- Grand Upright Music, Ltd. v. Warner Bros. Records Inc.
"Grand Upright Music, Ltd v. Warner Bros. Records Inc.", 780 F.Supp. 182 (S.D.N.Y. 1991), was a
copyright case heard by theUnited States District Court for the Southern District of New York . The court granted aninjunction against the defendants to prevent furthercopyright infringement of the plaintiff's song by sampling and referred them for criminal prosecution. The judgment changed thehip hop music industry, requiring that any future music sampling be preapproved by the original copyright owners to avoid a lawsuit.The case
Biz Markie , arapper signed toWarner Bros. Records , had sampled a portion of the music from the song "Alone Again (Naturally) " by singer/songwriterGilbert O'Sullivan , for use in "Alone Again", a track from Markie's third album, "I Need a Haircut ". Biz Markie and his production and recording companies were listed as co-defendants with Warner Bros. in the subsequent lawsuit.Judge Kevin Thomas Duffy granted an injunction against the defendant,
Warner Bros. Records , despite Warner Bros.' claim that Grand Upright did not own a valid copyright in the sampled song. Warner Bros. denied that Grand Upright owned the copyright to the song, though Grand Upright produced documentation that O'Sullivan had transferred title to them, and O'Sullivan himself testified to that regard. It also appears that the defendants unsuccessfully urged the court to take note of how common unapproved sampling was in the industry, because the court noted that "the defendants...would have this court believe that stealing is rampant in the music business and, for that reason, their conduct here should be excused."The decision received some criticism for stating that "the most persuasive evidence that the copyrights are valid and owned by the plaintiff" was that Warner Bros. had previously attempted to obtain permission to use the song. However, this would not legally establish that Grand Upright was in fact the owner, but only that Warner Bros.' believed that the song was copyrighted by "someone", which would make their infringement knowing and willful. As Grand Upright had provided evidence that specifically established the copyright was theirs, the ruling did not hinge on this point, however.
The court wrote that "it is clear that the defendants knew that they were violating the plaintiff's rights as well as the rights of others. Their only aim was to sell thousands upon thousands of records. This callous disregard for the law and for the rights of others requires not only the preliminary injunction sought by the plaintiff but also sterner measures." The judge then referred the matter to a
United States Attorney for criminal prosecution due to the defendants' intentional copyright infringement.Impact on music
As a result of the court case, the sound of hip-hop music, heavily based upon combinations of various samples from various sources, was forced to change. Records such as those produced by
The Bomb Squad for Public Enemy, filled with literally dozens of samples, were no longer possible: each and every sample had to be cleared to avoid legal action. Sample clearance fees prohibited the use of more than one or two samples for most recordings, with some original recording artists requesting up to 100% of the publishing for use of a sample. As a result interpolation (replaying the requested sample using new instrumentalists, and using the newly recorded version and simply paying the songwriters--and not the artist or the label--for use of the composition) became prevalent in the industry, especially in the work ofDr. Dre ."Alone Again" is not available on current releases of Markie's "Haircut" album. His next album was entitled "All Samples Cleared!"
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