The Post

McCartney sues Sony for The Beatles music rights

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UNITED STATES: Former Beatle Paul McCartney sued Sony Corp’s music publishing arm yesterday in federal court in New York, seeking to reclaim copyrights to 267 Beatles songs that pop star Michael Jackson acquired two decades before his death.

Jackson famously outbid McCartney for publishing rights to the songs in 1985, paying US$47.5 million (NZ$66.5m) to obtain the collection as part of a much larger trove of some 4000 pop music tunes from Australian businessma­n Robert Holmes a Court.

The Beatles songs and the rest of the ATV collection were then rolled into a joint venture Jackson formed in 1995 with his Sony-based label, creating Sony/ATV Music Publishing, which grew into the world’s biggest song publisher.

His estate sold off its stake in Sony/ATV, including the Beatles collection, to Sony Corp for $750,000 in 2016, seven years after Jackson’s fatal 2009 drug overdose from the powerful anesthetic propfol.

According to his lawsuit, McCartney put Sony/ATV Music Publishing on notice as early as October 2008 that he wished to reclaim rights to the dozens of songs he co-wrote with the late fellow exBeatle John Lennon from September 1962 to June 1971. Those songs form the bulk of the Beatles catalog.

The suit claims Sony/ATV has so far failed to acknowledg­e the composer’s rights to terminate copyright transfers of that music, including such hits as All You Need is Love and I Want to Hold Your Hand, under the US Copyright Act.

‘‘Because the earliest of Paul McCartney’s terminatio­ns will take effect in 2018, a judicial declaratio­n is necessary and appropriat­e at this time so that Paul McCartney can rely on quiet, unclouded title to his rights,’’ the suit said. – Reuters

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