The award-winning singer is in
a legal battle with grime artist Sami Chokri,
who performs as Sami Switch, and music producer
Ross O'Donoghue, who argue "Shape of You"
infringes "particular lines and phrases" from
their 2015 song "Oh Why".
Questioned by their lawyer Andrew Sutcliffe at
the High Court in London, Sheeran, 31, said he
had not been aware of Switch at the time he is
accused of ripping off parts of "Oh Why", and
had never heard the song before the court case.
"I have already built a long and very successful
career writing original songs for both myself
and a wide range of other leading artists,"
Sheeran said in his witness statement. "I would
not have been able to do that if I was in the
habit of plagiarising other writers."
Sutcliffe said Sheeran must have known of the
grime artist, who he said had tweeted him
directly and they had both appeared on SBTV, the
British online music platform which helped
launch Sheeran's career.
The lawyer said Sheeran shouted out Switch's
name at Reading Festival in 2011 after being
asked to by his best friend Jamal Edwards, the
late founder of SBTV.
"This isn't stuff that's true," Sheeran told the
High Court in London on the second day of the
trial which began on Friday.
Chokri and O'Donoghue say the "Oh I" hook in
"Shape Of You" is "strikingly similar" to the
"Oh Why" hook in their song and that it was
"extremely likely" Sheeran had previously heard
their track.
Sheeran and his co-writers have denied this.
Sutcliffe, who at Friday's opening called
Sheeran "a magpie", questioned the chart-topper
intensively over his songwriting style and
whether it was spontaneous or the result of
development over time, with the influence of
other artists.
[to top of second column]
|
The lawyer said there was
overwhelming evidence at the time of writing
"Shape of You" that Sheeran was collecting ideas
before writing songs. "You alter
words and music which belong to others just
enough to think they will pass as original,"
Sutcliffe said to him.
Sheeran who answered the questions confidently
although sometimes appeared irked by them,
rejected that assertion. He described his songs
as 'excitement bottles' in his statement and
said he wrote them in two hours and recently
composed 25 songs in a week.
Sheeran was also asked about his decision to
settle a claim over his 2015 song "Photograph"
which two musicians said had the same
composition as their song “Amazing”.
Sheeran agreed to hand over 35% of the
publishing revenues, recognised the musicians as
co-writers, and paid more than $5 million to
them. Asked why he had done this rather than go
to trial over what he described as a "nuisance",
Sheeran said: "I took the advice of my lawyers."
Released from Sheeran's third studio album "÷",
"Shape of You" stormed charts around the world
upon its release in January 2017, becoming the
best performing song in the United States that
year.
(Reporting by Michael Holden and Marie-Louise
Gumuchian; Editing by Nick Macfie, Andrew
Heavens and David Gregorio)
[© 2022 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content.
|