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March 9, 2010
Pink Floyd sues EMI over iTunes payments
by Chris Matyszczyk
It's hard not to like Pink Floyd. The band's music always
felt so important, even if the songs were called things like "See
Emily Play" and the albums resonated with names like "Ummagumma."
Over the years, drama never lurked far from the band's core.
The legend of the wonderfully strange, and now deceased, Syd
Barrett makes for eerie and sad telling. And the falling out
between David Gilmour and Roger Waters means that they actually
tour separately.
Now there is another chapter. This one is called "Money," for
the band has hired fine lawyers and accused record label EMI
of a momentary lapse of reason.
According to the Telegraph, Pink Floyd's counsel believes
that online royalties have not been wisely calculated, and
that EMI hasn't been entirely fair in thinking that it had
the right to sell Floyd tracks individually via Apple's iTunes
Store and other establishments for downloading.

The Ummagumma album.
(Credit: CC Oddsock/Flickr)
This latter argument has been deeply felt by AC/DC, which
refuses to allow its work to be sold via iTunes.
Pink Floyd's lawyer claimed that EMI's reading of its contract
with the band is that a prohibition against unbundling applies
only to the physical product--not to the virtual paradise
occupied by online sales.
This does seem a little odd. Naturally, all of this legal
entertainment has cash at its core. And the contract was signed
in 1998 and 1999, when Prince was still cool and the iTunes
money tree had not even been planted.
EMI lawyer Elizabeth Jones told Bloomberg: "I can't say
it's obvious from the agreement what the commercial intent
of the parties was. I'm sure the claimants would have liked
to protect their records and EMI would have liked to have
had full control to exploit."
Which sounds dangerously like a rather deadpanned disregard
for Floyd's artistic heritage. For anyone who was brought
up with albums, it's sometimes hard to accept that individual
songs can exist outside of the original conception. Somehow,
there are albums for which the crappy tracks serve as a necessary
counterpoint to the more wondrous efforts.
Now, thanks to a lawsuit that was filed last year, it will
be up to a judge to be the atom heart mother between these
two squabbling brethren. What are the chances he is a Floyd
fan? I mean, most judges are in their 60s, aren't they?
Update, 4:30 p.m.
Bron http://news.cnet.com
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