Ed Sheeran Won. What Is The Lesson?
Музыка
In this livestream, I discuss why Ed Sheeran won his lawsuit for his song "Thinking Out Loud" vs Marvin Gaye's song "Let's Get It On" and what the lessons learned are.
Apply for videographer/video editor: rickbeato.com/jobs
📚The Beato Ultimate Bundle - $99 FOR ALL OF Rick's Courses. Get it here: ⇢ rickbeato.com
📘- The Beato Book Interactive - $99.00 value
🎸 - Beato Beginner Guitar - $159.00 value
👂- The Beato Ear Training Program - $99.00 value
🎸- The Quick Lessons Pro Guitar Course - $79.00 value
… all for just $99.00
Get it here: rickbeato.com
My Beato Club supporters:
Justin Scott
Terence Mark
Farren Mahjoor
Jason Murray
Lucienne Kilpatrick
Alexander Young
Jason Wagner
Todd Ladner
Rob Kline
Nicholas Long
Tim Benson
Leonardo Martins da Costa Rodrigues
Eddie Perez
David Solomon
MICHAEL JOYCE
Stephen Stubbs
colin stead
Jonathan Wentworth-Linton
Patrick Payne
MATTHEW KARIS
Matthew Barouch
Shaun Samuels
Danny Kurywchak
Gregory Reedy
Sean Coleman
Alexander Verbitskiy
CL Turner
Jason Pappafotis
John Fulford
Margaret Carno
Robert C
David M Combs
Eric Flatt
Reto Spoerli
Herr Moritz Adam
Monte St. Johns
Jon Beezley
Peter DeVault
Eric Nabstedt
Eric Beggs
Rich Germano
Brian Bloom
Peter Pillitteri
Пікірлер: 2 100
The real lesson is the Lawyers always win 💰
@kipponi
Жыл бұрын
Yes. Those hyenas even I like hyenas.
@jimisjamtracks
Жыл бұрын
Exactly
@pesto12601
Жыл бұрын
Don't paint such a broad picture... 99.5% of lawyers don't even do the trial work you associate with "bad lawyers"... the majority of doing research and background work, and doing right by their clients... and are good people!
@Jz2CoolDude
Жыл бұрын
Exactly!!! Lawyers created over 8 years of paid work for themselves...what a joke!
@jillsteffes735
Жыл бұрын
Real reason is plaintiffs had zero case.
It’s amazing to grow up in a time when this level of music theory is delivered for free by Rick, regularly as a commentary.
Ed found over a hundred songs that use the same cords and even songs that came out years before the song he was accused of copying and thats how he won. He said this in an interview.
@TheDevilWAH
20 күн бұрын
he didnt so much just find the songs, he took his guitar to court and played the same cord patten and sung a few lines from the all with out changing cord patten. nothing beats a practical demonstration.
@gamingclipz7309
16 күн бұрын
It’s because there is only 12 chords… if you copyright chords no music could be made… now like 60k songs come out on Spotify a month…..
Sheeran's lawyer told jurors he found 80 songs that contain the same chord progression as “Let’s Get it On,” with 33 coming before the Gaye song was released in 1973. Sheeran was actually sued by Structured Asset Sales, owners of a third of the copyright on the Gaye song. In the end, owners of the publishing rights for both songs won, as both songs received a major increase in exposure.
@smallworldbigworld-yi3xw
Жыл бұрын
Probably as big a reason to do these lawsuits, as anything.
@sharpvidtube
Жыл бұрын
It would take a lot of listens on Spotify to cover the legal costs?
@michaelfarkas2257
Жыл бұрын
yes marvin gaye and sheeran needed increase in exposure
@BrianMcBrearty
Жыл бұрын
Not SAS here.
@tattoofthesun
Жыл бұрын
@@michaelfarkas2257 ha ha ha ha
Ed Sheeran was a major influence on the Beatles.
@davej.meister5421
Жыл бұрын
How so? Are you trying to be funny? Ed Sheeran wasn't even yet in diapers when the Beatles first hit the U.S. scene.
@Mucving
Жыл бұрын
You must be fun at parties.
@ForestDa1865
Жыл бұрын
Glad they went with Hey Jude for the song title instead of Hey Dude though
@davej.meister5421
Жыл бұрын
@@Mucving Who must be fun at parties? Hint: I NEVER party.
@YorickWell
Жыл бұрын
😂I love that movie, too.
Adam Neeley brought up a good point in his latest video on this. Ed was writing within a genre, the pop soul ballad genre, hence why it sounds similar to other songs in the genre, if he used conventions outside of the genre, then he wouldn't be writing in the genre anymore. I feel like blurred lines lawsuit set a dangerous precedent for music in that now they can go after songs that have a similar feel or are in a similar genre.
@jantonisito
Жыл бұрын
I agree and that is a SERIOUS copyright issue - AI being trained WITHOUT any permission of the owner of the IP - both music and say fine arts.
@daviddeezmusic2313
Жыл бұрын
My opinion compeletley
@bdr518
Жыл бұрын
In my opinion, and I have zero legal training outside of a decent education in English reading comprehension and logic, this Ed Sheeran case was much closer to infringement than Blurred Lines ever was. I personally don’t believe either should be considered infringing, but I could at least SEE the connection in Sheeran’s case. That said, the real dark horse in every case is the jury and their ability to be swayed by the attorneys.
@RJWhitmore
Жыл бұрын
@@bdr518 I feel like with an uneducated jury, a poor deposition by the defendents, a judge that rules out important evidence, and a dose of some unethical lawyers and experts, you could have a court find that the Earth is flat - and then have that as precedent that everyone else must fight against. This is what happened in the Blurred Lines suit. It should be the case that the jury must have reached some level of education in the matter at hand, third parties should be able to put forth arguments for the court to consider (at their own expense), should be tried by a panel of educated judges, and lawyers and experts should be peer reviewed for meeting standards.
@eclecticmuso
Жыл бұрын
@@bdr518 Funny that you use the expression dark horse as that was another frivolous lawsuit that hinged on being able to copyright a descending minor scale and Flame won, another dangerous precedent.
The fact is certain chords go together to work properly and considering there are only 7 notes in the music scale it is inevitable that there are going to be similar compositions popping up occasionally.
@UserNameWasCensored
Жыл бұрын
Twelve notes 😁 It just might be time to buy the Beato Bundle to freshen up...
@tonytricks
Жыл бұрын
@@UserNameWasCensored 7 notes in the scale,twelve notes in the octave
@TheTomnom
Жыл бұрын
well put
@artmanjohn2
Жыл бұрын
Yes, remember "My Sweet Lord" by George Harrison and the song "She's So Fine". and that lawsuit that pursued?. I personally didn't even think that they were that similar at all! Didn't get it at the time, still don't.
@BrunoGarciaMusic
Жыл бұрын
@@tonytrickschromatic SCALE ??????? 12 notes man. 12
Style is based on limitations. Music is based on repetition. - John Hartford
Saw the sale and bought the bundle recently. I'm excited to fully delve into it with summer, currently am self taught on guitar, bass, and drums for about 3 years while starting lessons for guitar this past year through college. I'm enjoying the guitar courses so far, and found the PDFs helpful
This is basically a free course that covered more than what my old instructor took about 6 months to cover when I was learning music theory. Thank you Rick and the internet for making these type of videos that will hopefully help so many musicians trying to learn music and they won't take as long as I took a couple of decades ago hahah Cheers!
@henry247
Жыл бұрын
Same
Thank God these crazy lawsuits weren't around in the Doo Wop era. EVERYTHING on the radio was the same four chords. And it was GREAT! Congratulations, Ed Sheeran!
Blues Traveler has a song with lyrics that start with, "Just another I, IV, V, about as cute as can be and danceable, but I don't really care." They also use Pachbel's canon chord progression for one of their biggest hits, Hook. Every chord progression has been played and they absolutely should not be protected. There are only a limited number of options.
@DrChiYT
Жыл бұрын
yes, and Hook is literally a song saying "hey I can sing about any crappy thing, and as long as I have a pretty good hook you'll like this song" The fact that it's a for real hit is so meta, lol.
@fearinwaves
Жыл бұрын
that's an ai lyric
James Jamerson’s bass line is the main element that makes the songs sound similar. But for some reason no one has ever mentioned it. Jamerson didn’t even get royalties for his original performance.
@uprightdoublebass
Жыл бұрын
He was a work for hire. Sold his rights to the music to composition.
@brockmiller574
Жыл бұрын
@@uprightdoublebass sure. Still, over time it has this feeling of exploitation. He died poor. He had to buy a ticket to attend that 25th anniversary event for Motown. Now, we are all aware of the relationship that he and the rest of the funk brothers had with the label, but at some level you'd think that even if Barry Gordy didn't mind exploited a few golden geese, Smokey might have felt a twinge of survivors guilt, maybe... Or not. Really, all we can say for sure is that the music business is ugly.
@chrisloesch5854
Жыл бұрын
Bass lines and rhythms aren’t copy-writable is my understanding.
@davej.meister5421
Жыл бұрын
Now I really have a hankering to hear "Eddie" by Styx. I know it was written about Ted Kennedy, but it should have been written about music theft pirate Eddie Sheeran. Maybe Styx will play it in concert...as a middle finger to Eddie.
@allenf.5907
Жыл бұрын
@@brockmiller574 Any business has ugliness to it. The story of any of the brilliant musos, James Jamerson et al., should be told or made public.
Awesome vid again Rick. I've been playing since 1973, and learned the to play guitar the same way, using records and tapes. I had a voracious appetite for learning music, my teachers were Bob Dylan, Peter Paul and Mary, Gord Lightfoot, Pete Seeger, etc, etc. After 50 years of playing, I can join in on pretty much any song in any key and people are surprised as though I was performing some kind of magic or something. The long hours of ear training have become a tool in my kit as it were. On another note, Imagine the law suits when they discover how many songs are based on the 12-bar blues! Or how every pop tune for over 2 decades used the same 4 chord progression C-Am-F-G. I don't get the argument that Ed Sheeran's song takes revenue away from Marvin Gaye's. That's like saying; "Wow! Now that Ed wrote this song, I don't need to listen to Marvin's any more". It's completely asinine. You cannot copyright a chord progression any more than you can copyright the alphabet. I'm glad this precedent has been tried in court. Though I highly doubt it will stop the frivolous lawsuits, after all lawyers gotta eat as well, and at they end of the lawsuit, they all get paid regardless of the outcome.
@m.rivers9201
Жыл бұрын
What does not make sense is our ears don't lie. The Verve's Bitter Symphony should of never lost to the Rolling Stones, as when hearing the 2 songs in question they sound nothing alike. What is worse the Verve sought to do it right on the part that they barrowed. Here, in the Gaye/Sheeran case, the songs sound the same. You music guys claiming that they are technically different notwithstanding, well if that's true then I could do this with any Hit song Id like to copy, Just use a single different note and call it a day because, technically its not the same anymore, right? Dumb, dumb, dumb. We know when something sounds like something else as in a type of genre and we also know when something is the obviously the same song with a slightly different package. C'mon. This is going to be great when AI makes these imperceptible note changes and reissues the entire Beatles catalogue from some New Great Corporate Group. I have a feeling some of you then will cry foul, But when this happens you guys are the ones that allowed this to happen by setting this required definition of different as being as little as you described it needed to be. When that day comes I am going to laugh and think to myself, "Ed you sly devil you." technically they arent the same, LOL.
@unclemick-synths
Жыл бұрын
If they disallowed songs from sounding similar, entire genres would die! There's a reason why copyright is for melody and/or lyrics.
@kennethfrank5675
Жыл бұрын
reminds me of the "The" Ohio State University trying to copyright the word "The"...frivolous and only made lawyers more money
22:58 As someone who has always struggled with pitch, one of my proudest musical moments was when I heard a song on the car radio, and then got home and played the bassline from memory. Such a cool feeling, especially for me. (I don’t have poor pitch for lack of practice per se. When I was first learning music my dad would play two notes more than an octave apart and I struggled to hear which one was higher. I tune my guitar using harmonics because I still sometimes have a hard time tuning it by fretting the 5th fret like all my friends do. It’s not anywhere near as bad now, but I used to take more than half an hour to tune my guitar up.)
If a chord progression can be copyrighted, than every single song ever created could potentially have a copyright claim file against it... including the Marvin Gaye song as I'm certain there were songs written before "Let's get it on" that used the same exact progression.
@jillsalkin7389
Жыл бұрын
Right. In pop music, simplicity is almost always the common factor. Using the same progressions and rhythms is inevitable.
@ronm9357
Жыл бұрын
Oh yeah. Name those songs. But you won't.
@reedbass5644
Жыл бұрын
The verse of True Love Ways by Buddy Holly, released in 1959 (I think this is the earliest recorded pop song that uses I iii IV V progression The Beatles - I Feel Fine Elton John - Crocodile Rock Rod Stewart - Have I Told You Lately are other examples uses the same chord progression: these pre-date Let's Get It On
@corza1239
Жыл бұрын
It's more the fact that the songs sound so similar look at photograph by ed and amazing by Matt cardle they are identical
@JohnvanCapel
3 ай бұрын
Pachelbel's estate would have had a field day.
Rick would be an excellent expert witness on music theory in court. It could be a lucrative side hustle.
@Umuliuz
Жыл бұрын
As things progress, this may come to pass.
@sacriste
Жыл бұрын
More money for interviews yeah
@benadams1661
Жыл бұрын
He's too emotional and at 61 he's a good 10 or 20 years too old to be up to speed and versed on popular music trends in 2023, anything pre 2000s would be more his forte, maybe early 2000s but like I say he's at least 10-15 years too old
@Vivi_9
Жыл бұрын
@@benadams1661 popular music trends in 2023? It's all garbage compared to the past, nobody needs to be versed in current trends lol
@larsinthewoods
Жыл бұрын
@@benadams1661 what's on the hitlists is completely irrelevant in this context. It's about what can be copyrighted and not. That boils down to lyrics, beats and chords, and understanding when it crosses over from being generic public domain to being a unique intellectual property. Also, we only have 12 notes in music. That hasn't changed.
One of Rick’s best videos in a while. Good point, that in the end it’s up to the jury to decide if the songs are the same or not. And great examples of the music theory and how important it is to write melodies and chords that are unique, whenever possible. Well done!
@nihlify
Жыл бұрын
The problem is the world consist of billions of people. You can sit at home, making a song all by yourself and there's a good chance it has (unknowingly) many similarities to songs you have never heard off on the other side of the world. There's no "unique" checker when you do something. This is true for almost everything in life. You might come up with a joke all by yourself, thinking you're very clever and then you see someone has already posted the same joke on twitter many times.
Great that ear training is mentioned so much Getting familiar with the various intervals is so key here
The most important thing with your song writing is sincerity. If you can fake that, you've got it made!
RE: copyright and the late Gordon Lightfoot (RIP): "In April 1987, Gordon Lightfoot filed a lawsuit against Michael Masser, alleging that Masser's song "The Greatest Love of All" stole twenty-four bars from Lightfoot's 1970 hit 'If You Could Read My Mind.' According to Maclean's, Lightfoot commented, "It really rubbed me the wrong way. I don't want the present-day generation to think that I stole my song from him."[83] Lightfoot has stated that he dropped the suit when he felt it was having a negative effect on Whitney Houston, as the suit was about Masser and not her.[84] Ultimately the case was settled out of court and Masser issued a public apology.[85] ~~~~from Wikipedia entry on 'The Greatest Love of All.' In this instance I think it likely that Lightfoot would have won the suit had it not been settled out of court.
I remember reading where Donald Fagan said there's nothing wrong with a simple melody as long as you have some interesting harmonies behind it. So it seems like music sounds the same because, as Rick has pointed out, people are using the same chord progressions over and over and never going outside those boundaries.
Hey Rick I have followed you for a couple years and love all you do. So I purchased your ultimate bundle finally. I am a mediocre guitar player with very good rhythm. Glad to be apart of your program. Brett Roy
@simonsmatthew
Жыл бұрын
I know some classical musicians that have no sense of rhythm even after years and years of learning.
As a songwriter I am glad Ed Won. As you said Rick, you can't copyright chords, and beats, only melody and lyrics.
@gpiano88
Жыл бұрын
I too am a songwriter and a pianoplayer. That being said, Ed Sheeran said he couldn't write a song without using those chords used in 'Let's Get It On'. If that's the case, he's obviously plateaued out as a songwriter. He's nothing more than mediocre as it is with most of the trash being heaped upon the younger generations. Genre has nothing to do with it and if it does, then Sheeran could be a little more original.
@calle9766
Жыл бұрын
@@gpiano88 Writing a pop song without using the I, IV and V chords sounds rather difficult. Those chords define the major key and western music as a whole buddy
@gpiano88
Жыл бұрын
@@calle9766 I don't buy that at all. It is rather limited and inhibits creativity. John F. Kennedy once said; 'Conformity is the jailer of freedom and the enemy of growth'.
@calle9766
Жыл бұрын
@@gpiano88 It is limited, and it does inhibit creativity. But that’s modern pop music and it’s building blocks. Endless Country and Rock n’ Roll songs have been made on just those three chords. Not to mention the 12-bar blues wich traditionally only uses those three chords. As a modern pop songwriter Ed is very limited in what he can do when it comes to making a hit record. Modern pop is mass produced and that’s just the reality of it. In todays standard there are only 6 possible chords (since the diminished chord is very rarely used nowadays) for a pop song. I don’t like it but repetition is bound to happen and you can’t copyright chord progressions, what you especially can’t do (other youtubers have talked on this) is copyright the functional harmony behind a chord progression
Rick youre the wise middle aged man we all need. I bought your book and ear training and its really helped. I would have never learned about these things without you. You have done alot of videos on jazz but can you do a video of the elements of r&b?
@editingsecrets
Жыл бұрын
It would be interesting for him to use these two songs to break down the common elements of a Motown smooth soul feel
@trteeerryfse-wy2ww
Жыл бұрын
@@shayjohnson5830 lol I was being nice
@davewielhouwer11
Жыл бұрын
@trteeerryfse-wy2ww he acts like he is 45, so that counts.
@editingsecrets
Жыл бұрын
@@davewielhouwer11 He's more open to good new music than a lot of people half his age
@trysometruth
Жыл бұрын
@@shayjohnson5830 Huh? If you eat right, see a doc regularly, and avoid malls and schools in Texas you can easily get to 90 years old. Rick's _starting_ the last _third_ of life.
Nik Kershaw is a great one for writing songs with unusual chord progressions and he has key changes everywhere.
@WhyTheHorseface
Жыл бұрын
Yea, known for money making hits.
@mrshankly213
Жыл бұрын
@@WhyTheHorseface Yeah unfortunately his prime was a time when there was a lot of talented artists. The Riddle is a great song though and reached number 3 in UK and Ireland. The Riddle had to compete with Stevie Wonder "I just called to say I love you", Wham "Freedom" and Chaka Khan "I feel for you" that just shows the level Kershaw was working against. By comparison, "Thinking out loud" by Sheeran did reach number for 1 week, and had to compete with Meghan Trainor "All about that bass", Cheryl "I don't care" and Gareth Malone's All Star Choir "Wake me up". By far inferior competition for the number one spot.
@mrshankly213
Жыл бұрын
@@WhyTheHorseface Also musicians love The Riddle, little girls love anything by Ed Sheeran.
@davidanderson4091
Жыл бұрын
@Julie Morris - That, combined with bloody unusual and disjointed lyrics that made no sense... Near a tree by a river There's a hole in the ground Where an old man of Aran Goes around and around And his mind is a beacon In the veil of the night For a strange kind of fashion There's a wrong and a right But he'll never, never fight over you I mean, seriously?
@Zorgcho
Жыл бұрын
@@davidanderson4091 Still a thousand times better and more interesting than the absolute drivel below... "When your legs don't work like they used to before And I can't sweep you off of your feet Will your mouth still remember the taste of my love Will your eyes still smile from your cheeks"
One of my colleagues was on that trial. He was the tech guy for the trial team. Lawyers call that the "hot seat guy" On a computer in the courtroom, responsible for displaying the exhibits, deposition testimony, graphics etc + All the work of "herding cats" with the lawyers the night before (long nights) to make sure we've got everything we need for tomorrow. I heard Ed was very kind, generous, involved with his legal team & appreciative of the hard work they did. I think a victory legally and of character.
One of your best videos. I wish I was given the advice of the significance of training your ear as a guitar player and musician when I was a kid
4:50 no it's not just the lawyering, it's also dependent on the "ear" ability of the members of both juries.
@wrmusic8736
Жыл бұрын
the irony here is that an average person wouldn't be able to tell similar chord progressions in different songs. To them Sheeran's song most likely sounded even more different. And that's kind of cool. When you become a musician and get to learn how to deconstruct what you hear - music loses its magic that is still there for other people.
You’re doing great Rick. Glad to see your business growing 🎊
Regarding AI you stated so well the sort of thing I’ve been saying. For example, AI never would have written Beethovens Ninth. Not only the addition of the soloists and chorus in the 4th movement, but the opening of the 1st, switching the 2nd and 3rd movements around, no break between the 3rd and 4th movements, and more. This piece was so ground-breaking that it arguably ushered in the Romantic period in music. And of course other great rule-breaking composers: Debussy, Stravinsky, Schoenberg. AI would never have gone where these artists went.
As a formally trained and educated music guy, with rock/jazz blood, it’s great to see you break it down from a music theory perspective. Keep up your great work.
@eleanormedina6703
Жыл бұрын
Same beats .technology can take over .😂So why r you fighting for your human life? just go with the flow... 😂
@eleanormedina6703
Жыл бұрын
No money in your pocket. Robots don't need credit cards.
@TheBella2u
Жыл бұрын
@@eleanormedina6703 Ha ha 😊 Ha you read the book 1984? If not, you need to. You might see where going with the flow leads you.
@eleanormedina6703
Жыл бұрын
@TheBella2u read it in middle school.
@eleanormedina6703
Жыл бұрын
My boyfriend in college was full on anarchy guy.I dumped him.Cute as hell but ..loved attention.
Just to pick one out of thin air: Hard Luck Woman by Kiss, written by Paul Stanley and was to be recorded by Rod Stewart. HLW sounds a good deal along the lines of, released in ‘71-‘72, Maggie May and You Wear It Well.
@earlgrey691
Жыл бұрын
Uncannily so but i thought it was actually a Rod song ripped off by Kiss previously ? How wrong you can be ? What a can of worms thiis could open if lawfare ever got fully deployed at some future point ?
Well, I'll just say we feature Thinking Out Loud into Let's Get it On in our in our sets. They go seamlessly. The Vocal melodies aren't identical but the progressions and meter are.
@supercussion6590
Жыл бұрын
Yeah, and that’s a great service to the professionals that need some tunes to kill time. It’s 6 minutes total, and thats good for a 1-2 hour set.
@samuelwtuiolemotu2826
Жыл бұрын
👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽♥️
@jefflevesque5316
Жыл бұрын
@@supercussion6590 Indeed...folks find it entertaining as well.
Needle on the record reference! That how i learned to play drums on all the songs on Boston’s first album. Also, Heart’s Greatest Hits/Live - good memories.
I don't have any sort of knowledge of music and this is probably one of the reasons I appreciate your videos. I feel I always learn someyhing new.
I used to whistle what I thought was an original melody when I was little. Years later I realized it was Fanfare for the Common Man. Somehow it got stuck in my head, maybe from ELPs version that used to play when a football game went to commercial. Wasn't my song tho.
Honestly, this happens periodically, I remember when RHCP’s Dani California almost went to lawsuit 17 years ago against Tom Petty’s Mary Janes last dance. Tom took the high road though, saying it’s just pop music, we all borrow from each other.
@reggaerock
Жыл бұрын
It happens quite often for Sheeran. He's settled 4 suits out of court admitting plagerism outright and has been sued 3 other times. He's a ripoff artist. But he keeps making millions.
@michaelkearney2186
Жыл бұрын
Tom Petty wasn’t so “petty” after all… 😎
@newmoon54
Жыл бұрын
No~!~ There's no ~HIGH ROAD~ when you copy even PARTS of songs~!~ PERIOD~!~ For that matter the great Gilbert O'Sullivan ( Alone Again (Naturally!)), (and Claire) amongst several other great songs of his,, shouldn't have sued those rap groups, even though they only used small samples of his songs in their songs?!?!?! Stay away from other artists works!!!! PERIOD!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
@mc76
Жыл бұрын
Elvis Costello said essentially the same thing re: Olivia Rodrigo.
@georgeprice4212
Жыл бұрын
Of course, Tom took the high road…he’s seen the inside of enough courts in HIS career (over the forced change in labels from Shelter/ABC to MCA, then over “Damn The Torpedoes” release - in which Petty actually had to declare bankruptcy!) and wasn’t going to subject any other band to the same thing. What went on with Sam Smith was NOT Tom Petty, but Jeff Lynne who sued.
I was a business major and watching this video is like taking a course that I know I’m gonna fail because I don’t understand 90% of what Rick is talking about but I’m gonna sit through it anyway because it’s just so fascinating. Even though I don’t understand it 😂
@tidalboxer
Жыл бұрын
If you keep watching, listen to music, and have a basic understanding of some music.. it probably will start to make sense though.
@PianoMan-hx3ev
Жыл бұрын
I understand it almost perfectly, and I’ll tell you what...In short, as a composer, it is harder than H-E- 🏒 🏒 (double hockey sticks 😂) to write something completely original.
@McSlobo
Жыл бұрын
@@tidalboxer Yeah, humans are like AI. If you feed information in, and there's some links between pieces of information, our heads figure out how it works. Crazy, huh. :D
@tidalboxer
Жыл бұрын
@@PianoMan-hx3ev exactly!
@Hertog_von_Berkshire
Жыл бұрын
I have enjoyed music all my longish life and only now am I beginning to realise how little I actually know.
Good video, I started on drums and picked up guitar in high school and learned by ear as well and then learned tab. I had a Beatles tab book and learned so many chord progressions in there and odd chords you can do on guitar. I've always tried to write songs in odd or variant chords to get that extra bit of weirdness in my songs. I just released a self produced album on streaming "Black Heart Sweet" and it has the best songs I've ever written and all the songs are different from each other. Fans tell me no one is writing and recording like this anymore. Hopefully the next generations will pick up playing and writing. Your channel is helping I'm sure. I love watching your top ten/twenty videos with my kids.
Should we send Ed a Beato book?
@editingsecrets
Жыл бұрын
Only a copy of the relevant pages
I know a lot of things are written on guitar, but bass lines can be the foundation of a song, such was the case many times. Can you do a song writing video about bass?
@jkb1O5
Жыл бұрын
🤙
@kipponi
Жыл бұрын
Queen song: Another one bites the dust is good example bass song.
@SheetFiber
Жыл бұрын
Meghan Trainor seems to know a lot of stuff about bass
@tomsabatino
Жыл бұрын
@@SheetFiber 🤮
Thank you for extending the Beato bundle again!!! I will have the 100 by next month. I am praying that you continue to do this for 2 more months people like me who can only save about 10 bucks a month lol!!! I thank you very much!!! PBWYA TDJ
There are a lot of songs that sound similar but are vastly different. How many times have you started listening to a song and when the vocals come in it was a different song than what you thought.?? Maybe I’m getting old or maybe because I’m a drummer and listen to the beat more than specific notes . The good part is it makes it easier to string a few songs together when we are playing in a club.
Excellent Question, Rick: "How do I know what I don't know?" Listening to others, especially outside of your comfort zone., whether it be a different genre or culture.
@ReignitedAuto
Жыл бұрын
Don't be ridiculous 😆
@JamesKimSynergize
Жыл бұрын
Ears and the ability to listen well are a musician's greatest asset.
Only lesson is that 4 chords cannot be copyrighted or every Pop artist would be suing and counter-suing each other
I always say that there’s only a certain amount of chord progressions and especially if you’re in pop music. Only certain combinations work. So you’re gonna get people relating each other. If you’re creative enough you can make a different song though. Purple Rain and Tori Amos’ Hey Jupiter have exactly the same chord progression. I think she even admits it. But the rhythm, lyrical spacing, and overlapping melodies make it into a totally different song.
@justinlassiter7671
Жыл бұрын
And if Ed and his team were better musicians, they would have changed that section..there's no way they didn't recognise it as overtly Marvin Gaye in affect
I am an IP atty and a musician. Copyright is very problematic, this case is just another example of the real issues with it. It's hard to apply, people are the least educated about it, and not many go to trial, so there is little guidance. I listened to your earlier opinion of the two songs and found it puzzlingly Definitely according to the law, these songs are different and this is a good ruling. Chord progressions are not subject to copyright, just like arranging standard shapes are not subject to copyright either. Thank you for going into this more deeply to explain the actual music theory. AI will never take over music. Copyright office has already ruled that AI created works are in the public domain because an author must be a human. All the next lawsuits will be people proving they didn't use AI. He should get legal costs here.
@trteeerryfse-wy2ww
Жыл бұрын
Very well thought out
@paulhstoutjr
Жыл бұрын
BS!
@anymonkeymusic4286
Жыл бұрын
A.I. has already taken over music, movies and Art.
@rapid13
Жыл бұрын
Nah, it’ll be proving that a human _directed or guided_ the AI and that makes it human. And that seems reasonable.
@editingsecrets
Жыл бұрын
Counselor, can you please clarify - does this case create a precedent? Or will the next million song copyright infringement lawsuits have to start from scratch, without reference to this case as authoritative?
A powerful statement as to why you must buy the Beato Book. Might even save on lawyer fees later on.
You are such a great professional and person offering opportunities for people in all art areas ❤ I really appreciate this
Hey Rick, Great content as always. I am curious as to what device/app you are using for the whiteboard in this video? What a great idea. :)
i can't count how many songs i rejected to continue to make because i felt they sounded too familiar. in hindsight it was stupid to do so because you can't assume to create something that never have been done before. there is so much music out there. no matter how you start something it might have been the starting point to some other song out there too. thats normal. its the same with movies or books... its hard to create something without having similarities to hundreds of other works. sometimes inspired, sometimes you unknowingly have the same ideas.
I would like to order your book, but I am blind. I’m trying to figure out if I would be able to use it. I have screen, reader, technology, and things like this on my computer.
I put a humbucker in a Tele . Added another three way switch to split it or run any combo of pickups. Put in a tailpiece with individual string saddles.
04:20 "...they have a completely different melody and completely different lyrics!" EXACTLY! I wrote a comment on this subject on a Beato youtube video a week or so ago and explained that I met Hal David (renown lyricist for those of you who may be unfamiliar) as the result of writing a winning lyric for The American Song Festival many years ago. Hal explained to me at that time that a "songwriter writes the melody and lyric or the lyric or the melody". The songwriter MAY orchestrate or arrange the song but it's all about the MELODY and the LYRIC when you're writing songs. That's what you copyright. Nice job explaining, Rick.
Thank you Rick for clearing it up on who brought the lawsuit. It is important to have all the facts. I appologize, i didnt have all the facts i should have had before my post last week.
Would love to hear your view on Men at Work’s loss for their flute interlude in Land DownUnder. They copied a small amount of a crap song and made it better reharmonizing it. I’m totally confused how they lost
@sunnyday_lemonbars
Жыл бұрын
yes I'd love a deep dive on that one as well. so sad about Greg Ham!
@anitabonghit2758
Жыл бұрын
That one pisses me off. It was inspired by a song taught to children as a nursery rhyme. He doesnt use the same some. Its different notes and a different rythm. And again it was a greedy corperation that sued after buying the somg the the estate of the deseaced artist
And it's also difficult to somehow, someway NOT inadvertently take fragments of melodies from existing songs. Two examples off the top of my head : Bebe Rexah's "Me Myself and I" uses melody fragments from Scatman John's "Scatman" song and One Republic's "Apologize" uses melody fragments from Celine Dion's "Titanic" soundtrack hit "My Heart Will Go On".
@MrMmcdaid9
Жыл бұрын
I love Adele's "Easy On Me" [and Ricks analysis of that production], every time I listen to it, though, I hear the preeminent "Stay With Me Baby". it's a major part of the allure, for me. It's [like] the same thing!
The Music Professor has just done a little look at Handel's Zadok The Priest (in D / Db) which for the first couple and some other bars uses a motif from Bach Prelude in C , (identical I think if shifted up a key).
Funny... I've always loved music and i played flute in my junior and high-school bands. The problem was i could never remember the theory ...failed it every year. It would frustrate my band teacher because i could play my parts perfectly. I memorized where to come in and i sounded out all the notes. Id practice for hrs. Loved it but i just couldn't read the actual scores. He told me i had perfect pitch and i never even under what he was telling me. Now in my late 50's i can still pick up my flute and sound out a song i like. I can hear if something is off and show you how it should sound but i cant tell you what the notes being song are or what notes they should be i just go by what i hear. The sound.
@007KayElleKay
Жыл бұрын
I think we must be twins as I have perfect pitch too and am still teaching flute at 64 .
@mikegillettify
Жыл бұрын
Legit question: Why do folks pronounce it “FLOUT-IST?” Is that really proper or is it “flut-ist?”
@007KayElleKay
Жыл бұрын
@@mikegillettify -I’m the UK we refer to it as being a “ Flaw-tist” not a flauw-tist or a Floot-ist - we are and always will be , Flaw-tists. It’s from the German - the design of the modern flute with keys was created by Bohm and is referred to as the Bohm system . It’s been developed over the years and we now have a regulated scale called The Cooper Scale where A = 440 mgz . This meant that flutes were standardised ( finally) and could all play in tune with one another which wasn’t possible until the Cooper Scale was agreed upon . That’s very simplistic btw - flutes are extremely complex things , the positioning of the holes , the length of the head joint , the embouchure hole we blow across , it all had to be worked out with complex maths and physics and even chemistry because the materials used in flute making resonate at differing frequencies . A solid silver flute has a brighter sound than a solid gold one . From a proud Flaw-tist !
Regarding AI, yesterday I decided to try to play with Chat GPT and song writing. It actually did an okay job (1/4) songs were okay. All followed a very traditional song structure. Where it did better is if you fed it a few lines. Where it was good is when I fed in all the lyrics to a song I wrote and asked for it to improve the song. While I did not love all the suggestions it would be useful if you were stuck on a verse or two.
@ckatheman
Жыл бұрын
I did the same, and the results were extremely trite. Might give a basis to expand on, but little else.
Best thing that happened to me as a song writer and guitarist was playing with a player that was much better then myself. He showed me so many things u can do to make a very simple song sound interesting and many other things. I wish I started playing with better players from day one.
Back when I was in my early teens, with no musical background. I self taught how to play the piano, had a friend who was good at guitar, he taught me the basic easy guitar chors, since I self taught piano, jumping on guitar was an easy transition. Then somehow, I self taught my self to play by ear, my tape cassette tape had a great workout, play, rewind, etc.. then I would get what I thought were the chords. This was pre internet times where you couldn't go on the net to get chords for free. I dont play much now but those were the best times of my teen life at school.
The one that upsets me the most is The Rolling Stone's manager winning the case over Verve and took the money for 20yrs on sample infringement, rubbish, they sampled it sure and argreed on the 50/50 but it blew up and they took the lot.
@wrmusic8736
Жыл бұрын
pop music. It's purely about the money and not always the "make money with your music" kind of money.
@MentalS6k
Жыл бұрын
UPADTE: a couple of years ago, TRS reverted the copyright of the song back to The Verve. Willingly I might add.
@maestrovonhuge9397
Жыл бұрын
@@MentalS6k UPDATE: that's what it says and the only reason it was willingly is because he died and it was his sons decision.
Everytime I get a chord progression like this I use/put in some passing chords and or suspensions to avoid this very issue!
@Timliu92
Жыл бұрын
Same here!
@simonsmatthew
Жыл бұрын
And of course that also makes it sound better. The advantages of knowing some very elementary counterpoint!
Thinking Out Loud has a cool walk down part at the end of the later verses.. another thing that differentiates it
Rick, I wanted to thank you that you shared a page out of your Book. “Chords for Songwriters.” I took a screenshot and printed it for myself. Very good resource. Now I just have to do that for all other keys. I’m on a very tight budget. That page means a lot to me thank you again. I play keyboard. I learned to play with 6 fingers I’m disabled. But this was back in 1988-1990 in Germany.
I tell my theory students that the chords in a major key are like the basic ingredients to any baker's recipe: Flour, eggs, milk, butter, baking powder, sugar, etc. So this is like a baker suing another baker for using the same ingredients
@alexsherel3344
Жыл бұрын
Lol thinking the same thing but not specific to baking….just cooking in general….
Pop songs use the same progressions because they sound really good. And songs that sound good sell lots of records.
@smallworldbigworld-yi3xw
Жыл бұрын
It may be that the main reason for using them is that they sound particularly good. But more likely it's a matter of familiarity, and simplicity.
@MickH60
Жыл бұрын
@@smallworldbigworld-yi3xw No, it's for the way they sound, they create a mood when played in certain ways, music producers are all over this.... It's formulaic...
@louiebee6745
Жыл бұрын
That's why it's called 'pop' music.
@LesterBrunt
Жыл бұрын
False. Songs that make money are by definition bad.
@smallworldbigworld-yi3xw
Жыл бұрын
@@LesterBrunt Explain?
According to Wiki The Beach Boys' Surfin USA was originally credited to Brian Wilson, then to Chuck Berry, then to Berry/Wilson. Even though the song has always been owned by Arc Music, Chuck Berry's publisher.
Ther's always like, a Gazillion comments on Ricks channel. So, although my lil comment will probably never cross his eyes, but G to D is a perfect 5th. going from D to G would be a Perfect Fourth. Yer still THE Man for all things music. Yer humble subscriber...
Fantastic on songwriting and melody and riff writing - perfect share on writing and creating originality. I don't believe its all been written already - not my view. Excellent advice on the informed musical humanity that will always lead the AI. You are great Rick Beato!
Your videos are always so insightful.
When the trial was underway, you posted an analysis of the two songs and explained exactly what was copied and what was not. Your presentation was spot on. I was not the least bit surprised that Ed won his case. If his lawyers had been knowledgeable, ethical and competent, they would have advised him that he can NOT win this case in a jury trial. Makes me wonder if they knew this and took it to trial just for the money, knowing they would lose.
You're making me think of that comedian that did a bit called the "Pachebel Canon Rant", about all the songs with the same chord progression at the classical piece. 😅😂😅😊
Your whiteboard lectures were the first time any music theory made sense to me!
Honestly, it sounds more like Van Morrison's "Crazy Love" from 1970 than it does "Let's Get it On". Even the melody is similar.
@MarieLivengood
Жыл бұрын
Ed said that was his inspiration.
Rick- I highly suggest that you send raw videos to 2 or more editors and then choose 1. My friends do editing for woodworking channels, but would suck at editing your videos and keep the feeling and vibe of your channel the same.
Video games went through a similar conundrum a few years ago with Fortnite and its dances; the result was that while you can copyright a full choreography (maybe like Riverdance, the entire Thriller video, etc) you can't copyright dance moves like The Robot, Moonwalk, and so on.
I agree. A song is a song , it has its own soul, spirit, harmony and melodiies, even if chords and progressions are the same as other songs.
@robertcooney1938
Жыл бұрын
Yep... a billion songs are G C D, maybe with an Am in there.
@wrmusic8736
Жыл бұрын
@@robertcooney1938 yet only a few dozen work. And that's the point. Chord progressions are just a foundation on which the house is built. But you wouldn't call just a foundation - a house.
@robertcooney1938
Жыл бұрын
@@wrmusic8736 totally agree. Vocals, harmonies, a nice bass line, a good groove that locks in with the drums. Some lead guitar and piano. If you change all those things up, it's unique and if it's unique. A tambourine can always make the difference. Iggy Pop used jingle bells on his biggest hits.
I thought George Harrison got a raw deal with “My Sweet Lord”. Apparently thousands of songs use just four chords. The Moody Blues might have written “In search of the lost chord” but in reality music is a language and also mathematical so certain patterns are predetermined and simple songs (most songs) are often using the same building blocks.
@michaelohara49
Жыл бұрын
Should check out Axis of Awsomes four chord song. It demonstrates the ridiculousness of this lawsuit in hilarious fashion.
Love your videos. Do you have a book, and is anything from this video by any chance in the book?
Over the last few weeks my singing/songwriting teacher/partner and I have been playing a game. During the hour we pick 4 random chords, from *any* key and then write using those chords as a basis. It's a great way to get some really interesting and intriguing composition, and avoid the standard progressions.
Whether you like his music or not, everyone should be happy that Ed won.
@fuglbird
Жыл бұрын
Maybe you should listen to the music and not the lawyers. Even my neighbors seven year old kid said "That's Let’s Get it On" when he heard Thinking Out Loud.
@StevenTwoTwo
Жыл бұрын
@@fuglbird Just because it's similar doesn't mean it's plagiarised
@robertdowell9493
Жыл бұрын
@@fuglbird perhaps your neighbour’s seven year old is tone deaf? You would understand how sensible this verdict is if you listen to “4 Chords” by Axis of Awesome. Chord sequences and arrangements can’t be copyrighted or we’ll be embroiled in endless legal cases and musicians will lose out. And all of us who love music.
Based on your last video I did not think he was going to win. I was surprised that he did.
@gilbertoflores7397
Жыл бұрын
I thought Rick was being a bit cynical, as how most other cases that have even less in common with other songs end up paying something, he was guessing that this was also going to result in a loss too. As he explained that it shouldn't, but likely would.
@iss8504
Жыл бұрын
He was focusing on a narrow area, the chords. Blurred Lines case is a bad ruling that suggested chord progressions were subject to copyright. I gave this case a 50% chance for Sheeran. His melody was different though, so that helped. What's sad for Sheeran is that despite winning these allegations tarnish his reputation. His future mashups should be older songs with even older songs. Marvin Gaye and Mozart....
@thedappercook
Жыл бұрын
LOL that was just his opinion!
@ashleywhiteman2684
Жыл бұрын
Slippery legal team. Maybe? I don't think he should have won. On the premise that his music is an essential copy, most of the songs he does are. They're not covers or remixes but rip offs.
@sc33h3o3
Жыл бұрын
i wasn't sure why in that video he felt the need to show that the melodies could mesh well together at a certain point, there are a lot of songs where you could splice the melodies together like that. and since Ed's melody was so diametrically different, it was like, what's the point. i think many were influenced by that demo even though it was not even a valid commentary on this case.
Always a pleasure to see this version of a music master Al Pacino. Very difficult or impossible to copy you with AI. 😊
Hey Rick! A bit off topic here - although it does have to do with new bands sounding like old bands: have you listened to Wunderhorse yet? I think you’ll appreciate them. My favorite is ‘Girl Behind the Glass’ but there are a lot of elements in their songs that speak to my music taste and remind me of bands I love, in a good way.
Oh man, if people could copyright a chord progression... I don't even like to think of the consequences imagine the great songs we wouldn't have. It's weird to think about what music would be now. Just a quick example, imagine if Nirvana had never written Teen Spirit.
@Magnapict65
Жыл бұрын
They did accept ripping Killing Joke off with another song. But in a respectful rip off way??
it seems to me a good application for AI is to give it a song and have it determine if it violates copyright somewhere.
@zachary963
Жыл бұрын
KZread already does that
Right. You can't copyright chord changes.
Using your ears to tell the difference between Dm and AM is relatively easy. I've been trying to transcribe and play on the piano Haamoja's Natural Evolution album. I can't even find some of the chords on the keyboard.
The main takeaway from this video is if Ed would have bought and read the Beato Book he would never had ended up in court. I think I’ll send a copy to The Lathums.
Hey Rick, what i learned from this video combined with your video about „AI“ is that i could do a slightly changed Marvin Gaye song and record it with a „AI-computer-robot-Marvin-Gaye-voice“ and then i would be a famous musician, songwriter and superstar in 2023? 😅
@smallworldbigworld-yi3xw
Жыл бұрын
You wouldn't be famous, but you might make a lot of money. Your "AI" would be famous, I guess.
that Pat Mettheny chord is from the intro to Scarborough Fair by Simon & Garfunkel :-)
sometimes tech makes a positive diff like TScholz Power Soak, EVH extra windings, BMays custom build... or, maybe, as minor as your choice of string gauge, or round wound, flat wound, smooth, etc., etc., and so on... ; )
The problem with this particular suit, is that it could've gone either way due to the jury.
@dmitriiturchenkov3075
Жыл бұрын
It was a Circus Not a suit. Ed even brang his guitar to make it clear. If Suit really wanna find a true they must check- jury must get access to the Archive records of creation that song. And check when the Music was stolen from Marvins song. The Judges did nothing to really find a true. That's a shame.
Rick, I agree wholeheartedly with your musical/technical analysis no question about it. I always thought that lawsuit did not make sense to me. BUT the problem I am having with artists like E.S. is that he has demonstrated a certain penchant to "draw" inspiration from some popular and successful and catchy songs that have proven to be enduring in the musical psyche of people. He tends to take the easy way to success that way. There is one artist that pop artists have avoided to draw inspiration from and it is the great Stevie Wonder, because his popular songs are difficult harmonically.
@MickH60
Жыл бұрын
He's not doing that at all, it's the chord progressions used by hundreds of musicians because of the way they work together, like 12 bar blues, there are literally hundreds of songs with the same exact progressions...
@EthanRom
Жыл бұрын
He just made a soul pop ballad song and most songs in that genre sound like that. Much like in Jazz where musicians are actually encouraged to draw inspiration from old Jazz standards and to incorporate it into your playing.
The greatest thing i Was ever taught by my illustrious guitar teacher when i was 14 was to learn to teach myself...of course he went over all this stuff rick teaches which is great and has served me well ,as well as Ear training ,learning shitloads of songs and this all becomes 2nd nature and you shouldnt have to think about it much...but all this new stuff is regurgitation...at least the music part of it is,and has been done somewhere along the line so it all comes down to a lyrical idea and melody to set things apart
I'm not a Videographer but took a look at the page. You should have a full job description.
What we should all learn and take away from this is that it’s all in the beato book.