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‘Unbelievably frustrated’: Ed Sheeran hits out after winning copyright case

Pop singer Ed Sheeran has hit out in frustration after winning a copyright trial in which he was accused of stealing parts of a Marvin Gaye song.

The US jury sided with Sheeran that he did not copy key components of Gaye’s 1973 classic Let’s Get It On for his 2014 hit Thinking Out Loud.

The jury determined that heirs of songwriter Ed Townsend had not proven that Sheeran, his label Warner Music Group and his music publisher Sony Music Publishing had infringed their copyright interest in the Gaye song.

Sheeran, who had said he would quit if found guilty, hugged his lawyers after the verdict was read in the Manhattan federal court.

Outside court, Sheeran said he was “obviously very happy with the outcome of the case” which had taken six years.

“But at the same time I’m unbelievably frustrated that baseless claims like this are allowed to go to court at all,” he said.

“It’s devastating to be accused of stealing someone else’s song when we’ve put so much work into our livelihoods.

He said the two songs had “dramatically” different lyrics and melodies.

Sheeran also touched on the trial’s emotional toll, saying he had missed his grandmother’s funeral in Ireland.

“I will never get that time back,” he said.

The verdict came after six days of trial and less than three hours of deliberations.

Townsend’s heirs sued Sheeran for copyright infringement in 2017, contending that Thinking Out Loud copied the “heart” of Gaye’s song including its melody, harmony and rhythm.

Sheeran’s lawyers argued that any similarities between the songs involve basic musical “building blocks” that cannot be copyrighted.

Testifying during the trial, Sheeran denied the copyright infringement claims, telling the jury, “I find it really insulting to devote my whole life to being a performer and a songwriter and have someone diminish it.”

Sheeran on the witness stand played the chord progression to Thinking Out Loud and sang the opening words: “When your legs don’t work like they used to.”

Sheeran testified that his friend and collaborator Amy Wadge first started strumming the chords for the song during a visit to his home in England, and that they collaborated on the lyrics.

Ed Sheeran expresses his frustration outside court in New York. Photo: Getty

Ben Crump, a lawyer representing the heirs, told jurors that Sheeran effectively confessed to ripping off Gaye’s song when he performed it live in concert as a medley with Thinking Out Loud.

Sheeran testified that singers frequently perform such “mash ups,” and that he had on other occasions combined his song with Van Morrison’s Crazy Love and Dolly Parton’s I Will Always Love You.

Juror Sophia Neis, 23, told reporters afterward that there had been “a lot of back and forth” in the jury room before the panel made its decision.

Gaye, who died in 1984, collaborated with Townsend, who died in 2003, to write Let’s Get It On, which topped the Billboard charts.

Sheeran’s Thinking Out Loud peaked at No. 2 on the Billboard Hot 100 in 2015.

The plaintiffs asked for a share of the profits from Thinking Out Loud.

The heirs said in a court filing that they received 22 per cent of the writer’s share of Gaye’s song from Townsend.

“I’m just a guy with a guitar who loves writing music for people to enjoy. I am not and will never allow myself to be a piggy bank for anyone to shake,” Sheeran said after the verdict.

Two similar lawsuits are pending against Sheeran in Manhattan, brought by investment banker and “Bowie Bonds” creator David Pullman’s Structured Asset Sales LLC, which also owns copyright interests in the Gaye song.

Sheeran won a trial in London last year in a separate copyright case over his hit Shape of You.

Gaye’s heirs won an important verdict in 2015 when a jury in Los Angeles agreed with the claims that the Robin Thicke and Pharrell Williams song Blurred Lines copied Gaye’s Got to Give It Up.

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