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The Honest Musician's Fear of Accidental Plagiarism

Singer-songwriter Guy Garvey explores the legal pitfalls that can befall the honest musician - and how to avoid them. From 2011.

Many musicians have found themselves accused of stealing from another artist.

It's every songwriter's biggest fear - that really great phrase or lyric you thought was all your own creation turns up in another song.

There are few musicians who would admit to stealing even if caught red handed, but what happens if the theft was unintentional? And what if you heard lines from one of your songs in someone else's work?

Would you immediately reach for the lawyer's phone number or would you let it go without complaint if the offending writer 'fessed up? Musicians assimilate what is around them and even the finest tunesmiths derive inspiration by drawing on and re-adapting existing popular music. So is any song really original?

As Noel Gallagher put it rather bluntly when confronted about his musical influences: "There's 12 notes in a scale and 36 chords and that's the end of it. All the configurations have been done before."

Singer and songwriter Guy Garvey explores the legal pitfalls that can befall the honest musician and how to avoid them.

Featuring fellow songwriters:

Sir Tim Rice
Paul Heaton
John Bramwell

Producer: Cecile Wright

First broadcast on BBC Radio 4 in January 2011.

Available now

30 minutes

Last on

Fri 20 Sep 202400:30

Credit

RoleContributor
ProducerCecile Wright

Broadcasts

  • Thu 27 Jan 201111:30
  • Sat 5 Nov 201110:30
  • Mon 12 Sep 201606:30
  • Mon 12 Sep 201613:30
  • Mon 12 Sep 201620:30
  • Tue 13 Sep 201601:30
  • Tue 3 Mar 202006:30
  • Tue 3 Mar 202013:30
  • Tue 3 Mar 202020:30
  • Wed 4 Mar 202001:30
  • Thu 19 Sep 202410:30
  • Thu 19 Sep 202416:30
  • Fri 20 Sep 202400:30

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