Advertisement

Ed Sheeran Shared The Brilliant Way He Was Able To Win Over The Jury And Win His Copyright Trial

As you have probably seen, Ed Sheeran won his music copyright trial last week. The lawsuit had alleged that Ed's "Thinking Out Loud" copied Marvin Gaye's "Let's Get It On," which Ed denied.

Ed walking along the street

This week, Ed appeared on The Howard Stern Show, where he talked about the impact of the trial on his life. "I'm really glad it's over, man. It was eight years of that. This is my livelihood. This is the thing I've worked my entire life to do," he said.

"To have someone disbelieve it and diminish it and just say that you've stolen it — I feel like I really had to take a stand and go to [the trial]. Either way, you lose because you spend god knows what to win the case, and then you don't get that back. And if you lose the case, you lose. Then there's a stain on your reputation ... the headline of 'Ed Sheeran Stole This.'"

Ed on the Howard Stern Show holding his guitar

Ed also missed his grandmother's funeral because of the trial, saying, "It's a shame. I won't get that time back. She was a great woman."

Ed on the Howard Stern Show

Ed then revealed the brilliant way he was able to win over the jury at trial. He said he took out his guitar and started playing a bunch of songs that had the same chord progression as his song and the Marvin Gaye song.

.@EdSheeran pulls out his guitar on the #SternShow to demonstrate what he did in court to win his “Thinking Out Loud” copyright lawsuit. pic.twitter.com/ROuc6XRT12

— Stern Show (@sternshow) May 10, 2023

SiriusXM / Via Twitter: @sternshow

He played "Thinking Out Loud," followed by "Have I Told You Lately That I Love You" by Rod Stewart, "People Get Ready" by Curtis Mayfield and the Impressions, "You're Still the One" by Shania Twain, "Just Like a Woman" by Bob Dylan, and finally, "My Girl" by the Temptations.

Ed on the Howard Stern Show

"There was 101 songs," Ed said. "I was saying, 'Yes, it's a chord sequence that you hear on successful songs. But if you say that a song in 1974 owns this, then what about the songs before?'"

Ed on the Howard Stern Show

He added, "We found songs from the 1700s that had similar melodic stuff. There were huge songs in the '50s and '60s. You can't copyright a chord sequence."

Ed on the Howard Stern Show

There you have it. Congrats on winning the case, Ed!