Dua Lipa thinks about her Glastonbury performance ‘all the time’
Dua Lipa has opened up about her plans for this year’s Glastonbury festival, saying that she thinks about the performance “all the time.”
Bang Showbiz
NEW YORK — Dua Lipa won the dismissal on Thursday of a lawsuit in Manhattan accusing the British pop star of copying her 2021 megahit “Levitating” from a 1979 disco song.
U.S. District Judge Katherine Polk Failla said L. Russell Brown and Sandy Linzer failed to show “substantial similarity” between “Levitating” and their song “Wiggle and Giggle All Night,” though some listeners could hear similarities.
Linzer and Brown alleged that “Levitating” copied the “signature melody” from “Wiggle” and another song to which they held a copyright.
But the judge found that melody unprotectable, drawing on a federal appeals court decision in November that ruled Ed Sheeran’s 2014 song “Thinking Out Loud” did not illegally copy Marvin Gaye’s classic “Let’s Get It On.”
The judge also found that several other alleged similarities between “Levitating” and “Wiggle” were commonplace, having appeared in Mozart and Rossini operas, Gilbert and Sullivan operettas and “Stayin’ Alive” by the Bee Gees.
“A musical style, defined by (Linzer and Brown) as ‘pop with a disco feel,’ and a musical function, defined by (Linzer and Brown) to include ‘entertainment and dancing,’” cannot possibly be protectable,” Failla wrote.
To make it so the style was uncopyable by law, she said, would “completely foreclose the further development of music in that genre or for that purpose.”
Jason Brown, a lawyer for Linzer and Brown, said they plan to appeal.
“This case has always been about standing up for the enduring value of original songwriting,” Brown, who is L. Russell Brown’s nephew, said in an email to Reuters.
Lawyers for Lipa, her label Warner Records and other defendants did not immediately respond to requests for comment from Reuters.
Her lawyers previously called it implausible to believe Lipa, 29, heard “Wiggle” before writing “Levitating,” and said the artists suing her could not “monopolize one of the most commonplace and rudimentary elements of music: the use of a minor scale.”
Brown’s other songs include Tony Orlando and Dawn’s “Tie a Yellow Ribbon Round the Ole Oak Tree” and “Knock Three Times,” while Linzer’s songs include the Four Seasons’ “Let’s Hang On!” and “Working My Way Back To You.”
“Levitating,” from Lipa’s album “Future Nostalgia,” was the No. 1 song on Billboard’s 2021 year-end chart.
Contributing: Jonathan Stempel, Reuters
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