When a jury decided in March of 2015 that Robin Thicke, Pharrell William and Clifford “T.I.” Harris were guilty of copyright infringement in lifting elements of their song “Blurred Lines” from the ...
In blockbuster new legal papers, the Gayes also target music publisher EMI for "conflicts of interest" and a decision not to ruin the "golden goose" that is the year's biggest hit song. By Eriq ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. In an interview with veteran producer Rick Rubin, Williams said he sometimes “reverse engineers” a sound from a previous record, ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. On Friday, Gaye’s family filed a motion in federal court alleging Williams lied under oath in the case. The motion points to a ...
Robin Thicke is not equivocating. “I know you want it,” the R&B star croons without a shred of irony in “Blurred Lines”, his chart-topper of 2013. His fictitious interlocutor is “a good girl” who, the ...
At long last, it seems the "Blurred Lines" copyright lawsuit has been put to rest for good. The plaintiffs cited a GQ interview from November of that year in which Williams said he "reverse engineered ...
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