Taylor Swift has defended herself as the only real author of her 2014 hit Shake It Off in response to a lawsuit claiming that she plagiarised lyrics from the 2000 music Playas Gon’ Play by woman group 3LW.
“The lyrics to Shake It Off have been written completely by me,” Swift said in a sworn declaration filed on Monday. “Till studying about Plaintiffs’ declare in 2017, I had by no means heard the music Playas Gon’ Play and had by no means heard of that music or the group 3LW.”
Playas Gon’ Play songwriters Sean Corridor and Nathan Butler filed the copyright swimsuit in 2017, citing similarities between the strains “playas gonna play” and “haters gonna hate”.
It was dismissed in 2018, with a choose commenting that the lyrics have been “too banal” to be copied, however resurrected by an enchantment panel in 2021.
In December, a choose refused Swift’s request to dismiss the case, citing “sufficient goal similarities” between the 2 songs for a jury to settle the matter.
“Our purchasers are lastly transferring nearer to the justice they so richly deserve,” their lawyer Marina Bogorad mentioned on the time. “The opinion … is particularly gratifying to them as a result of it reinforces the concept their creativity and distinctive expression can’t be misappropriated with none retribution.”
In writing the lyrics, Swift said in her movement, she drew partly on “experiences in my life and, specifically, unrelenting public scrutiny of my private life, ‘clickbait’ reporting, public manipulation, and different types of adverse private criticism which I discovered I simply wanted to shake off and concentrate on my music.”
Having began out as a rustic artist, Swift had change into a mainstream pop star after the discharge of her 2012 album, Pink, which introduced with it intensive tabloid hypothesis about her private and romantic life.
Swift continued: “With Shake It Off, I wished to offer a comedic, empowering method to serving to individuals really feel higher about adverse criticism by music, dance, and the non-public independence enabling one to only shake off the adverse criticism.”
The lyrics additionally drew from what she known as “generally used phrases and feedback heard” all through her life, together with “gamers gonna play” and “haters gonna hate”, her consciousness of which stemmed again to her college days.
She denied the potential for having heard the 3LW music, which reached No 81 on the US Billboard charts, in any type of media or social setting. She said that her dad and mom didn’t permit her to look at MTV’s Whole Request Stay till she was “about 13 years previous”: the 3LW hit first appeared on an album in 2000, when Swift was 10.
Associated: From Ed Sheeran to Katy Perry, plagiarism claims are an occupational hazard for musicians
Her mom, Andrea Swift, additionally filed an announcement saying that she “fastidiously monitored each the tv [Swift] watched and the music she heard” in addition to the shared house laptop. “Taylor didn’t attend sleepovers at mates’ homes as a younger woman as a result of we lived on a farm till she was 10 years previous and I all the time most popular having mates come over to our house.”
Within the new movement, Swift’s lawyer, Peter Anderson, wrote: “It’s, sadly, common for a success music to be met by litigants hoping for a windfall based mostly on tenuous claims that their very own music was copied. However even in opposition to that background, Plaintiffs’ declare stands out as notably baseless.”
Following publication, Corridor and Butler mentioned in an announcement: “That is defendants’ fourth try and make these claims go away, so defendants’ labelling them as baseless rings hole at this level.
“The legislation doesn’t consider in pure coincidences, particularly the place, as right here, the 2 works are so strikingly comparable that Ms Taylor’s denial of entry makes no distinction to the end result.
“Plaintiffs are assured that there are plentiful factual points for his or her claims to achieve the jury, as it isn’t as much as the court docket to weigh in on credibility points or crown the winner within the battle of the consultants.”
• This text was amended on 9 August 2022. Swift was aged 10, not 11, when 3LW’s hit appeared on their 2000 self-titled album.