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Ed Sheeran beats second copyright lawsuit over Thinking Out Loud

- YORK

Sheeran’s attorney Ilene Farkas called the decision “an important victory not only for Ed” and collaborat­or Amy Wadge, but also “for all songwriter­s and consumers of music”.

British singer-songwriter Ed Sheeran on Tuesday defeated a second copyright lawsuit in federal court in Manhattan over similariti­es between his hit Thinking Out Loud (2014) and late soul singer Marvin Gaye’s Let’s Get It On (1973).

United States District Judge Louis Stanton dismissed the case brought by Structured Asset Sales, ruling that the parts of Let’s Get It On Sheeran was accused of infringing were too common for copyright protection.

Sheeran, 32, won a separate jury trial over the songs in the same court earlier this month.

Judge Stanton presided over both cases, which concerned co-writer Ed Townsend’s share of Gaye’s classic. Townsend’s heirs failed to convince jurors that Sheeran infringed their part of Townsend’s copyright in the song.

Structured Asset Sales is owned by investment banker and Bowie Bonds creator David Pullman, and it owns part of Townsend’s interest in Let’s Get

It On.

It sued Sheeran, his label Warner Music Group and his music publisher Sony Music Publishing in 2018 after Townsend’s heirs filed their lawsuit.

Judge Stanton on Tuesday found that the combinatio­n of chord progressio­n and harmonic rhythm in Gaye’s song was a “basic musical building block” that was too common to merit copyright protection.

Sheeran’s attorney Ilene Farkas called the decision “an important victory not only for Ed” and collaborat­or Amy Wadge, but also “for all songwriter­s and consumers of music”.

Structured Asset Sales has filed another lawsuit against Sheeran based on its rights to Gaye’s recording, which is still pending.

Mr Pullman told Reuters that the jury in that case will get to hear the recording of Let’s Get It On, as opposed to the computeris­ed rendition of the song’s sheet music from the Townsend trial.

“Their biggest fear, in terms of everything they’ve filed, has been to prevent the sound recording from coming in,” he said.

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