Taylor Swift says she didn’t rip off players or haters
Aug 15, 2022, 06:00 AM
CMU’s Andy Malt and Chris Cooke review key events in music and the music business from the last week, including Taylor Swift's statement to a US court as part of the long-running song-theft legal battle over her 2014 hit ‘Shake It Off’ in which she explains how she came up with the lyrics for her track, while also insisting there was no way she could have been exposed to the song she is accused of ripping off before creating ‘Shake It Off’, plus some interesting new stats comparing consumer spending in the UK on recorded music and live music - and the impact of COVID-19 on all that.
STORIES DISCUSSED THIS WEEK
• Taylor Swift submits statement to court in ongoing Shake It Off song-theft legal battle
• From Suffering to Recovering: The stats that explain why the UK music industry is set for a dramatic post-lockdown comeback (Music Business Worldwide)
ALSO MENTIONED
• UK label spend on A&R and marketing reach almost £500 million last year
MORE FROM CMU
• Upcoming CMU webinars
• Buy MMF and CMU Insights’ Dissecting The Digital Dollar book on Amazon
• Sign up to receive the CMU Daily news bulletin
• Listen to the full Setlist theme tune
STORIES DISCUSSED THIS WEEK
• Taylor Swift submits statement to court in ongoing Shake It Off song-theft legal battle
• From Suffering to Recovering: The stats that explain why the UK music industry is set for a dramatic post-lockdown comeback (Music Business Worldwide)
ALSO MENTIONED
• UK label spend on A&R and marketing reach almost £500 million last year
MORE FROM CMU
• Upcoming CMU webinars
• Buy MMF and CMU Insights’ Dissecting The Digital Dollar book on Amazon
• Sign up to receive the CMU Daily news bulletin
• Listen to the full Setlist theme tune