider.  Cases involving performing music in some way are always tedious.  In a previous post, I mentioned that small venues have been forced to shut down their live music because of their inability to pay for the licenses or even regulate the performing of only original songs.
            Plagiarism is no stranger within the world of music.  Recently, will.i.am was reported to have used a sample from DJs Arty andMat Zo without permission.  Will.i.am contacted Arty after hearing the song “Rebound” and wanted to collaborate.  When Arty expressed his interest in this venture, will.i.am took the positive response as permission record his vocals over the existing song to record as a new version, “Let’s Go”.  Will.i.am believed he was in his legal right to use the producers’ song because he credited Arty in the liner notes, thinking this was all the permission he needed.  In my strictly personal opinion, I feel that much of today’s popular music is mostly comprised of unoriginal content.  While many aspiring music producers now have more accessible resources to hone their craft, they can tend to create lazy and uninspired works by taking samples from other artists and piggy-backing off of their success.  As with the case involving will.i.am, taking another artist’s craft and using it to create your own can lose the respect from many followers.
            The BlackKeys have claimed that a casino used a song of theirs in their advertisements.  Pinnacle Entertainment, the company that runs the L’Auberge Casino Resort Lake Charles, and Manhattan Production Music, the company that sells similar-sounding songs for advertising purposes, are being accused of using the song “Howlin’ For You”.  The band has also sued Pizza Hut and Home Depot in the past for using their songs, as well.  As an artist, I can understand the frustration of hearing a song I created being used for other purposes with no mention of it being my original work or without being compensated.  But, with the vast amount of music being created every day, there are only so many chord progression combinations used within popular music that the possibility of coincidences is bound to happen.

This entry was posted on Sunday, May 12, 2013. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0. You can leave a response.

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