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Estate wants Cloud guitar creator to stop making replicas Welcome to "the org", Mumio…they can have you, but I'll have your love in the end | |
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The guy owns the trademark. I don't see how the Estate has a leg to stand on.
The Estate is getting desperate, that's not a good sign. Things might be going down hill for them. [Edited 12/4/18 18:12pm] [Edited 12/4/18 19:04pm] | |
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Sorry, it's the Hodgkin's talking. | |
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Weird because a month ago Dave RUsan was named The Estate's official curator for Prince's guitars at Paisley Park. | |
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It would be funny if Dave sued Paisley Park for selling cloud guitars since he owns the trademark to the cloud design now. I wish I could afford a Dave Rusan Cloud, I did purchase a Schecter Cloud ( $1750 )from Paisley Park shortly after the opening of the museum. I feel that it’s close but where it isn’t is the headstock, Dave’s headstock is longer and works better with balancing the overall proportions of the guitar. The Schecter just looks stubby to me. I also own a HS Anderson MadCat reissue Guitar and that thing is amazing! The workmanship on that guitar is superb and it sounds great. It’s the closest thing out there to Prince’s Hohner I think and at $3200 it’s a bargain compared to Dave Rusan’s $8000 Cloud. [Edited 12/4/18 23:47pm] | |
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Fuck the Estate. The cloud guitar design is based upon the design of a guitar that Todd Rundgren used anyway. | |
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If he owns the trademark how can they stop him? Paisley Park is in your heart
#PrinceForever 💜 | |
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I don't know how to play a guitar, nor can I afford to spend $8000 for one that I'd really love to have but Dave OWNS the trademark. Which means it belongs to him, to do with as he wants. Personally, I think the estate would be wise to work out some sort of Prince-related incentive option with him to enhance sales for a precentage. Maybe some rare, never, ever seen before video footage of Prince rehearsing with it, broken down into tutorial form with other "real musicians" narrating. Wins all around. I knew from the start that I loved you with all my heart. | |
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fucking idiots! The estates commercial lawyers are charging them millions & dropped the ball on this. Dave rightly took the initiative & the estae acted too late....idiots! Fact is that this design was NOT Prince's original, in fact if anyone should own it it should be Andre Cymone who alerted P to it in the 1st place! | |
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Minneapolis luthier Dave Rusan holds the very first Cloud guitar built for Prince in 1983. Rusan is standing by his bench in Knut-Koupée Music, the guitar repair shop he worked at that Prince frequented and commissioned to build a one-of-a-kind axe for the film Purple Rain.
https://www.premierguitar...oud-guitar
On a blustery Sunday night in New York City’s Times Square, the mood is bittersweet as devoted fans flock to a special weekend screening of Purple Rain. While many here are still trying to come unstuck from the notion of a world without Prince tearing up a stage or dropping another uniquely multihued album, there’s also a sizzle of expectation in the air, almost as though a full-blown concert, and not just a movie, is about to jump off. After all, this was the film that, more than 30 years ago (in the summer of ’84), established Prince, playing a character known simply as the Kid, as an explosive musical talent to be reckoned with. Maybe his acting chops didn’t quite set the world on fire, but that’s yet another of the saving graces of Purple Rain; as campy as the film is, the story it tells is straight-ahead, timeless, romantic, and familiar. Sacrificing himself for his art, the Kid fights through family strife, ridicule (from his rivals Morris Day and the Time), and his own demons to realize his lifelong dream. And naturally, he gets the girl in the end. One scene in particular sends a knowing murmur through the theater crowd. The Kid is wooing his love interest, Apollonia, when he stops in front of a shop window to admire a guitar. “Do you see something you like?” she asks him. He answers only “Let’s go,” and the camera cuts and pans slowly over Apollonia’s shoulder to reveal a white, curvy, alien-looking axe, slung upside-down (for a lefty—like Jimi Hendrix, let’s say) from a black mannequin’s neck. It’s foreshadowing that hits you over the head, but the statement is clear: This is the Kid’s totem, the staff of Moses, his ticket to the big time. And one day soon, it’ll be his to play. “That’s what a guitar is really, at least in the rock world,” says Dave Rusan, the original builder of what would become known in Prince-ly lore as the Cloud guitar—one of four he made in the mid-’80s. “It’s so much more than just part of a costume. It’s a means of expression, power, identity, you name it. And honestly, I didn’t know how it was going to be portrayed in the movie, because we didn’t have any hints of a plot line or the script or anything. But when I first saw it, I remember thinking, ‘Oh wow—there it is!’ I was quite surprised.” At the time, Rusan lived and worked in Minneapolis doing repairs at Knut-Koupée Music, the hip Uptown store cofounded by a local guitarist named Jeff Hill. Prince started coming in when he was still in high school, and by the late ’70s, after he’d signed to Warner Bros., he was a regular customer. Rusan remembers first hearing about Prince through David Z, who produced some of his early demos. “One day David walked in with a boom box with a cassette in it, which was how you listened to stuff on the fly back then. He just came into the store and put it up on the counter and played it. After a while we went, ‘God, who’s this band? They’re great—they sound just like Earth, Wind & Fire!’ And he said, ‘This is one guy. This is Prince.’” By the middle of ’83, Prince’s album 1999 had put him on the map with the hits “Little Red Corvette” and “Delirious.” Word started circulating that he had even bigger plans for his next project. “I’d been in London working at another shop for about nine months,” Rusan recalls. “When I came back, there was Prince up at the counter. He and Jeff went into the back office and they talked a long time, and then Jeff came down and told me, ‘Prince is going to make a movie. He needs a guitar, and you’re going to make it.’ And I was like, wow. I didn’t see that coming. He’d already had some success, and had a few albums out, but not too many people made movies until they were much bigger—like Elvis, you know?” Prince told Hill he needed a fully functioning instrument, but with an unusual design that he wanted to swipe from a bass once owned by André Cymone, Prince’s childhood friend and former bass player. “We were recording his first album [For You] at the Record Plant in Sausalito,” Cymone remembers. “We had a day off, so we just got in the car and drove. I spotted a shop in San Rafael, we popped in, and I saw the bass. I played it and fell in love, but I didn’t have the cash at the time, so I asked Prince to buy it and he did. I’m not completely sure who the maker was—I haven’t seen it since I left the band. I was pretty surprised when I saw him playing a guitar version. I’d never seen anything like that before.”
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Estate = P.U.S.S.I.E.S. | |
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What a waste of money. Billable hours are racking up. The question is who requested to pursue this litiagation. The heirs aren't in control yet. Any lawyer would know this was a waste of time. | |
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http://cloudguitarcentral.blogspot.com/2010/07/origins.html
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Not a good move by the Estate. They would benefit more so by making a deal with him, to sell his guitars via Paisley Park and the website. | |
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could this all be more scams for lawyers to make EVEN MORE money? | |
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Time keeps on slipping into the future...
This moment is all there is... | |
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Just because a trademark is approved by the USPTO doesn't mean it will hold up as valid. They make plenty of mistakes. We sell printed apparel and run into this issue all of the time. We have people copy our products, file trademarks on their copies, then claim we are in violation of their trademark. They never win.
In this specific case it is odd that he filed for a trademarke this year for a guitar that has been associated with Prince for decades. The terms of the work for the original guitar are going to be important.
And the estate cares because they were selling cloud guitars. | |
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They were selling cloud guitars before this guy got his trademark in Febuary.
He filed once in 2016 and was denied, he filed again in 2017, that one went through, now he's trying to trademark the term "Could Guitar"
"Custom-made handcrafted guitars, specifically exact reproductions of the guitar made for and used by the artist known as Prince." is what he said in that appplication. it's very unlikely taht one gets approved. | |
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So prince (or his band) had a cloud guitar since at least 1980? So the told the guy "can you make me one in white" and only after Prince died did he try to trademark the design. [Edited 12/5/18 21:49pm] | |
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Sorry, it's the Hodgkin's talking. | |
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I don't follow your post.
Teh image shows design for the guitar predates Dave Rusan. Dave Rusan's trademark application says he created the design for the guitar ini 1983. The video shows the design existed and was used in Prince's band at least 3 years before that.
If Prince hires Dave Rusan to make him a guitar and gives him the design of what it should look like, Dave Rusan can'd turn around and claim rights to that design. His own trademark application says "Custom-made handcrafted guitars, specifically exact reproductions of the guitar made for and used by the artist known as Prince."
Unless he can prove otherwise, Prince hired him to make a guitar and told him what it should look like. Today not just Dave Rusan, but many otehr people, are making cloud guitars and selling them as Prince guitars.
What really should happen is the estate should get the trademark, again be able to sell the guitars they were selling, give Dave Rusan a free license to continue selling what he's selling, and shut down everyone else who is out there making and selling them as Prince guitars. They shouldnt' be able to use or imply that it's a Prince product. The estate owns those rights. | |
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Sorry, it's the Hodgkin's talking. | |
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Why? He is the created of guitars. If Prince had chose that sytle bak in the mid '80's foe the movie Purple Rain. Then in actuality; the creator is the owner of the cloud guitars' | |
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We know from the trademark application that Rusan didn't create the bass design. HIs trademark application has first use date of the design.
ANd the whole point of my posts is we don't know, so we can't just assume Rusan designed it independently, espscially since the bass is prior art. People are ripping the estate in this thread. | |
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The Estate should be ripped. They should be worried about keeping afloat instead of going after this guy. That isn't P's design, what gives them the right? | |
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O(+>NIИ<+)O
“Is man merely a mistake of God's? Or God merely a mistake of man's?” - Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche | |
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The estate should be ripped for shit like this.
The man of science has learned to believe in justification, not by faith, but by verification - Thomas Henry Huxley | |
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Sorry, it's the Hodgkin's talking. | |
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