ChrisW wrote:Hybrid88 wrote:Well, the worst thing now is that, assuming they don't appeal, this will now set a precedent for all cases like it to come in Australia -
Nothing will change.
The precedent is already set - if you quote someone else's composition in your own (as Hay now freely admits - big point that) you need to clear it with the original composer before releasing.
The silly thing is, if you clear it first the fee is often going to be tiny.
Who knew 'Land Down Under' was going to be the massive hit it was?
And it might be a sad fact, but song ownership is bought and sold.
Larrakin bought the song and they will seek income from that purchase.
If I buy your old car, should I then let anyone on my street drive it, just because I wasn't the original owner?
Lets not start comparing apples and oranges here, the thing is, music is meant to be shared so many people can get enjoyment out of it, ok so you pay a small investment for this and that's fine. But when you start looking at everything from a "making more money" standpoint, then you are missing the point by a mile - all this red tape and legal stuff is only going to ruin music in the long run if it gets out of hand.
And as far as I know, I've never heard of a case like this over such a very short passage of music actually winning, so it'd be hard to think that no precedant will be set. In the least, people will start to think of jumping on the bandwagon so to speak. This is not your average case.






