The
Rolling Stones Are DONE With Trump Using Their Music
Surprisingly, Trump did NOT use this song to back up his speeches where he gave his views about women. Watch/hear this video directly on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nYYTLJ8YHi4
The Rolling Stones are
now on a growing list of rock stars who have asked Republicans to stop using
their music.
This time it was Donald Trump, who has been playing the Stones’
music at his rallies.
Just one day after Trump unofficially sealed the GOP nomination,
the band stated that they had not given permission for the billionaire to use
their music and they asked that he “cease all use immediately.”
Ironically, the song in question is “You Can’t Always Get What
You Want,” which is about compromise – something the Republicans know little to
nothing about and something that goes against everything Donald Trump has been
campaigning against. The campaign has also played “Start Me Up.”
Trump, who will take anyone to court for virtually anything, seems not to care very much about artists’ intellectual
property rights.
TrumpTube, which is like YouTube for Donald Trump, posted his
playlist and the Rolling Stones song is still at the very top, with an
unofficial video, of course.
Adele and Aerosmith frontman Steven Tyler both asked the candidate to stop using their recorded songs to fire up crowds. Neil Young also objected when the real estate mogul used “Rockin’ in the Free World” during his campaign kickoff announcement last year. In those cases, the Trump campaign stopped using the songs.Source: CBS News
Twisted Sister is also twisted up about Trump using their music without
permission. Noted liberals R.E.M. were also fed up with being
used by Trump.
Trump is far from the only Republican to receive backlash from
artists for using their music.
FiveThirtyEight compiled this list last year, after Neil Young told Trump to knock it off.
The list begins with Ronald Reagan, after Bruce Springsteen famously told him
that “Born In The USA” didn’t mean what Reagan thought it did.
Both Bushes
received cease and desist orders.
John McCain made enemies of a whopping nine
artists – as diverse as ABBA, Heart, Jackson Brown, Tom Petty and the Foo
Fighters. John Cougar Mellencamp had to ask two GOP candidates, McCain and
Reagan, to stop using “Pink Houses.” Again, they had no idea what that song was
about.
Whether Trump (or any others of the candidates) was really
violating copyright law is up to interpretation. Most commercially marketed
music is licensed through one of two organizations, ASCAP and BMI.
Campaigns
can buy licenses without the artists’ permission in most cases, however, some
of the more powerful and influential artists do have some say over what songs
can be included in the licensing agreements.
Trump’s campaign hasn’t yet commented.
Author Wendy
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