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SoLiD GRoOvEs

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Born London
United Kingdom
Record labels Disco:Wax
New World Records
Dubsided
Freerange Records
Advance Entertainment
Beat Outfit records
UNLIMITED MUSIC
WayOn
switchmusik
GenresElectronica
House Music
Drama
Detective Novel
Action Fiction
Crime TV Genre
AlbumsGuns Don't Kill People. . . Lazers Do
Guns Don't Kill People... Lazers Do
April Cradle
Music groups Major Lazer
With You.
Reviews www.imdb.com
First episode1975-09-09 00:00:00
Final episode1978-08-20 00:00:00
Networks CBS
Creators Glen A. Larson
Cast Eddie Albert
EpisodesEpisodesS03 E22 · The Siege at the Bouziki BarJul 9, 1978 S03 E21 · Photo FinishJul 2, 1978 S03 E20 · The CageJun 25, 1978 View 45+ more
Executive producer Glen A. Larson
Also known asSwitch; A. Brucker; Solid Groove
InstrumentsTurntables
SongsBabyGuns Don't Kill People... Lazers Do · 2009 Lean OnPeace Is The Mission · 2015 Bubble ButtFree the Universe · 2013 View 25+ more
ListBabyGuns Don't Kill People... Lazers Do · 2009
Lean OnPeace Is The Mission · 2015
Bubble ButtFree the Universe · 2013
Full nameDavid James Andrew Taylor
Groups Major Lazer
With You.
Skos genreDance/Electronic
Hip-Hop/Rap
Date of birth January 1,5660
Date of Reg.
Date of Upd.
ID1784585
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SoLiD GRoOvEs Life story


David James Andrew Taylor, better known by his stage name Switch, is an English songwriter, DJ, sound engineer, and record producer. He is best known for his work with Beyoncé, M.I.A. and Major Lazer, of which he was a founding member.

Delhi pollution: Indian Supreme Court's 40-year quest to clean foul air

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... In 1998, it ordered that the entire fleet of public transport vehicles which ran on diesel - estimated to be around 100,000 - Switch to compressed natural gas, or CNG, by 2001...

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... The Switch - to Bannau Brycheiniog National Park - its 66th anniversary...

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... Once inside, the hackers manipulated a bit of software - called the ATM Switch - which sends messages to a bank to approve a cashpoint withdrawal...

Ed Sheeran hits out at culture of 'baseless' copyright claims after court victory

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... Sheeran took legal action after Switch - real name Sami Chokri - and fellow songwriter Ross O Donoghue asked to be added to the songwriting credits for Shape of You, which is the most streamed song ever on Spotify...

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... After we re born, a genetic Switch is flipped and we start making adult haemoglobin...

Secret door in the Parliament will lead to a historic treasure trove

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Feb 26,2020 4:19 am

... The lamp still worked after 70 years A light Switch - it s probably installed, which illuminated in the 1950s, the great Osram-lamp with the inscription HM Government Property ...

Car industry: What's behind recent closures?

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... And with relatively high purchase costs and many unknown factors surrounding the UK s charging infrastructure, motorists may need more persuasion to make the Switch...

Ed Sheeran hits out at culture of 'baseless' copyright claims after court victory

Feb 16,2020 3:15 am

Ed Sheeran has warned that pop stars should not be allowed to be " easy targets" for copyright claims After winning his Court battle with The Writers of a song they claimed he had plagiarised.

A High Court judge ruled that The Singer had not copied part of his hit, Shape of You, from Oh Why, by Sami Chokri.

That prompted Sheeran: " I hope that this ruling means in The Future baseless claims like this can be avoided.

" This really does have to end. "

The case was not the First Time Sheeran has faced a copyright claim, and many other stars have also been involved in high-profile disputes in recent years.

Last month, After a rapper said she had plagiarised an eight-note riff for her 2013 hit Dark Horse .

Dua Lipa has recently been sued Twice Over her song Levitating, the biggest-selling single in the US Last Year . Those claims have come from The Writers behind Latin disco band Dr Buzzard's Original Savannah Band and Florida reggae group Artikal Sound System.

Also last month, Sam Smith and Normani were sued over their 2019 duet Dancing With A Stranger , while Taylor Swift is facing a trial over her 2014 anthem Shake It Off.

As the Music Industry saying goes, where there's a hit, there's a writ.

The Field of music copyright " has become like The Wild West" says forensic musicologist Peter Oxendale, who worked with Sheeran in this latest case.

He says cases have proliferated since 2015, when Blurred Lines creators in the US of copying the " feel" of Marvin Gaye 's Got To Give It Up, rather than directly plagiarising musical phrases or lyrics.

" In that case, [there] wasn't even two notes in common, and yet it found in favour of the wrong side, " Oxendale told BBC Radio 4 's The World At One.

Part of The Melody in Shape of You did bear some similarity to a segment of Oh Why - But Sheeran successfully argued in The High Court that it was a coincidence and he had not heard The Other song before.

Sheeran took legal action After Switch - Real name Sami Chokri - and fellow songwriter Ross O'Donoghue asked to be added to the songwriting credits for Shape of You, which is The Most streamed song ever on Spotify.

However, The Judge ruled that Sheeran would be justified in thinking their request " was a tactic designed to extract a settlement" - in other words, money and/or a credit without going to Court .

Sheeran said: " I feel like claims like this are way too common now and have become a culture where a claim is made with the idea that a settlement will be cheaper than taking it to Court , even if there's no basis for The Claim .

" It's really damaging to the songwriting industry. There's only so many notes and very few chords used in Pop Music . Coincidence is bound to happen if 60,000 songs are being released Every Day on Spotify. That's 22 million songs a year, and there's only 12 notes that are available. "

Sheeran's plea for an end to " baseless claims" will find sympathetic ears among other musicians.

" It should never have got As Far as it did, " Grammy-winning composer of the Sheeran case. " Hopefully this result brings about a change in The Avalanche of frivolous speculative copyright infringement cases. "

But Wednesday's ruling won't bring copyright cases to an end. It won't even bring cases against Ed Sheeran to an end.

After being sued for $100m (£76m) by the owner of a share of the songwriting rights to Marvin Gaye 's Let's Get It On, who claims Sheeran copied it for his 2014 chart-topper Thinking Out Loud.

He has also settled cases out of Court in The Past .

In 2018, he paid $5. 4m (£4. 1m) to songwriters Thomas Leonard and Martin Harrington Amazing (which was released by X Factor winner Matt Cardle in 2012) for Sheeran's 2015 song, Photograph.

In the latest trial, The Star said he had been " bruised" by that experience. Even though he felt he had done nothing wrong, He Said he had agreed to pay out on the advice of his lawyers because it would have been a " nuisance" and " more trouble than it was worth" to fight.

After The Shape of You ruling, Oxendale said: " I'm full of admiration for Ed Sheeran in this case because he could easily have taken the easy Way Out , which is just to give them a nuisance payment to go away.

" But he didn't. He chose to fight it and fighting cases in The High Court is traumatic for anyone. It's difficult. It's really expensive. It's time-consuming. "

Sheeran had already given a credit on Shape of You several years ago After similarities were pointed out.

In recent years, more stars have given the composers of potentially problematic tracks credits before a dispute gets anywhere near a Court .

on her 2017 single Look What You Made Me Do because It Follows the same rhythmic pattern as I'm Too Sexy.

Last Year , Olivia Rodrigo added two members of Paramore to the writing credits of Good 4 U, and The Number of writers on Uptown Funk, by Mark Ronson and Bruno Mars , ballooned from six to 11 when The Gap Band noticed similarities to their song Oops Upside Your Head.

Part of Chokri and O'Donoghue's complaint was that Sheeran treats unknown songwriters worse than famous ones when It Comes to giving credits - which he denied.

But the case rested on the fact that he insisted he had Never Heard their song, which would have been more difficult to argue if Oh Why had been a hit.

'Badly advised'

Copyright lawyer Kate Swaine says: " If I was advising somebody who's been accused of copyright infringement, The First thing I would ask them is, 'Is there a possibility that you could have, unconsciously or consciously, been influenced, inspired or taken an element of this?'

" If somebody turns around and says, 'I do know that track really well. I have heard it. It's not out of the question,' they may feel that, rather than getting into the cost and disruption of a Court action, it is easier to make a concession and therefore give some credit on the royalties.

" Here, what comes across from Sheeran's evidence is he was absolutely adamant that he had not heard this track. "

She sees little chance of The Number of copyright claims subsiding.

But she says that despite the Blurred Lines ruling, " The Law seems to be doing a reasonably decent job" of assessing when there is sufficient evidence of copyright infringement, and when there is not.



Source of news: bbc.com

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