Beatles' Apple Corps settles EMI suit
The Beatles' Apple Corps company has settled a royalties dispute with record label EMI, the two companies said Thursday, raising hopes that Beatles recordings may soon be legally available online.
"It was settled on mutually acceptable terms last month," Apple Corps and EMI said in a joint statement. They refused to provide details of the settlement.
Apple Corps Ltd., the company owned by Paul McCartney, Ringo Starr and the widows of John Lennon and George Harrison, sued EMI Group PLC in 2005 to recover what the band said was more than 30 million pounds ($60 million) in unpaid royalties. EMI releases Beatles recordings under the Apple label.
Apple Corps is a zealous guardian of The Beatles' interests. In February it settled a long-running trademark dispute with computer company Apple Inc. over the distinctive apple logo and name.
The Beatles have consistently refused to license their songs for music download sites, despite the desire of EMI to do so.
The legal settlement leaves EMI and Apple Corps free to negotiate a new royalties agreement that would include Internet sales.
Neither company would comment Thursday on whether such an agreement was imminent. At a news conference last week, however, EMI Chief Executive Eric Nicoli said the company was seeking to make the Fab Four catalog available online.
"We're working on it, we hope it's soon," he said.
Apple Corps announced Monday that Chief Executive Neil Aspinall, 64, a friend of The Beatles for more than 40 years, was quitting. He was replaced by Jeff Jones, a former executive vice president at Sony BMG.
- 1 Humble and romantic Hugh Jackman is the "Sexiest Man Alive"
- 2 Holly-Bollywood stars at the grand opening of "Atlantis" of Dubai
- 3 Dubai mega resort "Atlantis" lavish opening party
- 4 Attractive "Megan Fox" in hot pink dress
- 5 Layoffs to have "limited" impact on India: Citigroup
- 6 Power of Indian navy: catching suspected pirate "mother" ship
- 7 Carla Bruni on "NBC Today" program
- 1 PM bats for 8 percent economic growth, slams divisive politics
- 2 Nokia E63 smartphone - a BlackBerry killer?
- 3 Citigroup's South Asia chief Sanjay Nayar quits bank to head KKR India
- 4 Inflation falls to 8.90 percent, rate cuts seen
- 5 FinMin's suggestion of price cut to spur demand growth not in sync with India Inc.
- 6 India beat England in 3rd ODI, thanks to weather gods
- 7 Layoffs to have "limited" impact on India: Citigroup
- 1 Citigroup's South Asia chief Sanjay Nayar quits bank to head KKR India
- 2 Layoffs to have "limited" impact on India: Citigroup
- 3 Parsvnath Developers forms consortium with Spanish infra co., to bid for Indian projects
- 4 Jerry Yang to step down as CEO as Yahoo looks to reinvent itself
- 5 SBI hiring amid global firing
- 6 Citigroup looks to shed weight, announces 50,000 job cuts
- 7 L&T bags Rs.1637 crore orders, to add 10,000 jobs despite economic slowdown
|
|

















