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Rolling Stones threaten legal action against Donald Trump for using their songs at rallies

The Rolling Stones have threatened to launch legal action against Donald Trump if he persists in playing their hits at his rallies.

The Rolling Stones have threatened a lawsuit against Donald Trump if the president continues using their song without a licence.
The Rolling Stones have threatened a lawsuit against Donald Trump if the president continues using their song without a licence.

For years, it has seemed as if Donald Trump can always get what he wants, at least when it comes to using classic rock and pop hits at his campaign rallies against the wishes of the original artists.

But the Rolling Stones, who have tried for years to keep the president from appropriating You Can’t Always Get What You Want as his walk-off music, have not thrown in the towel.

The rockers sent a statement this weekend saying it is enlisting BMI, the publishing rights organisation that oversees public use of the song, in their quest to keep the track from being used for politically partisan purposes.

And the band says there’ll be a lawsuit if the president continues using the song without a licence.

President Donald Trump pumps his fists as he arrives for a Make America Great Again rally at Minges Coliseum in Greenville, North Carolina.
President Donald Trump pumps his fists as he arrives for a Make America Great Again rally at Minges Coliseum in Greenville, North Carolina.

“This could be the last time President Donald Trump uses Stones songs,” reads the headline to a release sent out by the Stones’ reps.

The statement reads, in part: “Despite cease & desist directives to Donald Trump in the past, the Rolling Stones are taking further steps to exclude him using their songs at any of his future political campaigning. The Stones’ legal team [is] working with BMI... BMI [has] notified the Trump campaign on behalf of the Stones that the unauthorised use of their songs will constitute a breach of its licensing agreement. If Donald Trump disregards the exclusion and persists, then he would face a lawsuit for breaking the embargo and playing music that has not been licensed.”

As these disputes have arisen, at issue is whether a song’s use in a campaign rally is covered by a blanket licence held by the host venue for all performance purposes. BMI is joining the Stones in contending that the Trump campaign is subject to a license specifically established for political uses, which allows songwriters to object to and withhold use.

News of the Stones taking up the fight to have their song excluded from campaign appearances follows on the heels of the Tom Petty family uniting last weekend to release a statement objecting to I Won’t Back Down at the president’s contentious campaign rally in Tulsa.

Brendon Urie soon followed with a strongly worded statement condemning Trump’s use of the Panic! at the Disco song High Hopes at the same rally. The long list of musicians who’ve previously publicly objected to Trump campaign song use includes Neil Young and R.E.M.’s Michael Stipe.

Left unaddressed, as it has been since Trump began using You Can’t Always Get What You Want at the end of his campaign speeches in 2016, is what message the candidate even intends to send with a song whose very title expresses the thought that expectations should be tempered.

Reuters

Ronnie Wood, Mick Jagger and Keith Richards of The Rolling Stones perform onstage at Hard Rock Stadium in 2019 in Miami Gardens, Florida.
Ronnie Wood, Mick Jagger and Keith Richards of The Rolling Stones perform onstage at Hard Rock Stadium in 2019 in Miami Gardens, Florida.
Read related topics:Donald Trump

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Original URL: https://www.theaustralian.com.au/world/rolling-stones-threaten-legal-action-against-donald-trump-for-using-their-songs-at-rallies/news-story/2312e6c5f5a7b115d26af2daceef9db2