After several years of court dates and lawyers’ fees, the main lawsuit between Ed Sheeran and Ed Townsend’s estate has come to a close. Towndsend co-wrote Marvin Gaye’s “Let’s Get It On” and his estate thought that Sheeran’s “Thinking Out Loud” felt a little too similar. But what either party thinks isn’t what matters here — it is what the jury thinks — and they finally returned a verdict:
A Manhattan federal jury deliberated for just 2.5 hours Thursday before determining that Ed Sheeran’s Grammy-winning song “Thinking Out Loud” did not copy from Marvin Gaye’s Motown classic “Let’s Get It On,” dealing a win to the British singer-songwriter in a long-running copyright case.
Sheeran breathed a visible sigh of relief, grinned and hugged his lawyers as the jury foreperson read out a verdict holding that he and co-writer Amy Wadge independently created the 2014 ballad “Thinking Out Loud.” Sheeran has been fighting infringement claims from the family of deceased “Let’s Get It On” co-writer Ed Townsend since 2016.
At first glance, the claim looks like it holds a lot of water. There’s no denying that there are similarities between “Thinking Out Loud” and “Let’s Get It On” (especially when they’re played really close together):
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Let me just say this and I’m done with it, The Marvin Gaye Estate never lost a case. #edsheeran pic.twitter.com/kvrn0PFuJL
— shawn allen (@addshawn) May 2, 2023
But from a different angle, one that looks structurally rather than just sonically, there’s a compelling story with a completely different outcome. Sure, they sound the same — but its because they share a chord, a very common one, and the stakes for assigning liability for merely sharing a chord would be too great. Similarity, even close similarity in a mashup, isn’t necessarily the “smoking gun” in IP lawsuits that Ben Crump, the attorney representing the estate, painted them to be. For example, I doubt people are out asking if A-ha stole from Bob Marley’s “No Woman, No Cry” when they made “Take On Me” after this performance, even if you don’t deny the similarities.
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Sheeran had this to say about the verdict:
“If the jury had decided this matter the other way, we might as well say goodbye to the creative freedom of songwriters,” Sheeran told reporters outside the lower Manhattan courthouse. “We need to be able to write our original music and engage in independent creation without worrying at every step of the way that such creativity will be wrongly called into question.
This isn’t some secret either — Sheeran himself has given examples of how protean cord progressions can be:
There would have also been a hell lot more legal liability if the case would have went the other way — just take a second to look through this very well put together rage list of artists that would be on the hook to pay The Teddy Bears:
10,000 Reasons by Matt Redman and Jonas Myrin, 20 Good Reasons by Thirsty Merc, Adore You by Harry Styles, Africa by Toto, Aicha by Cheb Khaled, Ai Se Eu Te Pego by Michel Teló, All You Wanted by Michelle Branch, Almost by Bowling for Soup, Alone by Alan Walker, (2/19)
— gloop (@GloopBloop113) May 3, 2023
You're Not Sorry by Taylor Swift, and finally, Zombie, by The Cranberries.
(List taken from https://t.co/Bc4aSBmKHx)
Therefore, The Teddy Bears should be able to sue everyone else on this list because they wrote their song first in 1958.
(19/19)
— gloop (@GloopBloop113) May 3, 2023
Though the verdict was a win for Sheeran, it was bittersweet:
Ed Sheeran is PISSED despite being found not guilty of copyright
“I am not and will never allow myself to be a piggy bank for anyone to shake. Having to be in NY for this trial means I’ve missed being w/my family at my grandmother’s funeral and I will never get that time back.” pic.twitter.com/Mlk9YEa2zl
— Gunz (@TheGunzShow) May 4, 2023
Cheers to Ed Sheeran keeping his day job!
https://twitter.com/basedchanny/status/667225887155331072?s=46&t=Y36Fcpj8aTBlTBMnZlc6bA
Ed Sheeran Wins ‘Thinking Out Loud’ Copyright Trial [Law360]
Earlier: Jurors Prohibited From Dancing To Ed Sheeran’s Funky Music (Or Is It Marvin Gaye’s)
Chris Williams became a social media manager and assistant editor for Above the Law in June 2021. Prior to joining the staff, he moonlighted as a minor Memelord™ in the Facebook group Law School Memes for Edgy T14s. He endured Missouri long enough to graduate from Washington University in St. Louis School of Law. He is a former boatbuilder who cannot swim, a published author on critical race theory, philosophy, and humor, and has a love for cycling that occasionally annoys his peers. You can reach him by email at [email protected] and by tweet at @WritesForRent.