LED ZEPPELIN TRIUMPH IN “STAIRWAY TO HEAVEN” PLAGIARISM TRIAL

Will Robinson of Entertainment Weekly reports:

Led Zeppelin are in the clear after a federal jury decided the band did not plagiarize their signature track, 1971’s Stairway to Heaven. The panel announced their unanimous decision on Thursday in a Los Angeles federal court room.

The English rockers were accused of infringing on the copyright of the instrumental track Taurus by the American band Spirit. Michael Skidmore, a trustee of the estate of Spirit guitarist Randy Wolfe, was the plaintiff and accused Zeppelin of lifting Stairway’s acoustic guitar-laden introduction from Taurus and sought upwards of $40 million in damages, as well as a songwriting credit for Wolfe.

But the eight-person jury ruled that even though Plant had access to Taurus and that Skidmore and Spirit’s estate had copyright to Taurus, the “original elements of Spirit’s song are not extrinsically similar” to Stairway to Heaven.

Zeppelin guitarist Jimmy Page and singer Robert Plant were in the courtroom when the verdict was handed down, a day after closing arguments were made Wednesday morning. They both smiled and hugged their team after the court adjourned.

“We are grateful for the jury’s conscientious service and pleased that it has ruled in our favor, putting to rest questions about the origins of Stairway to Heaven and confirming what we have known for 45 years. We appreciate our fans’ support, and look forward to putting this legal matter behind us,” Page and Plant said in a joint statement after the verdict was announced…

…But plaintiff attorney Francis Malofiy told reporters at the courthouse, “They won on a technicality. We proved access. We proved they had access to the music, but [the jury] never heard the music.” (A studio recording of Spirit’s Taurus wasn’t played during the hearing.) “So the jury’s sitting there with basically blinders on without ever having the opportunity of hearing the evidence at issue.”

Skidmore later reiterated this point at a presser and said, “If the jury had heard Taurus, the sound recording, we would have won the case. They were limited to looking at a piece of paper.”

He continued, “We got the access, we got the trust’s okay, we weren’t allowed to tell them the money [awarded from the suit] goes to charity. It was all skewed in Led Zeppelin’s favor. All I can say is money talks louder than common sense. We did the right thing. We tried to carry on Randy’s legacy … We had a small team versus multinational corporations. I think we did a really good job.”

…Music experts [who] also testified about the similarities between the songs, pointing out that Taurus and the Stairway intro both use a chromatic descending arpeggiated scale that skips the E note — a common musical element that is in the public domain and has been used by the likes of The Beatles and Mary Poppins, the defense argued.

Read more at Entertainment Weekly.

source: ew.com

4 Responses

  1. Totally ridiculous that the jury never got to hear the actual song. I personally believe that STAIRWAY no doubt borrows from TAURUS but how can you present a case regarding plagiarism without hearing the two songs in succession. A microcosm of society, LED ZEPPELIN is powerhouse and SPIRIT is not even an afterthought so why even bother? Disgraceful!

    1. A technicality, what was copyrighted is just the sheet music, a good lawyer petitions to have the recording thrown out.

      Monet, nice to see you again.

  2. I listened to both songs when this whole thing first blew up – the very beginning of Taurus when the guitar first comes in, similar .. plagiarism no way

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