Shame on you Larrikin Music.
The Land Down Under is a great song.
I am the last person to drape a flag around my neck and go shirtless into public screaming ‘Oi Oi Oi’.
I love playing that song on my guitar, because I like the way I play it, and people seem to enjoy it.
Only now after a court battle I find that the flute riff is “Kookaburra sits in the Old Gum Tree”. I dont play that bit on guitar, and now Colin Hayes probaly wont ask Greg Ham to play it either.
Since when should music be dissected and Men At Work told many years (over 20 I think), that they have stolen a riff from a song so entrenched in our musical history.
We sang “Kookaburra sits in the Old Gum Tree”, in primary school, this would mean, that as a government school, they should be paying APRA fees. Thats because the song is licensed by Larrikin Music, a company that betrays its own name and …………..ahem……….Im calling it………….fucking, money grabbing, unaustralian arseholes.
They say that the author died in an Adelaide retirement village and probably would not have heard the song, so after a question on Spicks and Specks, ‘Larrikin’ Music decided to take the band to court, for the author.
They also said that registering this particular song was a gold mine for them.
Why then when they registered this song in the eighties and bought it from the writer, where were they for her? If that indeed is their noble cause for this debacle.
Dont be fooled folks, money they get aint going to its author, its going to America….yup….Larrikin Music is owened by The Music Sales Corporation in New York. How AouZZieee is that.
Personaly, I hated that part of the song, and the guitar chords are D, A, B, G, A.
I heard a song on JJJ that used those same chord progressions, but lyricaly it was diffrent, Men at Work should hire a lawyer and sue this band, who probably have nothing more than a share house and one song on the J’s…… but thats the example ‘Larrikin’ music has set.
Here is a quote from the court proceedings.
”What purpose is served by insisting on the rights of a dead composer against quotation, one who in her lifetime wasn’t at all protective of her copyrights, who gave her intellectual assets away for no charge and showed no inclination to profit materially from her inventions?”
Feel free to know that even though Colin Hayes is Scottish, he would be honored that you are paying homage to his song, because he is like one of us,
Larrikin Music, you make ‘Women groan and men chunder”.