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Court rules against Kraftwerk in sampling case

German electronic pioneers are dealt a blow

Kraftwerk were dealt a blow by Germany's high court today (November 20) in lawsuit determining whether artists should have the right to sample other bands' music without infringing on copyright.

In the ruling issued today, the high court overturned an earlier ruling by Hamburg state court in Kraftwerk's favour stating that reusing even the shortest snippet of a song was considered copyright infringement.

The court had prohibited the sampling of a song melody unless it was part of a completely new work bearing no resemblance to the original.

Now the German high court has overturned that decision and sent the case back to the civil court, reports the Associated Press.

Kraftwerk sued rap producer Moses Pelham for sampling two seconds of their 1977 song 'Metal On Metal' in the track 'Nur Mir' by Sabrina Setlur.

--By our Los Angeles staff.
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Comments (1)

Ghvinianidzigol 

Nov 21, 2008

Difficult one. The thing is, i am totally pro-sampling. If an artist is making a collage out of paintings he didnt paint that ends up looking nothing like the original paintings, it is a most interesting way to work.But then, what you don't know is that Moses Pelham and Sabrina Setlur have been creating some of the worst crimes against music ever committed. They are the lowest crap even in the horrorfest that is the German music scene and everything that is a stick in their spokes must be cheered.

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