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The Supreme Court has rejected a copyright lawsuit claiming it. Ed Sheeran The 2014 hit “Thinking Out Loud” copied the musical codes for Marvin Gaye’s 1973 classic “Let’s Get It On.”
The Supreme Court on Monday decided not to listen to cases brought on by Structured Asset Sales (SAS) that owns some of the rights to gay songs. This decision maintains a lower court’s decision that Sheeran is not liable. Copyright infringement lawsuit.
SAS, owned by investment banker David Pullman, claimed Sheeran used copyrighted melody, harmony and rhythm to gay’s “Let’s Get It On.”
The case was dismissed in 2023 after US District Judge Judge Lewis Stanton determined that the musical elements Sheeran accused of copying were too common.
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The ju judge previously ruled that Ed Sheeran was not liable for copyright infringement lawsuits. (debra l rothenberg/wiremage, file)
The firing follows Sheeran’s victory in another copyright lawsuit against the song brought by singer-songwriter Ed Townsend’s family.
“When we did so much work for our livelihood, it’s devastating to be accused of stealing another person’s songs,” Sheeran said outside the court following the ruling.
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SAS appealed Stanton’s decision, but the New York-based Second Circuit Court of Appeals backed the judge’s decision last year.