The Guardian (USA)

Taylor Swift returns to US court after appeal over copyright lawsuit

- Ben Beaumont-Thomas

A copyright lawsuit against Taylor Swift is returning to court in the US, after an appeal overturned an earlier dismissal of the case.

Swift and her fellow songwriter­s Max Martin and Shellback are accused of copying lyrics from the 2001 song Players Gon’ Play by US girl group 3LW, for Swift’s song Shake It Off.

Both songs feature the lyrics “the players gonna play” and “the haters gonna hate”. In February 2018, a federal judge said the 3LW songwriter­s who brought the claim, Sean Hall and Nathan Butler, did not have creative ownership over the phrases, which were deemed to be commonplac­e. “By 2001, American popular culture was heavily steeped in the concepts of players, haters, and player haters,” judge Michael Fitzgerald wrote. “The concept of actors acting in accordance with their essential nature is not at all creative; it is banal.”

But the successful appeal found that Fitzgerald should not have had the sole final judgment on the originalit­y of the song. The decision will now be made by a jury.

Plagiarism claims have been made against numerous high-profile songs recently, with the latest case in the US being Truth Hurts, a song by singer and rapper Lizzo that spent seven weeks at No 1. Brothers Justin and Jeremy Raisen allege that they co-wrote the song and filed a lawsuit against Lizzo; she has countersue­d, saying the men “did not help me write any part of the song”. She did add British singer Mina Lionness to the songwritin­g credits, acknowledg­ing that a viral tweet Lionness wrote was used for the song’s opening line.

 ??  ?? Jury to decide plagiarism claim … Taylor Swift. Photograph: Caitlin Ochs/Reuters
Jury to decide plagiarism claim … Taylor Swift. Photograph: Caitlin Ochs/Reuters

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