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15 Vand. J. Ent. & Tech. L. 227 (2012-2013)
Copyright Infringement of Music: Determining Whether What Sounds Alike Is Alike

handle is hein.journals/vanep15 and id is 243 raw text is: 


            VANDERBILT JOURNAL OF

 ENTERTAINMENT AND TECHNOLOGY LAW


VOLUME 15                   WINTER 2013                   NUMBER  2


     Copyright Infringement of Music:

   Determining Whether What Sounds

                      Alike Is Alike


              Margit Livingston* and Joseph Urbinato**

                           ABSTRACT

       The standard  for copyright infringement is the same  across
different forms of expression. But musical  expression poses special
challenges for courts deciding infringement disputes because of  its
unique   attributes.   Tonality  in  Western   music   offers finite
compositional choices that will be pleasing or satisfying to the ear. The
vast storehouse of existing public domain music means that many  of
those choices have been  exhausted.  Although  independent creation
negates plagiarism, the inevitable similarity among  musical pieces
within  the same genre  leaves courts in a quandary  as to whether
defendant  composers infringed earlier copyrighted works or simply
found their own way to a similar melody, harmony, rhythm, or formal
structure. This Article explores the knotty legal issues embedded in
copyright  infringement  cases  involving musical  expression  and
suggests a methodology for cutting through the knots. By delving into
the historical development of Western music and tonality, it attempts to
connect  music  history and  theory  with copyright jurisprudence's
ultimate goal of balancing private protection of expressive works with
public access to them.

         Professor of Law, DePaul University College of Law. M.A. (Theatre Arts), J.D.,
University of Minnesota; LL.M., University of Illinois. The Authors acknowledge with deep
gratitude the diligent and insightful research assistance of DePaul law students Neil P. Kelley
and Daniel Schiller. We would like to recognize especially the invaluable research and editorial
contributions of DePaul law students Erik Weber and Melinda Wetzel.
   *     Professor Emeritus of Music History, Music Theory, and Bassoon, Roosevelt
University. D.M.A., Boston University. This Article is dedicated to the memory of my parents,
Mary and Antonio Urbinato, who inspired me to devote my life to music.


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