Yorkshire Post

Battle over Sheeran song to go to court

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A US judge has ruled a jury will decide whether or not Ed Sheeran, inset, is guilty of ripping off Marvin Gaye’s Let’s Get It On for his hit Thinking Out Loud.

District Judge Louis Stanton rejected Sheeran’s request to dismiss the lawsuit and in a decision made public said there were “substantia­l similariti­es between several of the two works’ musical elements”.

Let’s Get It On was released in 1973 while Halifax-born Sheeran’s Grammy-winning

Thinking Out Loud was included on the British artist’s X album in 2014.

The lawsuit was brought by the estate and heirs of late producer Ed Townsend, who co-wrote Let’s Get It On with Gaye.

It names Sheeran, his cowriter Amy Padge, Sony/ATV Music Publishing and the Atlantic record label as defendants.

Sheeran, 27, denies copying Gaye. As well as the “substantia­l similariti­es” between the two songs, Judge Stanton ruled it was disputed whether the harmonic rhythm of Let’s Get It On was deserving of copyright protection or whether it was too common. The defence argued Thinking Out Loud was characteri­sed by “sombre, melancholi­c tones, addressing long-lasting romantic love” while Let’s Get It On was a “sexual anthem”. Despite this, the judge said listeners could view them as having the same “aesthetic appeal”. Thinking Out Loud reached number one in the UK singles charts in November 2014 while Let’s Get It On hit number one in the US in September 1973.

Sheeran has also been accused of plagiarism over his songs Photograph and Shape Of You.

Judge Stanton is presiding over two lawsuits alleging Sheeran copied Let’s Get It On.

In the other case, Structured Asset Sales (SAS), which owns one-third of Townsend’s estate, is suing for $100m (£79m).

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