Arts & Entertainment

Jury Finds Pharrell Williams, Robin Thicke Copied Marvin Gaye Hit for `Blurred Lines'

The family of Marvin Gaye had been seeking about $40 million in damages--but the award was far less.

In a major victory for the family of the late Marvin Gaye, a federal jury found today that Pharrell Williams and Robin Thicke lifted portions of Gaye’s 1977 hit β€œGot to Give It Up” when they penned their chart-topping smash β€œBlurred Lines,” and the panel awarded Gaye’s family nearly $7.4 million in damages.

The eight-member panel reached its verdict on its second full day of deliberations in downtown Los Angeles. In response to the verdict, Gaye family attorney Richard Busch said he plans to seek an injunction blocking future sales of β€œBlurred Lines.”

Some members of Gaye’s family, and even one of the family’s attorneys, wept as the verdict was announced. The family had been seeking about $40 million in damages. The jury awarded about $4 million in damages, plus roughly $3.4 million in profits.

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Williams and Thicke were not in court when the verdict was read. The jury cleared rapper Clifford β€œT.I.” Harris Jr., who also has a writing credit on the song, of any wrongdoing.

The verdict is a β€œmiracle,” Gaye’s daughter, Nona, told reporters outside the courthouse. β€œI’m so filled with emotion that it’s hard to get the words out.”

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She said the family pursued the legal action β€œbecause he (Marvin) can’t do it for himself.”

At the time the Gaye song was copyrighted nearly 40 years ago, only written music -- not sound recordings -- could be registered with the copyright office.

During two weeks of trial, jurors heard β€œBlurred Lines” compared to the sheet music of β€œGot to Give It Up” played by a professional keyboardist in various pre-recorded configurations.

As the jury deliberated this morning, the panel submitted a question, asking about differences between the registered copy of the 1977 tune versus the sheet music used by session musicians. The panel then resumed deliberating, later asking for a clarification of language on the verdict form.

β€œAny of us are free to build on β€˜Got to Give It Up’ -- as long as we don’t copy the notes of β€˜Got to Give It Up,”’ Thicke attorney Howard King said in his closing argument. β€œThe Gaye family doesn’t own a genre or a groove.”

Busch countered that Williams and Thicke intentionally created their multimillion-selling 2013 hit as an updated copy of the disco-tinged β€œGot to Give It Up.”

Williams testified last week that the two songs share β€œfeel -- not infringement.”

The Gaye heirs were seeking a portion of the nearly $16.5 million in profits β€œBlurred Lines” has reaped since its release two years ago. Evidence read into the court record shows that Thicke and Williams each earned more than $5 million from the success of the disc, while Harris -- who got a co-writing credit due to his rap part added late in the recording -- made more than $700,000.

Although jurors saw the β€œBlurred Lines” video and heard the song, they were told to only consider the chords, melodies and lyrics of the songs, rather than production elements of the recordings.

The federal lawsuit was originally brought two years ago by Thicke, Williams and Harris Jr. as a preemptive strike to protect β€œBlurred Lines” from legal claims that it was derived from the decades-old Gaye hit.

The Gaye clan then filed counterclaims alleging that Thicke’s apparent fascination with their late father led to the misappropriation of his work in the creation of β€œBlurred Lines” and in the title track of Thicke’s 2011 β€œLove After War” album.

In his testimony, Williams said he has loved Gaye’s music since hearing Motown records around the house growing up.

β€œThe last thing you want to do is take something of someone else’s when you love him,” Williams told the jury. β€œIf I had, I would have dealt with it properly. It’s the fair and right and just thing to do.”

The 11-time Grammy Award winner was adamant that β€œBlurred Lines” and β€œGot to Give It Up” were similar only in terms of genre.

β€œSoul music sounds like soul music,” Williams said, adding that he understood why fans connected the two songs.

Busch stressed that it was Williams and Thicke who originally began the litigation.

β€œWe did not start this fight,” he said. β€œ... Pharrell Williams and Robin Thicke filed this lawsuit against my clients, against the Gaye family, for having the temerity to question whether β€˜Blurred Lines’ was an original song and whether it copied β€˜Got to Give It Up.’ They thought that the Gaye family would not have the resources, they would not have the ability and they would not have the wherewithal to fight this fight. They (were) wrong. They started this fight, but we ended it. β€œThey chose to litigate this case in the press,” he said. β€œOn the first day of this trial, Mr. Williams and his legal team appeared on the β€˜Today’ show, and throughout this case, they made comments about how this was about a groove and about how this was an era and how this was about a genre. It wasn’t. It was about the copying of β€˜Got to Give It Up.”’

--City News Service

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