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US panel reinstates 'Stairway' ruling in favor of Led Zeppelin

March 10, 2020
British singer Robert Plant, left, holds hands raised high with British guitarist Jimmy Page during a Led Zeppelin reunion performance at Madison Square Garden in 1988. — AFP
British singer Robert Plant, left, holds hands raised high with British guitarist Jimmy Page during a Led Zeppelin reunion performance at Madison Square Garden in 1988. — AFP

SAN FRANCISCO — A US appeals court on Monday reinstated a ruling that British rockers Led Zeppelin did not swipe part of the classic "Stairway to Heaven" from another band.

The San Francisco 11-judge panel affirmed a 2016 judgement that found no proof the classic 1971 Zeppelin song breached the copyright of "Taurus," written by Randy Wolfe of a Los Angeles band called Spirit.

In 2018 that ruling was overturned by a three-judge panel in San Francisco, which said certain instructions to the district court jury had been "erroneous and prejudicial," and failed to clarify that the arrangement of elements in the public domain could be considered original.

Led Zeppelin requested that the order for a new trial be reconsidered by a larger panel, whose decision Monday, based on the 1909 Copyright Act, puts the original ruling back in place.

"Stairway" is estimated to have grossed $3.4 million during a five-year period at issue in the earlier civil trial.

Led Zeppelin guitarist Jimmy Page, sued along with the group's singer Robert Plant and another surviving bandmate, John Paul Jones, testified in 2016 that the chord sequence in question had "been around forever." — AFP


March 10, 2020
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