I have followed his work closely. I attended a conference he gave last month. He is very articulate! He likes to think outside the box. I was very impressed with him! Especially with his work he did on the soundtrack to Despicable Me 2(I almost bought it ) I also attended a special screening of that movie that he was at. He spoke briefly there. He is no dummy! will ALWAYS think of like a "ACT OF GOD"! N another realm. mean of all people who might of been aliens or angels.if found out that wasn't of this earth, would not have been that surprised. R.I.P. | |
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Yeah...sounds just like Sweetest Taboo, right? Maureen? NOT!
She works within the context of the sound she and the band developed. Her subject matter is still diverse.
We getting a bit off topic here. Sade is Sade; Robin Thicke is no Sade. [Edited 8/18/13 9:02am] | |
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[img:$uid]http://s24.postimg.org/mnj2lwv4l/o7u8v.jpg[/img:$uid][/url] | |
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BlaqueKnight said: I don't see how anyone with ears could deny that Blurred Lines is an interpolation of a piece of Got To Give It Up. If this were a Prince song, the org would be full of hate for Robin. The org has gone nuts over less. Because it is a dead black R&B singer that some people on here are unfamiliar with, there is a lot of indifference about it because there is less attachment to the original artist and the source material. Suing the original artist over something you KNOW you stole? That's just downright disgusting. No R&B head in their right mind should support these fools ever again. Robin and Pharrell should have their careers severed at the head and T.I.'s ass should be put on notice just for good measure . T.I. 'll be like "What did I do? and folks 'll say "You was with 'em!" Its up to people that support a genre of music to preserve its integrity. Maybe a few years down the line, someone will do the same thing tyeo "Lost Without You" like Kevin Hart did jokingly and Robin will feel the same sting. [Edited 8/18/13 7:51am] Yep | |
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BlaqueKnight said: I don't see how anyone with ears could deny that Blurred Lines is an interpolation of a piece of Got To Give It Up. If this were a Prince song, the org would be full of hate for Robin. The org has gone nuts over less. Because it is a dead black R&B singer that some people on here are unfamiliar with, there is a lot of indifference about it because there is less attachment to the original artist and the source material. gSuing the original artist over something you KNOW you stole? That's just downright disgusting. No R&B head in their right mind should support these fools ever again. Robin and Pharrell should have their careers severed at the head and T.I.'s ass should be put on notice just for good measure . T.I. 'll be like "What did I do? and folks 'll say "You was with 'em!" Its up to people that support a genre of music to preserve its integrity. Maybe a few years down the line, someone will do the same thing to "Lost Without You" like Kevin Hart did jokingly and Robin will feel the same sting. [Edited 8/18/13 7:51am] I like Robin but I have definitely soured on him after this atrocity. I wasn't crazy about Blurred Lines to begin with. I only have his Evolution album and wanted to pick up Love And War but never got around to it. I am definitely having reservations about supporting his music now. Like I stated before if this situation was with Mariah Carey I think the tone here would be different because of her reputation with hopping on board with the latest hip hop star but Robin has teamed up with Lil Wayne on occasion too. Don't laugh at my funk
This funk is a serious joint | |
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The music notation would throw the case out of court. The chords and voicings are different. Maybe the song should be called "Blurred Give it Up"
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if it walks like a duck, and quacks like a duck
there's a duck floatin around in the room quacking | |
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Hold UP! | |
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I would say floating, because when you're hijacking, it's too easy to be caught walking | |
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Rapper's Delight wasn't sampled though. It was replayed by the Sugarhill Records house band. Good Times is not the only song on it. The little part at the beggining comes from a disco song called Here Comes That Sound Again by Love De-luxe. So it's no different than remaking a song or doing what Weird Al does. The thing was that Rapper's Delight was originally credited to the Sugarhill Gang members and Sylvia Robinson and not Chic. But Chic are not credited on other soundalike songs like Another One Bites The Dust and Bounce, Rock, Skate, Roll. . Also some acts approve sampling. Danny Seraphine from Chicago co-wrote Street Player and the group released it as a single. Unfortunately, it came out during the "Disco Sucks" phase and so flopped. Decades later, the Masters At Work (aka The Bucketheads) sampled it on The Bomb, and then Pitbull sampled the sample. Both songs became big hits and Danny said he made a lot of money from them. Acts that sampled old obscure songs from obscure acts that are out of print made money(if the song becomes popular) for the songwriter or whoever owns the songs. This would have never happened without sampling. Songs are only worth something if they get covered a lot or used in movies or commercials. Just owning songs that are not used just drains money as they are taxed. That's why some just wind up selling them off. You can take a black guy to Nashville from right out of the cotton fields with bib overalls, and they will call him R&B. You can take a white guy in a pin-stripe suit who’s never seen a cotton field, and they will call him country. ~ O. B. McClinton | |
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My two cents:
If this song is nominated for a Grammy and wins, all hell is gonna break loose. The Gaye family might bust up on that stage like ODB did that one year to Shaun Colvin.
Two, I second what someond said re how "Slave 4 U" sounded damn near exactly like "Nasty Girl". Damn skippy Pharrell better be glad Prince didn't sue his ass off.
Thirdly, how did Men at Work get in trouble for "Land Down Under" ?
And one more thing-Robin better thank his lucky stars he isn't accused of jacking an MJ song. The black community would never forgive him.
For a white boy that does black music, this whole thing has set him back made him lose cred. [Edited 8/18/13 10:52am] [Edited 8/18/13 10:54am] "Lack of home training crosses all boundaries." | |
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I guess this should come as no suprise, since he came in the biz riding the coat tails of an already legendary song:
Old habits die hard, I guess. | |
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Back in the day, Mad TV would be dropping a parody of it by now called "Crossed Lines" with Ike Barinholtz or Michael McDonald in a Robin hair wig and Phil Lamar as Pharrell and Aries Spears as T.I.. Nicole Sullivan, Mo Collins and Debra Wilson would be the video girls. | |
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I am a diehard Robin Thicke fan and it makes me very sad he's doing this. The first time I heard the song, I immiediately said it was a rip of Got To Give It Up and was sad he did not credit Marvin on the track.
Riding the coattails of the song you mention is NOTHING. Robin has been "channeling" Marvin on that same album. Listen to the last minute or so of Cherry Blue Skies.
I can call bullshit on the artist, whether it's someone I like or not. | |
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It's always been about money. It's the "record business", not the "record charity". From the beginning the labels gave acts rip off contracts that made the labels rich and the performers broke. That's how capitalism works, the people at the bottom do the most work for little money (or for free with sweatshops and slavery) and the people at the top who are doing the least get the rewards. Why do you think the mafia was involved in entertainment, Hollywood, Las Vegas, nightclubs, etc.? The mob wanted to make money and have fronts for their other illegal activities. Decades ago, label heads (especially with small independent labels like Specialty and Modern) added their names as the songwriter, and sometimes left the real songwriters off. Songwriters for hire worked for labels and got paid a fee for songs, but the label owned the songs and wthe writers didn't get paid royalties. . When a particular type of music became popular (ie. big band, rock & roll, doo wop, dance craze songs, heavy metal, James Taylor/Paul Simon style singer-songwriters, disco, new wave, hair metal, etc.), the labels sign a bunch of similar acts until it loses popularity from overkill. When Elvis Presley became popular, there were a bunch of Elvis soundalikes and there were a bunch of Beatle soundalike bands and British Invasion groups. Thinking that music is different than any other business makes no sense, the main reason people start a business is to make money. To make money is to give people what they want. Coca Cola, fast food, and cigarettes are not good for your health, yet people continue to buy it. You can take a black guy to Nashville from right out of the cotton fields with bib overalls, and they will call him R&B. You can take a white guy in a pin-stripe suit who’s never seen a cotton field, and they will call him country. ~ O. B. McClinton | |
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what's crazy about it......
critics will say the actual original version that becomes part of lexicon is outdated
but when a guy hijacks it,, the hijacker is praised for bringing the song "up to date".......
but taking it back to 1990
when Milli Vanilli won those two Grammy Awards, in particular for best new artists
it totally discredited the Grammy Award Academy for good and there were signs flying all around that the recording industry would soon tank....
they sold over 10 million copies of "Girl You Know It's True"......
which not only featured tons of samples, but they weren't even singing the songs.....
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Jazz musician Nicholas Peyton lays it out... "Ya see, we're not interested in what you know...but what you are willing to learn. C'mon y'all." | |
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here's a song that's been sampled to oblivion
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You mean two legendary songs, right? "When I Get You Alone" contains a credited sample of Walter Murphy's #1 hit "A Fifth of Beethoven," which of course is heavily based on Beethoven's Fifth Symphony. "Whitney was purely and simply one of a kind." ~ Clive Davis | |
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"Written by the singer and produced by Art Stewart" - so why is the Gaye family going after them. He didn't write it or produce it. Shouldn't the Stewart family be pursuing a lawsuit? | |
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Marvin wrote it, I have the record. The producer is not really relevant. . Did Marvin even own his songs? Motown often owned the songs/publishing of their writers. Then Marvin had things taken by the IRS. If Motown owns them, Marvin's family has nothing to do with it. It was Motown that turned down filmakers from using his songs, not the family or estate like in Jimi Hendrix's case. That's why the proposed Marvin movie was going to focus on the CBS years. You can take a black guy to Nashville from right out of the cotton fields with bib overalls, and they will call him R&B. You can take a white guy in a pin-stripe suit who’s never seen a cotton field, and they will call him country. ~ O. B. McClinton | |
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"Down Under" quite clearly contains a bit of "Kookaburra," but a lawsuit wasn't filed until almost 30 years after Men at Work released the song. However, the suit was successful because, well, it's obvious.
For my money, Marvin Gaye is second only to Stevie Wonder. One of the amusing moments on wax is when Marvin steals a riff from Stevie in "Praise" and then immediately apologizes for it in the lyrics. "Whitney was purely and simply one of a kind." ~ Clive Davis | |
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Reread the bold part. Marvin is the singer and the writer of "Got to Give It Up." "Whitney was purely and simply one of a kind." ~ Clive Davis | |
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Pages ago, I said this is the part of the actual lawsuit that stands out to me:
I don't yet know exactly what the hell that's supposed to mean but I'm pretty sure it means something quite specific, considering the Robin and crew are in fact suing - not counter-suing...flat out suing - the Gaye family. I knew from the start that I loved you with all my heart. | |
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Good night, sweet Prince | 7 June 1958 - 21 April 2016
Props will be withheld until the showing and proving has commenced. -- Aaron McGruder | |
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Robin Thicke seems to have handled all of the attention and success of Blured Lines pretty poorly. From his response to the feminist critiques of the video, to his offhanded comments about 'now white people want to claim me', to this lawsuit. He seems to have gotten so wrapped up in having "arrived" now to a mainstream audience. If he isnt careful, I really think he is going to lose goodwill with a lot of audiences quickly. Perhaps, even his original fan base.
Oh, and regarding the Got to Give it Up comparison. Of course Blurred Lines sounds identical. That's why it's a hit. Perhaps Robin and Pharell are talented, I don't know. I'd be more impressed if they could create a number one hit that didn't sound eerily similar to one of the most popular party jams of all time. [Edited 8/18/13 13:19pm] | |
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"Whitney was purely and simply one of a kind." ~ Clive Davis | |
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I was done with the Grammys after the Janet Jackson fiasco. When they gave Paul Simon the award for Graceland over her and nobody even knew that album, I looked into how the Grammys work and it was then that I understood that Grammys are bullshit. By the time the Milli Vanilli scandal hit, I was already done. I just watch for the performances.
Robin is about to dig himself in a hole he can't get out of. 119 made a good point about how poorly he's handling the press around his success. | |
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I think the way these things work is that no party really wants to get all the way to a courtroom, since it's so prohibitively expensive and risky to go that route; so everyone would always prefer to settle out of court - and consequently there's this game-playing as each side tries to get the upper hand. In this case, I wonder if the potential for damage to Robin's 'brand' as the row rolls on - particularly at the moment he's breaking into the mainstream - will mean that his side ultimately caves in and settles. You don't want to be known as 'the (white) guy who ripped off Marvin Gaye', do you? "Not everything that is faced can be changed; but nothing can be changed until it is faced." - James Baldwin | |
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very, very true
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