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Coldplagiarism? Say It Ain't So, Joe!

Posted Fri Dec 5, 2008 3:40pm PST by Lyndsey Parker in Video Ga Ga
Back in June, Coldplay were accused of plagiarism by Brooklyn indie-rockers Creaky Boards, who claimed that the title track to Coldplay's Viva La Vida album bore an uncanny similarity to one of their own songs--a song ironically titled "The Songs I Didn't Write." Creaky Boards even went so far as to allege--in a somewhat whiny, self-released viral video--that Coldplay frontman Chris Martin got the idea for "Viva La Vida" when he attended one of their shows at the 2007 CMJ Music Festival:

While there was admittedly some resemblance between the two tunes, nothing came of this. Coldplay went about their lives, racking up Grammy nominations and selling millions of records, and Creaky Boards simply creaked back into obscurity. But now a more prominent artist, guitar virtusoso Joe Satriani, is lobbying the same sort of charges at the Britrockers. Satriani has just filed a copyright-infringement lawsuit against Coldplay in Los Angeles federal court, and he may have a better case than Creaky Boards did.

Before you continue reading, check out this other video comparing and contrasting "Viva" with Satriani's 2004 instrumental, "If I Could Fly":

Now, first of all, there's no denying the similarity--it's a lot stronger than the one between "Viva" and the Creaky Boards song (that mashup at the end of this video makes a particularly convincing point). The songs in fact sound so much alike, if we'd wandered into a Satriani concert and heard him noodling away during "If I Could Fly" onstage, we'd admittedly mistake it for a guitar-wanky "Viva La Vida" cover.

Of course, the similarity could be a coincidence--and therefore the sonic resemblance isn't enough for Satriani to collect the "any and all profits" he is seeking in a jury trial against Coldplay. Another crucial aspect of his case is whether or not Coldplay had the opportunity to steal the song.

In the case of Coldplay vs. Creaky Boards, it was kind of difficult to believe Chris Martin would randomly pop up at some unknown band's CMJ showcase (Chris publicly denied he attended the gig in question). So it was almost impossible for Creaky Boards to prove that Coldplay had had ample opportunity to hear (and subsequently plagiarize) "The Songs I Didn't Write." But the Satriani album on which "If I Could Fly" originally appeared, Is There Love In Space?, came out four years ago on Epic, a major label...so it is more feasible that the members of Coldplay did have some chance to be exposed to it.

Although, of course, it's also kind of hard to imagine that Chris Martin lounges around his London mansion with Gwyneth, Apple, and Moses, attentively listening to Joe Satriani jams with notepad in hand. But hey, you never know.

Anyway, whether or not Coldplay are guilty as charged, they certainly were aware of Satriani's accusation before the lawsuit was officially filed this week. Just wait for the 3:30 mark in the video below for Chris Martin's sly mention of a mystery man whose name rhymes with "Moe Batriani"...along with his impassioned insistence that "Viva La Vida"'s resemblance to any song, by any artist living or dead, is purely coincidental:

1106 Comments

161. Jared -
Plagiarism? Naturally, Musicians are meant to be inspired by different kinds of music. The melody of both songs might have some resembles but, the whole idea of the songs are completely different. That's what matters. Music is the universal sound of our planet. Therefore, when we fight for copyrights that takes away the feel and freedom of music.

162. sarah a -
Uh, to the Sarah up above, Satch's song was released on a cd in 2004. It was obviously out first, and moreover, the guy is a legend. Every rock guitarist in the world knows who this guy is. He's played with some of the biggest bands and artists in the world, and he's taught tons of famous guitarists how to play. He's widely considered to be one of the very best guitarists in the world. Chris Martin even listed him as an influence a few years ago in a VH1 interview. There's no doubt that they know who he is and that they are familiar with his material.

163. Julie -
Is Chris Martin really claiming he doesn't know who Joe Satriani is? Please. Anyone who is roughly the same age as Chris Martin and is a music lover knows EXACTLY who Joe Satch is. He's one of the greats. It's like one of you young whippersnappers claiming to have never heard of Beyonce.

164. havefun01 -
funny when i first listened to coldplay awhile ago i said to myself they are U2, travis clones....
I like coldplays sound but as someone said they lack originality and steal ideas from all even garage bands like creeky boards,

165. Suzi -
Some of you need to look up " sampling".

166. tams -
Is it just me who thinks that the guitar solo is better than the one with lyrics? I think Coldplay killed the song when they sang it.

167. Cap -
ha even if they did take the bit, they should just tell the guy to make a remix with them.. cause that part in the video where the 2 songs are put together was pretty cool! i'd listen to it.. ha just cut him a portion of the remix and lets all go make some new songs..

168. Victoria D -
aww... i really like coldplay.
i hope they didn't plagiarize.
that would suck.

169. Yahoo! Music User -
Well if Coldplay ripped them off, well I guess every blues song should be up for question. Get a life Satchmo, if you weren't too busy mastrubating the guitar behind stock rhythm, maybe you'd have a real audience other than pretentious aspiring studio-musicians.

170. MatthewB -
This debate is breaking down into 2 camps: Camp number 1 are Coldplay fans who refuse on general principle to even consider the possibility that their favorite band could POSSIBLY have done something wrong, even in the face of clear cut evidence that Satriani had written that song 4 years earlier than Coldplay "CLAIMS" to have written it. Camp number 2 is everybody else. COME ON, PEOPLE! Same melody, same key, same tempo, SAME FRIGGING SONG!! Even if Coldplay didn't realize they were copying it (which does happen), they still owe Satch, if for no other reason than because Satch got to that melody first, and someone else cannot come along and make millions from a melody that he already wrote without paying up. That's industry law. You only get paid for your own work.

171. RLJ 2 -
I am a professional musician. Sometimes you can draw inspiration from other artists. No one has exclusive rights to a set of chord changes. It is up to the artist to use harmony and melody in way that sets them apart from others. As universal as the blues form is, BB King sounds different from playing the blues than Miles Davis, or John Coltrane. In this case however the phrasing of of the lyrics have similiar qualities as well as striking similiarities in the harmonic, and rythmic scheme of the two compositions. I guess the courts will have to decide.

172. Sean -
The first group that alleged the copy was full of bull. With Satriani's the tempo is slightly diffrent along with some of the notes. I think this is just a case of people trying to leech off of other people with more talent than they themselves have. I say to them quit crying and just try harded

173. jimmy -
I hate coldplay, they stole radioheads style

-said john to me

174. Gonzo -
Every Artist is a Cannibal, Every Poet is a Thief; All Kill their Inspiration, and Sing about their Grief.

175. Sandy C -
COLD PLAY ROCKS NO MATTER WHAT THE SONG IS THEY PLAY.

176. fernando -
The Grammy nominating members are nothing but sour, snobbish and old Republican guards. They deliberately left out the Journey after their successful concert tours.

177. AndrewM -
The Satriani melody is just so simple and may sound accidentally similar. But the Creaky Boards might have a lawsuit.....

178. chiapet -
its just the same melody
not the same words
satriani is acting really bitter
noone likes a bitter winey band
satriani wrote it, coldplay perfected it

179. Yahoo! Music User -
Coldplay stinks. They started out by trying to sound just like U2 and now they are trying to sound just like Keane. Chris Martin has to come up with something so he can keep Gwyneth in designer clothes.

180. greg -
Even if Coldplay didn't conciously sit down and say "hey lets steal this tune from Joe Satriani", seems obvious the two songs are the same. Don't know what has to be proven in a court of law but I would think Joe has a case. For all the Coldplay fans willing to cut them a break, you wouldn't feel the same if the roles were reversed
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