Ed Sheeran In Court Again Over claims He copied Marvin Gaye's Single Let's Get It On.

Ed Sheeran In Court Again Over claims He copied Marvin Gaye's Single Let's Get It On.



Editor Stephen Hill 24/04/23

Singer / Songwriter Ed Sheeran faces yet another copyright court case alleging the singer ripped off iconic Marvin Gaye hit Let's Get It On in his song Thinking Out Loud will begin in the US today.

 A Jury selection and opening statements will take place at the Manhattan federal courtroom in front of 95-year-old District Judge Louis Stanton.  
The jury will be asked to decide whether parts of Let's Get It On, released in 1973, were copied in the singer's 2014 number one and Grammy-winning hit Thinking Out Loud.  

Sheeran, 32, who denies copying the song, is expected to give evidence during the trial.  The case is being brought by the daughter of Ed Townsend, Gaye's co-writer of the 1973 soul classic, citing "striking similarities" between the two songs.  
Motown star Townsend died in 2003. Kathryn Townsend Griffin, his daughter, is the plaintiff leading the lawsuit.

However Sheeran's legal team have said the two songs "share versions of a similar and unprotectable chord progression that was freely available to all songwriters".  Sheeran himself has previously appeared to acknowledge similarities between the songs, toggling between the tracks during a concert in 2014, with the clip later shared on YouTube.  

YouTube clips of  the singer  segueing into his song with Gaye's hit may go on to form part of the evidence in the case.  
Sheeran's co-writer on the song, Amy Wadge, has not been named in the case. Additionally, Gaye's estate is not involved in the case.  
In 2018 Gaye's estate received about $5m (about £3.9m) when a judge ruled that Robin Thicke and Pharrell Williams' song Blurred Lines copied Gaye's Got To Give It Up, making it among the most significant copyright cases in recent decades.

Back in 2017, the singer  settled a £16m copyright infringement lawsuit over his song Photograph after musicians Martin Harrington and Thomas Leonard claimed his song was similar to a track they wrote in 2009. 

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