In the music
industry worldwide, there has been scandals of the highest proportions,
what with rip offs where some producers, music icons and singers swipe
other people’s lines and tracks. Recently, one of the biggest stories in
the world of pop music has been the up ROAR over whether or not Katy
Perry’s new single “Roar” borrows a bit too liberally from Sara
Bareilles’ “Brave”. According to music aficionados, both songs are under
suspicion for lifting the opening piano line of “Something Beautiful”
by Robbie Williams, and have been a source of a court case. But this is
not the first, neither will it be the last of such rip offs.
gist drill
brings you the top 10 musical rip-offs of all time.
OneRepublic’s Ryan Tedder is one of the most prolific and in-demand
songwriters in the game. Unfortunately for him, he gave the same
arrangement to both Kelly Clarkson and Beyoncé, which resulted in one of
the most contentious stories of the last decade. As soon as Kelly found
out that her track, “Already Gone”, was a carbon copy of Bey’s “Halo,”
Clarkson went nuclear, putting Tedder on very public blast. She tried to
have the song removed from her 2009 album All I Ever Wanted, but the
album had already been pressed by the time she discovered the
similarities between the two tracks.

Noel Gallagher, formerly of Oasis band, is one of the most notorious
‘borrowers’ of famous melodies in the history of pop music. For the song
off the band’s massive debut album “Definitely Maybe”, Gallagher was
accused of lifting the verse of the 1971 song “I’d Like To Teach The
World To Sing,” which became world famous when it was used in a
Coca-Cola commercial later that decade. That band, The New Seekers, sued
Oasis for damages and were ultimately awarded $500,000. Gallagher’s
response? “Now we all drink Pepsi.”
The Chili Peppers
are lucky that Tom Petty is one of the mellowest dudes in all of rock
music. Their 2006 track shares the same chord progression (not to
mention key!) as Petty’s 1993 song, but Petty refused to try and cash in
on the similarities by taking Anthony, Flea and the guys to court. “I
seriously doubt that there is any negative intent there,” Petty told Rolling Stone Magazine at the time. “And a lot of Rock & Roll songs sound alike.”
“Hey hey, you you, I wanna be your boyfriend,” sang The Rubinoos in
one of the great power pop songs of the 1970s. “Hey hey, you you, I
wanna be your girlfriend,” sang punk pop princess, Avril Lavigne in
2007. Notice any similarities here? The Rubinoos certainly did and
promptly sued Lavigne back in 2008. The two sides settled out of court,
and although the settlement remains confidential, it is a sure bet The
Rubinoos sang “Hey hey” all the way to the bank.

Cat Stevens listened to Flaming Lips’ rehashing of his lines and
decided to cash in fast. On the surface, it wouldn’t appear that these
two songs have much in common. After all, one is chock full of advice
that a father is giving to his son, and the other comes from an album
about a young Japanese girl battling an army of pink robots. However,
immediately after listening to these two tracks, the sonic similarities
between the two jumps out at you faster than you can say “Yoshimi!” The
two acts settled the matter fairly amicably, with Stevens getting 75% of
the song’s royalties, but Lips front-man Wayne Coyne got the last word
in. “I am really sorry that Cat Stevens thinks I’m purposefully
plagiarizing his work,” he said in an interview. “I am ashamed. There is
obviously a fine line between being inspired and stealing. But if
anyone wanted to borrow part of a Flaming Lips song, I don’t think I’d
bother pursuing it. I’ve got better things to do. Anyway, Cat Stevens is
never going to make much money out of us.”

Elastica front-woman Justine Frischmann is known for two things,
primarily: her super sexy sneer and the way she shamelessly raided the
catalog of 70s post-punk icons Wire for her band’s debut album, one of
the most popular albums of the Brit-Pop era. Wire took her to court, but
in a weird twist, didn’t receive any compensation for this thievery.
That’s what you get for hiring a lousy barrister, we guess!

Ray Parker, Jr. might not be afraid of any ghosts, but he certainly
was afraid when he showed up in court after getting sued by Huey Lewis.
You see, back in the early 80s, Lewis had been working with Columbia
Pictures on composing a theme song for their upcoming film Ghostbusters,
but backed out of the project when the producers for Back To The Future
came calling. So imagine Huey’s surprise when he heard Ray Parker,
Jr.’s “Ghostbusters,” which sounds nearly identical to Lewis’ hit, “I
Want A New Drug.” The case was settled out of court, Huey got a
paycheck, but then was countersued by Parker in the early 2000s after
Lewis blabbed about the settlement on an episode of Behind The Music.

Coldplay has been the focus of a number of plagiarism claims over the
years, – see this story about “Viva La Vida,” and this one about “Every
Teardrop Is A Waterfall” – but this track was a rip-off that they
straight up copped to. Martin handwrote a letter to Kraftwerk begging
them to be listed as co-writers of this song before any controversy
heated up, and the band agreed.
Similar to the Chili Peppers and Tom Petty story, Green Day avoided
having to write a big check to the Kinks due to the kindness of Ray
Davies (the two songs feature a nearly identical circular riff). In a
weird twist, though, Green Day was threatened with a lawsuit for
copyright infringement not by the Kinks, but rather by a British band
called Other Garden. The case never reached court, but if we were to
place Billie Jo’s hand on a bible, we’re guessing he’d cop to lifting
the riff not from Other Garden, but from The Kinks.
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