Allusio;3901370 said:I still do not understand WHY Branca and McClain chose to risk?!!!
I have only one logical explanation – it is really Michael’s voice…
kreen;3901431 said:I’ve been doing some research with the US Copyrights Office. The « MJ Songbook 1 » registration that Cascio and Porte registered right after MJ’s death might be the most important piece of information we have regarding what really happened. I’ve been wondering for a while if we could get more info about what exactly was registered at that time. So I asked the Copyrights Office :
« I am doing research on copyrights registration.
My question is this : when one sends you a collection of unpublished musical works to be registered under a general name, is it possible for members of the public to know the contents of this collection in more detail than what appears under the registration information on the Web site? »
The answer was :
« The content of your work will not be displayed, just the information you place on the application. However, your work is available for public inspection in the Copyright Office, as mandated by law, upon request and payment of a service fee. Please see http://www.copyright.gov/circs/circ06.pdf for more information. »
So I checked out Circular 6, and here are the interesting parts :
« Photocopies of the following copyright-related records can be obtained: affidavits, registration applications, assignments, contracts, licenses, and other documents that have been recorded in the Copyright Office. »
« The Office will provide certified or uncertified copies of published or unpublished works deposited in connection with a copyright registration and held in the Office’s custody only when one of the following three conditions has been met:
1- Written authorization is received from the copyright claimant of record or the owner of any of the exclusive rights in the copyright.
2- The Copyright Office Litigation Statement Form is completed and received from an attorney or authorized representative in connection with litigation, actual or prospective, involving the copyrighted work.
3- A court order is issued for a reproduction of a deposited article, facsimile, or identifying portion of a work that is the subject of litigation in its jurisdiction. »
« If you request a reproduction of a phonorecord, such as an audiotape, cassette, CD, or diskette, in which either a sound recording or the underlying musical, dramatic, or literary work is embodied, the Copyright Office will provide proximate reproduction. Because of the characteristics of available sound reproduction, all frequencies contained in the original phonorecord may not be reproduced. »
« You can inspect (a) completed records and indexes related to a registration or a recorded document and (b) copies or identifying material deposited in connection with a completed registration or rejection in the Records Research and Certification Section. »
So if i’m understanding this correctly, it means that we could at the very least get a copy of the registration form that Eddie sent, as well as any documentation he sent alongside his request. But more importantly, through a lawyer, we could actually get a copy of the actual material Eddie registered. And finally, if somebody actually went to the Copyrights Office in Washington, they could inspect the material deposited by Eddie.
Aren’t those interesting avenues? Has anybody tried to get that info before? There are fees for all of this, of course, but nothing too steep. Just knowing whether Eddie claimed at that point that MJ was singing the songs, as opposed to just saying he had written lyrics for them, would be a start. Also, to know whether there were 12 songs right from the beginning would be interesting. And maybe the record contains an authorization to file from MJ’s Estate, or an acknowledgement of the filing, which could shed some light on whether the Estate were quick or not to admit the songs as legit.
Does anyone here live near Washington, for starters?
This has already been done and lawyers for Angelikson fought it tooth and nail.
Allusio;3901370 said:I still do not understand WHY Branca and McClain chose to risk?!!!
I have only one logical explanation – it is really Michael’s voice…
StellaJackson;3901561 said:This has already been done and lawyers for Angelikson fought it tooth and nail.
The Office will provide certified or uncertified copies of published or unpublished works deposited in connection with a copyright registration and held in the Office’s custody only when one of the following three conditions has been met:
1- Written authorization is received from the copyright claimant of record or the owner of any of the exclusive rights in the copyright.
2- The Copyright Office Litigation Statement Form is completed and received from an attorney or authorized representative in connection with litigation, actual or prospective, involving the copyrighted work.
3- A court order is issued for a reproduction of a deposited article, facsimile, or identifying portion of a work that is the subject of litigation in its jurisdiction.
That was kreen's idea. Please refer to points #2 and #3 (cuz #1 is impossible, obviously): You'd need a lawsuit for this.
Like I said, I'm all in for a lawsuit. I do have a law company (in the USA, of course) that is potentially interested and has experience with similar cases. However in order to get their interest, I would need to present them a good summary of the sitation and I have had no time to write one, I'm busy with other things.
The statue of limitation ends 3 years after the release (in this case 14th December 2013 in the USA). I'm not sure whether a digital catalogue or re-issue would be treated separately (it would be the same like a newly created (online-) shop adding the item/individual songs to its assortment).
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How much would it realistically cost to launch a lawsuit? Basically it would be against Sony for having released the 3 songs; if some statute of limitation has expired for the Michael album, the recent iTunes release could be used as basis for the suit.
Like I said, I'm all in for a lawsuit. I do have a law company (in the USA, of course) that is potentially interested and has experience with similar cases. However in order to get their interest, I would need to present them a good summary of the sitation and I have had no time to write one, I'm busy with other things.
The statue of limitation ends 3 years after the release (in this case 14th December 2013 in the USA). I'm not sure whether a digital catalogue or re-issue would be treated separately (it would be the same like a newly created (online-) shop adding the item/individual songs to its assortment).
If all that is needed is a summary of the situation, well, all we have to do is cut and paste a couple of posts from this mega-thread. In 3 years, I think all of us have actually written a BOOK about these tracks.
Ok, let's say I write the summary. What's next? Do we have the money? What amount are we looking at?
Why do we need a lawsuit to know it's not Michael singing? What can it possibly achieve? Cascio/Porte aren't going to reveal anything for obvious reasons and it would just end up costing a load of money for nothing. The only thing that ahould happen is thatnthe songs should be removed from Michael's discography.
Why do we need a lawsuit to know it's not Michael singing? What can it possibly achieve? Cascio/Porte aren't going to reveal anything for obvious reasons and it would just end up costing a load of money for nothing. The only thing that ahould happen is thatnthe songs should be removed from Michael's discography.
the good thing about a lawsuit it can provide information that wasn't available to the fans before. such as a lawsuit discovery would allow you to ask for any communications, copies submitted to the copyright office and so on. possibilities are endless. the goal does not require to be aiming for a win but an information search. but I agree that cost benefit needs to be considered.
Just to make this clear for myself - the original Cascio tracks when registered for copyright a mere few days after Michael's death had no mention of Michael Jackson anywhere?
2 days after a friends death. Unbelievable.
I wouldn't say it makes perfect sense. I certainly couldn't do it. I was tore up for weeks over Michael's death and I never even met him. And there is no way anyone else could have released the Cascio tracks because they were solely in the possession of Eddie and no one else. Michael had no copies (Obviously. Why would he if it's not even him?).Actually, it makes perfect sense for them to register those songs as soon as possible -- IF it is MJ singing. It was either that or Latoya releasing "The Cascio songs" 6 months later on Joe Jackson's Ranch Records label.
I wouldn't say it makes perfect sense. I certainly couldn't do it. I was tore up for weeks over Michael's death and I never even met him. And there is no way anyone else could have released the Cascio tracks because they were solely in the possession of Eddie and no one else. Michael had no copies (Obviously. Why would he if it's not even him?).