Trump lawyers are set to argue in court this week that the hit '80s song 'Electric Avenue' wasn't properly copyrighted
The dance-floor icon Eddy Grant's 2020 copyright suit against Donald Trump is hitting a courtroom Friday.
Trump's side is set to argue Grant never copyrighted the master for his 1983 hit "Electric Avenue."
Grant sued Trump four years ago over the song's use in a campaign tweet making fun of Joe Biden.
Lawyers for former president Donald Trump and the dance-floor icon Eddy Grant are "gonna rock down to" a Manhattan courtroom on Friday for a face-to-face fight over the musician's '80s hit "Electric Avenue."
Grant sued Trump four years ago for tweeting a cartoon making fun of Joe Biden that used 40 seconds of the song as a soundtrack. The August 2020 tweet was viewed 13.7 million times before Twitter took it down, and Grant says this was an unauthorized use for which Trump owes him $300,000 in damages.
The UK citizen and Barbados resident is one of some two dozen artists who have objected to Trump's use of their music during his three presidential campaigns. But no musician has tangled with Trump more publicly and extensively than Grant.
Most artists simply send cease-and-desist letters, with only Grant and two others actually filing lawsuits. (Neil Young's 2020 suit against Trump — for the former president's use of "Rockin' in the Free World" and "Like a Hurricane" at rallies — quietly settled for an undisclosed sum four months after it was filed. The estate of Isaac Hayes sued Trump in August over his use of "Hold On, I'm Coming;" on September 3, a federal judge in Georgia issued a preliminary injunction against Trump using Hayes' music.)
Despite its relatively low monetary stakes, Grant's lawsuit is being challenged aggressively by Trump, and the oral arguments scheduled for this Friday are set to debut an extraordinary defense.
Trump's lawyers are expected to argue that, for decades, Grant somehow neglected to copyright the sound recording, or "master," for "Electric Avenue."
Trump's lawyers acknowledge that Grant copyrighted the sheet music 40 years ago. But they say he failed to similarly protect the actual recording that people have danced to at parties and nightclubs since 1983, when the song exploded from an early MTV staple to a platinum single.
Trump's legal team argues that Grant never protected what copyright law calls "the fixation of a series of musical and spoken sounds to a 'phonorecord.'" Therefore, they say, there was no sound-recording copyright for Trump to infringe on.
And since Grant's lawsuit claims Trump infringed on not only the sheet-music copyright but the sound-recording copyright as well, the defense wants the latter claim — the sound-recording half of the lawsuit — thrown out now, even before a trial.
Grant traces the record's copyright to 2001
Not surprisingly, Grant's lawyers see things differently.
They say Grant registered the US copyright for the sheet music for Electric Avenue in 1983, the year it hit the charts.
And they trace the sound-recording copyright back to 2001. That's the year Warner Records issued "Eddy Grant: The Greatest Hits," a compilation of 16 songs, one of which was "Electric Avenue."
Warner Records' rights to the 16 songs expired five years later, in 2006. That year, the artist's lawyers say, the label's US copyright for the greatest-hits album was transferred to Grant's company, Greenheart UK.
Since then, his lawyers say, Grant has remained the owner of that sound-recording copyright, which covers all 16 songs on the album, including "Electric Avenue" — a song even the judge, US District Judge John G. Koeltl, has said is "recognizable" and "catchy."
A last-minute registration
Dueling court filings indicate the two sides will argue Friday over whether Grant's copyright covers only the album itself (as Trump's side says) or every song on the album individually (as Grant's side says).
Trump's side may argue that even Grant has tacitly acknowledged that the sound-recording copyright for "Electric Avenue" was never properly nailed down. Two weeks ago, on August 15, Grant applied to the US Copyright Office "for a sound-recording copyright registration of Electric Avenue," a court filing says.
"Plaintiffs have requested expedited handling of the application and expect to have the registration number available for the Court before the scheduled oral argument," the Grant attorney Brett Van Benthysen told the judge in an August 16 filing.
Meanwhile, no trial date is in sight.
The case has dragged on through four years of pandemic delays, attorney switch-ups, and extensive and ultimately failed settlement negotiations.
Trump was deposed in the case in June 2022. His former social-media director, Dan Scavino, was ultimately deposed as well, but court records show he fought his deposition subpoena before eventually submitting to questions in February 2023 about his role in posting the tweet.
And Grant has been deposed by Trump's lawyers, who asked the artist to "explain" the song. "Do I have to?" Grant responded, according to a transcript excerpt. "That sounds like a trick question," he said.
An eventual trial will probably center on whether the song's inclusion in the cartoon was an allowable "fair use" of the work under copyright law, which allows works of art to be transformed or excerpted under limited circumstances.
The sides are also set to battle over how much, if at all, the dollar value of "Electric Avenue" was impacted by its appearance in Trump's Twitter feed.
A lawyer for Trump didn't respond to requests for comment on this story. Van Benthysen, the lawyer for Grant, declined to comment.
Correction: September 4, 2024 — An earlier version of this story misstated the dates of Trump's and Scavino's depositions. Trump was deposed in June 2022, and Scavino was deposed in February 2023; they weren't deposed in April 2022.
This story was updated on September 4 to add that a Georgia judge's injunction against Trump using the music of Isaac Hayes.
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