How to avoid being accused "rip off"?
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- Boss Lovin' DR
- 14312 posts since 15 Mar, 2002 from the grimness of yorkshire
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- Boss Lovin' DR
- 14312 posts since 15 Mar, 2002 from the grimness of yorkshire
When I was listening to it I did think it puts into stark relief how great a singer Marvin Gaye was and how little Teddy Sheeran sounds pitifully weedy doing his best to rip him off.jancivil wrote:the not-Marvin Gaye half of that is SO mediocre, besides the, what, dire need to appropriate that chord progression
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- KVRian
- 1356 posts since 21 Sep, 2013 from California
This is when I start wondering if using royalty free loops is good. If I use some loops, then you use the same loops, it is likely our songs will have similarities, even if my song is a rock song and yours is EDM.
Of course, if I used it first, then you copied LOL!
Of course, if I used it first, then you copied LOL!
- KVRAF
- 26033 posts since 20 Oct, 2007 from gonesville
'weedy' is rightdonkey tugger wrote:When I was listening to it I did think it puts into stark relief how great a singer Marvin Gaye was and how little Teddy Sheeran sounds pitifully weedy doing his best to rip him off.jancivil wrote:the not-Marvin Gaye half of that is SO mediocre, besides the, what, dire need to appropriate that chord progression
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- KVRist
- 414 posts since 19 Sep, 2016 from Wonderland
@dzilizzi
Well... at least no one has to pay royalties
Well... at least no one has to pay royalties
Last edited by Rappo Clappo on Mon Apr 17, 2017 10:26 pm, edited 1 time in total.
I never make mistakes; I just blame others.
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- KVRist
- 98 posts since 6 Feb, 2017
jancivil wrote:You appear to have no real concept of melody, if you need that kind of reduction.OreoSplitter wrote:I tried looking into copyright and melody. How does one know legally they could be in trouble and never found an answer. It may seem like melodies have this gigantic 1 in a million chance to copy someone by accident but I believe it's darn near unavoidable. If we converted all songs to the key of C and grouped them to similar tempo and time signature it would be clear to claim I own this melody in court is ridiculous. You figure most notes are occurring at 16th notes to quarter notes. 32nd notes and smaller to me is too small a difference to claim it as a new rhythm that is so unique but tempo is important in that situation. Anyways 16th notes and up. Then you have 7 notes. Sure there are 12 but 99.9 percent of music is playing the notes of that key. In this case it's key of C. Then you could eliminate melodies that are not musically feasible like random notes, still in key. In other words only a small portion of all possible melodies makes sense Just like note placement and rounding things to 16th notes. No one is going to make a melody with 3 16th notes right away with nothing left for the rest of the measure.
You have nothing better to with you're life then put other people down. Sit and spin.
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- KVRAF
- 4329 posts since 26 Jun, 2004
- KVRAF
- 3321 posts since 2 Jul, 2007
First step in not being derivative is to not THINK derivative. If you are going to emulate something, do it out of love. Do it because it's part of you.
Find out why you like something, pick it apart and make that your own starting point.
"Game of Thrones" uses concepts from Michael Moorcock's work - but it's obviously because George R. R. Martin loved them and he wove them into his tapestry.
Laika and the Kosmonauts write great futuro-surf music (and what the f**k do they know about surf music, they're from Finland). I believe they do it because they love the form.
Find out why you like something, pick it apart and make that your own starting point.
"Game of Thrones" uses concepts from Michael Moorcock's work - but it's obviously because George R. R. Martin loved them and he wove them into his tapestry.
Laika and the Kosmonauts write great futuro-surf music (and what the f**k do they know about surf music, they're from Finland). I believe they do it because they love the form.
- KVRAF
- 10160 posts since 16 Dec, 2002
KoolKool wrote:so...it is super hard to be purely original these day?
I hear music all the time that has the same melody as some other tune and sing the lyrics from that other tune just to point it out to my GF.
Maybe most people don't hear it because they don't / cant hear the constituent parts of a tune separately ?
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- KVRAF
- 4329 posts since 26 Jun, 2004
- KVRAF
- 26033 posts since 20 Oct, 2007 from gonesville
And you're not putting me down. I addressed what you said and I stand by that. I do a number of things, one of them involves melody.OreoSplitter wrote:jancivil wrote:You appear to have no real concept of melody, if you need that kind of reduction.OreoSplitter wrote:I tried looking into copyright and melody. How does one know legally they could be in trouble and never found an answer. It may seem like melodies have this gigantic 1 in a million chance to copy someone by accident but I believe it's darn near unavoidable. If we converted all songs to the key of C and grouped them to similar tempo and time signature it would be clear to claim I own this melody in court is ridiculous. You figure most notes are occurring at 16th notes to quarter notes. 32nd notes and smaller to me is too small a difference to claim it as a new rhythm that is so unique but tempo is important in that situation. Anyways 16th notes and up. Then you have 7 notes. Sure there are 12 but 99.9 percent of music is playing the notes of that key. In this case it's key of C. Then you could eliminate melodies that are not musically feasible like random notes, still in key. In other words only a small portion of all possible melodies makes sense Just like note placement and rounding things to 16th notes. No one is going to make a melody with 3 16th notes right away with nothing left for the rest of the measure.
You have nothing better to with you're life then put other people down. Sit and spin.
And, 'you're' contracts 'you' and 'are'; the possessive that sounds like is 'your'. In a sentence: My life is none of your business.
- KVRAF
- 26033 posts since 20 Oct, 2007 from gonesville
Melody is a far wider and deeper thing than that shite. You can absolutely have melodies that aren't derivative.
I'll reiterate: the reduction of melodic possibility to that simple grid doesn't do anything good for anybody.
What is it, an excuse?
I'll reiterate: the reduction of melodic possibility to that simple grid doesn't do anything good for anybody.
What is it, an excuse?
- KVRAF
- 26033 posts since 20 Oct, 2007 from gonesville
If you make things which are very derivative, you know they are, complaining about being called rip-off is just silly.
If you don't want that, do something based in your own idea of the landscape for a bit.
If you don't want that, do something based in your own idea of the landscape for a bit.


