Did Dua Lipa ACTUALLY Plagiarize Levitating?

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Published 2022-03-06
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Song Exploder Episode on Dua-Lipa
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Dua Lipa - Levitating
   • Dua Lipa - Levitating Featuring DaBab...  

Artikal Sound System - Live Your Life
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All Comments (21)
  • @RICHFOW
    As a song writer myself, I find it virtually impossible to find a melody or chord progression that sounds good and has not been done before.
  • Let's hope that no one ever actually manages to copyright a musical concept, because that would set back musical progress for decades.
  • The better question is, why do so many songs that were written using the charleston have "moonlight", "starlight", and "all night" in them.
  • @Warhamsterxxx
    In the College of Fine Arts in The University Of The Philippines, the first thing we were taught was that no one has a completely original idea. Everyone's creative output is somehow influenced by art that they have been exposed to.
  • I can attest to how easy it is to accidentally copy a song. My band wrote a new song a little while ago and we were excited to play it live. A week before the show, I listened to an album in a similar genre and the main riff in our song was a note for note copy of one of the songs on that album. Literally no one in the band had noticed (despite it being a pretty popular album in the genre that we had all probably heard before at some point). Musical genres sound the way they do because of patterns and tropes. If enough people are writing in the same genre, it's more or less guaranteed that those patterns and tropes will eventually manifest in the same way more than once.
  • @andrlop6772
    every time there's a plagiarism I think to myself "oh boy can't wait for the adam neely video"
  • If you've ever gotten into a genre of music that you've never listened to before, (country, classical, etc.) And listen to a whole playlist by different artists . . . the songs all sound extremely similar, especially if you haven't heard the songs before or don't know the genre. That overall sound is what MAKES the genre, and your ears cannot differentiate because you are not yet 'trained' to hear the difference.
  • @5150crazyfun
    I've seen this happen more often lately. In most cases, the less successful artist or band are the ones suing for "infringement". With that being said, I'm certainly no musical expert, but it sounds to me like several songs use similar musical keys and notes. It's one thing to be influenced by other songs, but it's another to say someone ripped off your song because of a similar musical arrangement. Because all music is ripping off of other musical influences and sounds in some manner. There should be millions of lawsuits if the basis to sue is that one song sounds like another.
  • @roomofmirros
    Litterally 80% of musical plagiarism controversies sound absolutely ridiculous when you actually know music theory lmao
  • Given the degree of similarity, it is highly unlikely that the Artikal Sound System "Smoke & Mirrors" album art was created independently from "Grand Theft Auto: Vice City".
  • Keep in mind the Star Spangled Banner has the Charleston rhythm multiple times (in Clarinet, it’s high F, high D, high Bb in Charleston as the first notes) Honestly, people these days
  • @aidyleemusic300
    This is why song writers must record every writing session be it voice recorder or video. Awesome analysis & channel dude.
  • @cvillalta
    from an improvisation standpoint i actually believe the story they told in the podcast, you could compose levitating without conciously plagiarizing any of the other songs. They took a common chord progression and rythmic pattern in the genre they were aiming for and they played a little with it. It is a huge coincidence, but it's possible
  • This is similar to when Katy Perry got sued for "Dark Horse". I loved the song, but when I heard the "original", I was certain she plagiarized. Until I heard the 15,000 other songs that used the same beat she did. Simply put, there are only so many chord progressions and chances are good, every song is a slight modification of another song already created.
  • @infairvarona
    I’m still convinced that this video single-handedly helped Dua Lipa win her case, Adam supporting artists whilst also entertaining us, king sh*t!
  • @ivantandyo
    “There is always Prior Art” agree.. and i believe that past art inspires the new ones. And thats what makes Music Beautiful! ❤
  • @20thCenturyPox
    I think we need a musicologist to explain how this Artikal Sound System song was ever on a Reggae chart
  • @guynakash
    What's fascinating about this is that people are still claiming copyright infringement for the most basic chord progressions and melodies as if they invented them, yes, it's 2020 and you're the first, brilliant, brilliant musician who thought about this sound and melody! Nobody else has ever heard of it before you came along, it took millions of years of evolution, thousands of years of music and countless artists to get to you, you wizard of notes and chords, to hook these 4 bars and improvise this, oh my god indeed, bravo.
  • @cmyk8964
    The “I’m levitating” scale (F♯ E D B A) is also the same melody used as the main riff of Unity by TheFatRat (B A G E D), except that’s in swing time. They’re both the 5th, 4th, 3rd, 1st, and 7th of their respective minor keys.
  • @thahardman
    Dude, this is an awesome analysis! Nice work