The producer of a mashup album that combined the Beach Boys’ Pet Sounds and the Beatles’ Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club band has been threatened with a multi-million-dollar lawsuit by EMI, the Beatles’ music publisher. EMI has also demanded that he turn over the IP addresses of the hundreds of thousands of people who downloaded the mash-ups, presumably so that EMI can sue all of us, too.
The mashups were released by the fictitious band “The Beachles,” as part of a notional album called Sgt. Petsounds, and they were a kind of noise-rock experiment in mixing up the two seminal albums (both albums are known for their own use of “found sound” and mashup techniques).
Clayton Counts produced the album for some DJ friends of his, and was not commercially compensated for his efforts (Counts has recently relocated to look after sick relatives and is broke, lacking even a telephone). It’s idiotically inconceivable that anyone who hears Sgt Petsounds will decide that they’ve got all the Sgt Pepper’s they need, and decide not to buy the Beatles’ original as a consequence. No economic harm could possibly arise to EMI as a result of the existence of this album, which was favorably reported in USA Today and other major news outlets.
This follows a pattern set by EMI of indiscriminate censorship of people who do to the Beatles what the Beatles did to the artists who inspired them. First EMI tried to crush DJ Danger Mouse’s incredible “Grey Album” (the White Album plus Jay-Z’s Black Album), then they took down djBC’s Beastles (The Beatles plus the Beastie Boys) and now they’re coming after The Beachles.

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EMI phails again
This just in: Bill Shakespeare is suing Ray Bradbury for using the title “Something Wicked This Way Comes” which we all know is a line from Bill’s blockbuster play “Macbeth.” He’s also suing Suzy Brown for uttering the phrase “Double bubble toil and trouble” in a school Halloween play last year. “After all” Bill is quoted as saying “we need to protect intllectual property rights!” (Alas where would most of today’s great works of literature be if they had copyright law like we have today in the good old days?)