2007 TIMBALAND PLAGIARISM CONTROVERSY

Rolling Stone's website covers the controversy on January 18th.

In January 2007, several news sources reported that Timbaland was alleged to have plagiarized several elements (both motifs and samples) in the song "Do It" on the 2006 album ''Loose'' by Nelly Furtado without giving credit or compensation. The song itself was released as the fifth North American single from ''Loose'' on July 24, 2007.

Contents
Background
Authors' comments
Janne Suni
Glenn Gallefoss
Universal / Nelly Furtado
Timbaland
Third-party analysis
Similar cases
Media coverage
The beginnings of the controversy
Mainstream coverage
Criticism
References
External links

Background


The claimed original track, entitled "Acidjazzed Evening", is a chiptune-style 4-channel Amiga module composed by Finnish demoscener Janne Suni (a.k.a. Tempest). [1] The song won first place in the Oldskool Music competition at Assembly 2000, a demoparty held in Helsinki, Finland in the year 2000. [2] According to Scene.org, the song was uploaded to their servers the same year, long before the release of the song by Furtado. The song was later remixed (with Suni's permission) by Norwegian Glenn Rune Gallefoss (a.k.a. GRG) for the Commodore 64 in SID format - this is the version which was later allegedly sampled for "Do It". It was added to the High Voltage SID Collection on December 21, 2002.[3]
A video which claims to show proof of the theft was posted to YouTube on January 12, 2007.[4] Another video was posted to YouTube on January 14, 2007, claiming Timbaland also stole the tune a year earlier for the ringtone ''Block Party'', one of several that were sold in the United States in 2005.[5] A YouTube video comparing all the related songs was posted in February 13.[6]
On April 1, the track for "Do It" (without vocals) was used as theme music for the 2007 Juno Awards broadcast, which Furtado hosted. The track was played during the show's opening and before commercial breaks. The controversial samples could be clearly heard throughout.

Authors' comments


Janne Suni

Janne Suni posted the following comment regarding the copyright status of "Acidjazzed Evening" on January 15, 2007:
"...I have never given up the copyrights of Acidjazzed Evening. I also have never authorized 'commercial' use of the song. In 2002, however, Glenn Rune Gallefoss (also known as GRG) made a conversion/arrangement of the Acidjazzed Evening which was not released commercially. This arrangement was made on the Commodore 64 computer. It was authorized by me, and Glenn Rune Gallefoss explicitly asked for permission before releasing the arrangement."

On February 16, 2007, he added the following note:
"I'll correct one persistent misconception: I have been using the services of a law firm since September 2006. Things are gradually developing behind the scenes, and whatever the result turns out to be like, I'll publish any available info here as soon as possible."

Glenn Gallefoss

The C64 news portal C64.sk published the following comment from Glenn R. Gallefoss on January 15, 2007:
"... Its my sid version that has been sampled in do-it : You can hear that by the 11 waveform bleeps I have put in at random plaves (only 3 voices on a sid you know), the arpeggios are using filters, I can even hear the lead using my multipulse routine (which i rarely use, but i did it on acidjazz.sid )."[7]

This implies that the C64 conversion, and subsequently, the alleged sample in "Block Party" and "Do It", were created using GRG's self-developed C64 music program SDI. There is also a YouTube video showing the song being played in this program.[8]
On February 3, Gallefoss published the following comment on his personal web page:
"Not much to tell about this matter. I have made a deal with my lawyers. Sometime in the near future, something will happen."[9]

Universal / Nelly Furtado

Hannu Sormunen, a Finnish representative of Universal, which represents Nelly Furtado in Finland, commented the controversy as follows in the January 15 issue of Iltalehti:

In case that the artist decides to pursue the matter further, it's on him to go to America and confront them with the local use of law. It will require a considerable amount of faith and, of course, money.[10]

The first legal action against Universal Finland was officially filed with Helsinki District Court in mid-August 2007, on behalf of Glenn R. Gallefoss.
Timbaland

On February 2, 2007, Timbaland responded to the plagiarism accusations in an interview by the radio show Elliot in the Morning. In this interview, Timbaland admits to what he calls "sampling", but he also claims that sampling is "not stealing", because "everybody samples from everybody every day". Timbaland also says that the sample is "from a video game" and mentions the Commodore 64. He also says that he has no time for research and that it is sometimes impossible to "know what's public domain and what's not." Timbaland also calls the issue "ridiculous" but mentions that he is "in legal discussions" and therefore can't say much about it.[11]
On February 9, Timbaland commented the issue as follows in an MTV interview:

"It makes me laugh. The part I don't understand, the dude is
trying to act like I went to his house and took it from his computer. I
don't know him from a can of paint. I'm 15 years deep. That's how you
attack a king? You attack moi? Come on, man. You got to come correct. You
the laughing stock. People are like, 'You can't be serious.'"[12]

Third-party analysis


A device in Timbaland's studio, as seen in video clips from the MTV show "Timbaland's Diary", has been identified as an Elektron SidStation.1813 This device is a MIDI-controlled synthesizer based on the SID chip of the Commodore 64, and it is capable of playing back .sid files the way they would have sounded on the original hardware. It has been speculated that Timbaland downloaded Gallefoss' version of the song from the High Voltage SID Collection1334 and used the SidStation for running it to the studio system.1813
Chris Abbott, maintainer of the website C64Audio.com, posted an in-depth analysis on the topic and summarizes it in his on-line article. Abbott has commercially released Commodore 64 music, most notably the "Back in Time" CD series. Abbott writes regarding the alleged plagiarism:
"What appears to have happened is that the three-voice output from the original C64 version has had the bass voice silenced: that missing bass voice then follows the original tune except for a couple of changed notes, and the removal of some octave jumps. However, various technical procedures show that other components of the song (chords/melody/rhythm) have been exactly reproduced. This is vanishingly unlikely to have happened by chance."[13]

Abbott also notes that although the evidence seems to be conclusive, the eventual outcome is not. The record company has a multitude of possible reactions to the controversy as well as many possible reasons why the sample was not cleared on the first place.
A more artistic proof of the similarities was made by a blogger who mixed the two songs together and called it ''Do it in the Acid jazzed evening''.[14]

Similar cases


Earlier examples of unauthorized commercial use of SID music have been brought up by sources covering the Timbaland plagiarism controversy.
An often-mentioned example is Zombie Nation's 1999 hit ''Kernkraft 400'', which was a remake of David Whittaker's song for the 1984 Commodore 64 game Lazy Jones. Another example is the Dutch hit ''You've got my love'', for which the artist Bas "Bastian" Bron sampled the drums from Jeroen Tel's and Reyn Ouwehand's song made for the Rubicon game. Both of the cases were won by the original authors in court.1813
An earlier example of unauthorized use of demoscene-based tracker music also exists. In 2000, a small-scale American artist ''Jay Newingham'' was found to have directly copied several well-known demoscene songs for his electronica band ''Planet-X'' (not to be confused with Derek Sherinian's Planet X), including pieces such as Purple Motion's soundtrack for the Second Reality demo. This case was never taken to the court, however.[15]
The Fitts for fight case also involved stolen chipmusic.
Jamba sold music by Bodenständig 2000 without permission and the Bastian song ''You’ve Got My Love'' used the drums from Jeroen Tel and Reyn Ouwehand's Commdore 64 tune ''Rubicon''.[16]

Media coverage


The beginnings of the controversy

The earliest forum posts suggesting that "Do It" was based on "Acidjazzed Evening" date back to July 2006[17], and according to the Finnish news portal eDome, "Suni and other demoscene hobbyists" already knew about it at this time.[18] The controversy began to spread once a comment was posted to the Pouët.net forum, a prominent demoscene website, on October 4, 2006.[19] It wouldn't spark a larger internet debate until a post to the Something Awful forums on January 11, 2007.[20] That forum post would lead to coverage by Slashdot,[21] and Digg.[22]
Mainstream coverage

One of the first large media to react to the on-line controversy was the Finnish Broadcasting Company, which published a news item on the topic in January 14, 2007.[23]
The electronic music magazine Side-Line put a complete news round-up up on its website.[24] Finnish tabloids Ilta-Sanomat,[25] Iltalehti,[26] and newspapers ITviikko,[27] and DigiToday[28] also published articles about the suspected plagiarism on January 15, 2007.
On January 16th, Finnish news portal eDome published an article about the case saying in the English summary that:
"It is beyond any doubt that Timothy ”Timbaland” Mosley has directly copied large sections of Janne Suni’s songs, much more than any ’fair use’ would allow. Timbaland has not sampled tiny bits or effects from the song, but whole sections. This is a clear breach of copyright." [29]

The article also covered similar cases from the past and notified that both the competition and the prize ceremony "were witnessed by the 4000-5000 people at the event. The competition and the ceremony were also shown in Helsinki area cable TV." The same day, the news reached Norwegian media, including Norwegian Broadcasting Corporation[30] and Dagbladet[31], both of which interviewed Gallefoss.
On January 17th, the case was reported on briefly by the Rolling Stone website,[32] XXL Magazine,[33]
and the popular German IT news portal Heise online. Heise's story suggests that Timbaland downloaded Gallefoss's SID arrangement from the High Voltage SID Collection.[34].
On January 18th, Rolling Stone put the controversy as top news of the day with a more detailed article[35]. Later that day the San Jose Mercury News covered the story in their blog[36]
On January 22nd, MTV took notice of the issue with a longer article and according video-news. It is not clear if this video news was merely for online consumption or actually broadcast[37]. MTV owned sister station VH-1 also published the MTV news story. MTV had apparently tried to reach Timbaland's representatives via phone and e-mail, but they "had not responded at press time".37
Criticism

The controversy has also been criticized. According to XXL Magazine, there has been too much media coverage on the event. XXL claims that much of the visibility can be attributed to "the collective pride of a bunch of geeks and their ongoing war with mainstream media". XXL also claims that plagiarism of this scale happens all the time, and goes on to compare it to the kind of sampling found in "90% of pre-1997 hip hop" as well as to the riff-stealing in blues and rock music.

References


1. Tempest's website
2. Scene.org's Assembly 2000 results data
3. High Voltage SID Collection Update #34
4. YouTube Producer Timbaland steals song from finnish musician
5. YouTube Timbaland steals song - more proof!
6. YouTube Timbaland uncleared sample
7. C64.sk: GRG’s cover of Tempest’s tune got ripped
8. YouTube - Acid Jazzed Evening C64 feat. ' Furtado & Timbaland '
9. GRG's web site / news
10. Onko Nellyn hitti Suomesta? ('Finnish')
11. Elliot in the Morning - Timbaland interviewed (MP3) (transcript)
12. Timbaland Still In Shock Over Jay-Z, Madonna, Elton Collaborations
13. Chris Abbott: Doin' it for themselves: what's going on in Timbaland?
14. J's Corner of Randomness: TimBUSTED!
★ Rickit! Rickit!

15. A scam artist called Jay
16. C64 Music: Chiptune Commercial Rip-Off's striking!
17. Vee.fi user reviews of Nelly Furtado: Loose
18. Yhdysvaltalaistuottaja pölli suomalaismuusikolta ('Finnish')
19. Pouet discussion thread
20. Something Awful ''Timbaland ripped off a track from my buddy.''
21. Slashdot - Did Producer Timbaland Steal From the Demoscene?
22. Digg.com Timbaland ripped off a track from my buddy.
23. Amerikkalaista hiphop-tuottaja Timbalandia syytetään suomalaisen plagioinnista
24. Did Björk producer Timbaland steal music from demoscene? More evidences showing up !
25. Suosittu jenkkibiisi onkin suomalaiskopio?
26. Onko Nellyn hitti Suomesta?
27. Hittituottaja varasti suomalaisen Amiga-biisin?
28. Veisaako Nelly Furtado Suomesta varastettua Amiga-biisiä?
29. Yhdysvaltalaistuottaja pölli suomalaismuusikolta
30. Norsk offer i plagiat-skandale
31. Anklager stjerneprodusent for juks
32. Finnish Artists After Nelly Furtado?
33. Revenge Of The Nerds - Timbaland vs. The Internet
34. Hiphop-Produzent wilderte in C64-Musikarchiv
35. Is Timbaland a Thief?
36. Did Super Producer Timbaland copy the track of "Do It" off of Finnish producer Janne Suni?
37. YouTube Clip Claims Timbaland Got Furtado Track From Finnish Dude

External links



Acidjazzed Evening (MOD format, ZIP-compressed) or as .mp3 format

Acid Jazz (C64 remix) (SID format)

The Block Party ringtone available from Zingy

Collection of different sources about the issue

This article provided by Wikipedia. To edit the contents of this article, click here for original source.

psst.. try this: add to faves