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#oasis Hello VS Gary Glitter Hello Hello, I'm Back Again

#oasis Hello VS Gary Glitter Hello Hello, I'm Back Again

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Title#oasis Hello VS Gary Glitter Hello Hello, I'm Back Again
AuthorVS Channel
Duration0:18
File FormatMP3 / MP4
Original URL https://youtube.com/watch?v=saNhGXVwvI0

Description

#oasis #SHORT #VIRAL #TIKTOK

Oasis
Hello
1995

Glitter
Hello Hello, I'm Back Again
1973

INTERPOLATION
TRIBUTE
COPY
PLAGIARISM
STOLEN - STOLE
COINCIDENCE
?

INTERPOLACIÓN
TRIBUTO
COPIA
PLAGIO
ROBO - ROBADA
COINCIDENCIA
?

WIKIPEDIA

The music on (What's the Story) Morning Glory? has been characterised by commentators as rock, and Oasis as an essential part of Britpop culture. Music critic John Harris commented in his music history Britpop!: Cool Britannia and the Spectacular Demise of English Rock that much of the music seemed to be "little more inspired than a string of musical hand-me-downs". Among the musical cues Harris noted on the album were Gary Glitter's "Hello, Hello, I'm Back Again", John Lennon's "Imagine" ("Don't Look Back in Anger"), the theme to the 1970s children's programme You and Me and the Beatles' "With a Little Help from My Friends" ("She's Electric"), and the influence of R.E.M.'s "The One I Love" on "Morning Glory". One song, "Step Out", bore such a close resemblance to the song "Uptight (Everything's Alright)" by Stevie Wonder that it was removed from the album shortly before release due to the threat of legal action. Musicologist Allan F. Moore compares "She's Electric" to the Beatles' "When I'm Sixty-Four", writing that both songs can be claimed by an older generation.

Oasis' plagiarism of Gary Glitter costs them thousands of pounds every year.

Glitter charges for every album sold and every time 'Hello' is played on the radio or online

“I started singing ‘Hello, hello, It’s good to be back,’ and everyone was dying of laughter,” said Noel Gallagher. Because they found it so funny, Oasis decided to leave that plagiarized part in the song “Hello”, which opened their second album (What’s the story) morning glory?’. They had already done it more times. But this time, it was expensive. In June 1999, Gary Glitter took legal action. He was the author of the 'Hello, hello, it's good to be back' that they had borrowed. Since then, the former 'glam rock' star, convicted of sexual crimes against minors, has not stopped making money. In 2013 he would have already pocketed a million pounds.

Oasis is a band very famous for many things. One of them, by 'borrowing' riffs and melodies from other groups. They themselves recognize it and boast about the musical 'thefts' scattered throughout their discography. In an interview for The Times, Noel Gallagher admitted that he used to borrow melodies, and not only from The Beatles, “something logical, because I learned to play guitar from a book of Beatles songs.” Considering how friendly they were, they didn't receive too many lawsuits. One already came to them with the song 'Shakermakers' from their first album, 'Definitely Maybe' (1994), which was a copy of 'I'd Like to teach the world to sing' (1971) by the New Seekers. They had to change the letter and had to pay 175,000 pounds. Noel said the loan was ironic

Noel explained, according to Songfacts: “I started singing ‘Hello, hello, It’s good to be back,’ and everyone was dying of laughter. As the issue progressed, we realized we couldn't get rid of that part, so we left it."

https://los40.com/2024/06/11/el-plagio-de-oasis-al-pedofilo-gary-glitter-les-cuesta-miles-de-libras-cada-ano/

A fair cop for Noel, as Glitter is listed as co-writer on the opening track of (What's The Story) Morning Glory? We're not sure how Noel now feels about still-strong royalties of Morning Glory? funding Glitter's dotage.

https://www.musicradar.com/news/guitars/blog-noel-gallaghers-greatest-lifts-176554

Gary Glitter has reportedly earned £1m worth of royalties from the Oasis track Hello which uses a sample of his lyrics.

According to the Sun, the singer will continue to earn a significant amount of money for many years as a result of the song, which is the opening track on Oasis' second album (What's the Story) Morning Glory?. It includes the lyric "Hello, hello, it's good to be back", a line taken from Glitter's 1973 hit Hello, Hello, I'm Back Again.

Music lawyer Craig Brookes told the Sun that Hello could have earned Glitter £1m so far, on top of the annual £300,000 he gets from royalties linked to his back catalogue of releases.

In addition to his royalties, in 1999 Gadd received an estimated £200,000 for copyright infringement after taking legal action against Oasis.

https://www.theguardian.com/music/2013/jul/29/gary-glitter-royalties-oasis-1m

*Copyright Notice*:
No copyright infringement is intended. This video is strickly editorial for entertainment & news purposes ONLY and has no commerical intention.

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