I'm still tripping Ed Sheeran tried to pull off ripping off Marvin Gaye's Let's Get it On in his song Thinking Out Loud

godofwine

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I'm road tripping and Ed Sheeran's Thinking Out Loud came on the radio and I still can't believe he tried to blatantly rip-off Marvin Gaye Let's Get It On buried in this track

White people really trying to be slick. It's a dope ass track, I can't even lie. I'm practicing for when they open things back up karaoke and talent shows. But you can easily tell Let's Get It On is in there



 
Damn. I can't unhear it in the melody now. Slick lil bastard. The Gay Estate is gonna get their bread though they're damn near undefeated.
 
Wow this is nuts. Stevie wonder can see this was armed robbery.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thinking_Out_Loud

Plagiarism allegations[edit]
Further information: List of songs that have been the subject of plagiarism disputes
On 10 August 2016, it was revealed that the family of Ed Townsend, who wrote Marvin Gaye's "Let's Get It On" was suing Ed Sheeran saying "the melodic, harmonic, and rhythmic compositions of 'Thinking' are substantially and/or strikingly similar to the drum composition of 'Let's [Get It On]'."[60] The case was dismissed without prejudice in February 2017.[61] Two years later, on 28 June 2018, Ed Sheeran was again sued on similar grounds, this time for $100 million in damages by Structured Asset Sales, owners of one-third of the copyright to "Let's Get It On".
[62]
 
Welp looks like the Gaye estate isn't done with Eddy boy


Ed Sheeran will stand trial in the copyright case involving his hit song "Thinking Out Loud."

Sheeran is accused of plagiarizing various parts of Marvin Gaye's "Let's Get In On" for his song, which came out on the 2014 album x (pronounced "Multiply").

"Thinking Out Loud" went on to win a Grammy for Song of the Year.

As reported by Billboard, on Sept. 29, Judge Louis Stanton decided not to throw the case out and allowed the lawsuit to proceed to trial.

"There is no bright-line rule that the combination of two unprotectable [sic] elements is insufficiently numerous to constitute an original work," Judge Stanton declared.

He continued: "A work may be copyrightable even though it is entirely a compilation of unprotectable elements."

According to Cornell's Legal Information Institute, a "bright-line rule" is defined as "an objective rule that resolves legal questions in a straightforward, predictable manner."

Judge Stanton believed that Sheeran's case was too nuanced for him to make a decision either way and has decided to leave it up to the opinion of a jury.

A date for the trial has not been set yet.

This specific case against Sheeran has gone on for quite some time.

The family of Ed Townsend, the co-writer of "Let's Get It On," initially filed the suit in 2016 before a judge dismissed the case the following year, as reported by The Wrap.

But the judge dismissed the case without prejudice, leaving it open for the suit to be filed again later on.

According to PEOPLE, the case was brought up again in 2018 by the Structured Asset Sales organization after it bought a third of the Townsend family's shares and sought $100 million from Sheeran.

The owner of Structured Asset Sales, David Pullman, said after the announcement that the case would go to trial that he was "pleased" and that he "looks forward to more success in this case which involves the largest copyright infringement in history."
 
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