Behringer return Oberheim name to Tom Oberheim: “it's the right thing to do”
>In its apparent quest to bring back every classic analogue synth ever made, Behringer have attracted some controversy, but the company have now been publicly thanked by Tom
Oberheim for returning the worldwide rights to his company name.
You may recall that, back in 2019, Gibson made a similar gesture to Tom Oberheim, having acquired the Oberheim brand name in 1988, following the company’s bankruptcy in 1985.
However, it seems that this is related to trademarks in the US and several other territories. Behringer’s parent company Music Tribe still
owned Oberheim trademarks in various other countries, but these have now been returned to Tom Oberheim, too.
“I was very happy after all these years to have regained ownership of some of the Oberheim trademarks,” said Tom Oberheim, who founded Oberheim Electronics in 1970 and created synth classics such as the SEM and OB-Xa. “This led to the hope that someday I would be able to use my own name in all countries where the Oberheim trademark exists, so we contacted Music Tribe.”
“Tom Oberheim is a pioneer of analogue synthesizers, and our whole industry owes him a debt of gratitude for his innovations,” said Uli Behringer, Music Tribe founder. “When we learned Tom was still interested in making his own products with his original name, we knew the right thing to do was to transfer our Oberheim registrations back to him.”
Everyone can live happily ever after, then, though it’s curious that this move by Music Tribe follows their apparent failure to trademark the ‘Behringer Oberheim’ name in an application earlier this year.
Dave Smith’s Sequential, meanwhile, seemingly filed a trademark application for the OB-X name in January. Smith previously collaborated with Tom Oberheim on the OB-6 synth. Make of all that what you will, but the bottom line is that Tom Oberheim is now free to create Oberheim-branded products, and that has to make sense.