Stop the music! Chorus of artistes tell Trump to tune it down

From the beloved opening lines of Leonard Cohen's Hallelujah to the rousing, children's-choir decision of the Rolling Stones' You Tin can't Always Get What You Want, President Donald Trump's entrada rallies have been filled with classic songs whose authors and their heirs loudly turn down him and his politics.

It's become a sub-cycle in the endless campaign cycle. The Trump campaign tin hardly play a vocal without the artiste denouncing its apply and sending a end-and-desist alphabetic character. Neil Immature, John Fogerty, Phil Collins, Panic! At The Disco and the estates of Leonard Cohen, Tom Lilliputian and Prince are just a few of those who have objected.

Campaigns have been turning popular songs into theme songs for more than a century, and American artistes have been objecting at to the lowest degree since 1984, when Bruce Springsteen denied the use of Born In The U.s.a. to the Ronald Reagan reelection campaign.

But this twelvemonth, the issue has reached an unprecedented saturation point, indicative of a wide cultural divide betwixt the president and his supporters, and overwhelmingly left-leaning musicians, who almost never make the same demands of Democratic candidates.

"I've been covering this shell for probably 20 years, and this is probably equally stark a partitioning I've seen every bit far as artists not wanting a political leader to utilise their songs," said Billboard contributor Gil Kaufman, who has been roofing the convergence of music and politics for the record trade magazine during the campaign. "The choice is then stark for a lot of voters, and it is for musicians likewise."

FILE - In this May 18, 2022 file photograph, Neil Young poses for a portrait in Calabasas, Calif. Young is among several musicians who are objecting to their songs beingness used at President Donald Trump'south entrada rallies. (Photo by Rich Fury/Invision/AP, File)

Few have objected as adamantly equally Young. The fiercely opinionated rock Hall-of-Famer is the rare musician who has gone beyond demands and filed a lawsuit over the repeated use of his songs.

"Imagine what it feels like to hear Rockin' in the Free World after this President speaks, similar it is his theme vocal," Immature wrote on his website in July. "I did not write it for that."

That feeling that they've been drafted onto Team Trump clearly fuels many artistes' acrimony.

"Their music is their identity," Kaufman said. "Information technology'southward important to them to not appear as though they are tacitly endorsing Trump."

Other artistes take been more than befuddled than angry about the playing of songs whose themes are the exact opposite of the letters Trump is sending.

Fogerty said he was baffled by Trump's use of Fortunate Son, his 1969 hit with Creedence Clearwater Revival, whose condemnation of privileged children of rich men who did not serve in Vietnam sounds like a tailor-fabricated slam of Trump.

"I find it confusing that the president has chosen to use my song for his political rallies, when in fact it seems similar he is probably the fortunate son," Fogerty said in a video on Facebook in September.

He was more fiery after he kept hearing it played.

"He is using my words and my vocalization to portray a message that I practise not endorse," Fogerty said in an Oct 16 tweet announcing a cease-and-desist social club.

That the president'south rallies are potential spreaders of the coronavirus may be adding intensity to artistes' desire non to have their music contribute.

"It'southward not a great look for the artists, if their music is aligned with something seen as unsafe," Kaufman said.

Many social-media observers pointed out that, given its title, Collins' In The Air Tonight was especially tone-deafened when information technology was played at Trump's Oct 14 rally in Iowa. Collins' attorneys promptly demanded the entrada stop using the vocal.

Legally, politicians don't necessarily demand direct permission from artists.

Campaigns can buy wide licensing packages from music rights organisations, including BMI and ASCAP, that give them legal access to millions of songs

BMI said the Rolling Stones had opted out of inclusion in those licenses, and information technology informed the Trump entrada that if it did not finish playing You Can't Always Get What You Want, a Trump favourite in regular rotation at his rallies, the entrada would exist in breach of its understanding.

Simply even if their songs can exist played contractually, artistes can yet object. That commonly just means a public need to the campaign.

"A lot of the time information technology just takes the cease-and-desist to tell them non to use information technology, that's already enough for the artist to get their message out that they're not associated with the campaign and did not corroborate the employ," said Heidy Vaquerano, a Los Angeles attorney who specialises in entertainment law and intellectual property.

And there are other legal channels, such as states' right-of-publicity laws, which treat an artists' identity as their property, or the federal Lanham Human activity, which protects an artiste'due south personal trademark and contains a provision barring faux endorsement.

"The use of their music, it could dilute the worth of their trademark," Vaquerano said. "Courts have recognised that that could be an implied endorsement."

The Trump campaign did non immediately answer to a asking for comment.

The president has turned more than recently to slightly friendlier ground, dancing at events to YMCA by the Village People, whose leader and primary songwriter, Victor Willis, has said he doesn't feel he's endorsing Trump when the song plays.

Withal the campaign cannot avert condemnation even when playing dead artistes.

Niggling's widow and daughters, who had been fighting in court over his estate, united in their need in June that Trump stop using his song, I Won't Back Down.

Cohen's estate attorneys vehemently objected to the prominent use of Hallelujah during the final-nighttime fireworks at the Republican National Convention in August, proverb in a argument it was an attempt to "politicize and exploit" a vocal they had specifically told the RNC not to use.

Cohen attorneys made the rare move of suggesting an alternative, whose title could be taken every bit a dig at Trump.

"Had the RNC requested another vocal, You Want information technology Darker," the lawyers said, "we might have considered approval."

(Source: AP)

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Source: https://cnalifestyle.channelnewsasia.com/entertainment/artistes-tell-donald-trump-campaign-stop-using-their-music-189791

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