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-   -   Jon Bon Jovi and the songs he cleverly stole from others. (https://drycounty.com/jovitalk/showthread.php?t=54006)

Old Joysey 09-02-2015 08:21 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Supersonic (Post 1084814)
I'm quite sure there's more out there. To this day I swear I recognize the riff from Naked, along with the drum loop, from another song but I can't say which one. Can anyone point me in the right direction? Or come up with more examples of songs they stole from others? I'm sure there's more out there of bands I rarely listen to. I'll edit the list once the suggestions start to come. :)

Swallowed by Bush (chorus)?
https://youtu.be/Qc4SE7o9Zts

TwinFan 09-03-2015 12:52 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by rolo_tomachi (Post 1192088)
Mana - Clavado en un bar (Intro) // Have A Nce Day (Intro)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RLNdTLlJqi0
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uzWO7O-qHWI

Seems Have A nice Day Intro. In 2002-2003, Jon in a promo interview spoke about Mana music. Interesting.

This one is REALLY pushing it...

Sent from my LG-H810 using Tapatalk

ezearis 09-03-2015 09:05 PM

I thought the purpose of this thread was commenting on songs that are really similar, not to overthinking in what little piece of a song resembles to another.

liljovi93 09-03-2015 09:24 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ezearis (Post 1193799)
I thought the purpose of this thread was commenting on songs that are really similar, not to overthinking in what little piece of a song resembles to another.

Yeah, completely agree with this.

The odd chord can't be counted as 'stealing' .. It's highly unlikely that Jon purposely done that on most songs.

Becky 09-03-2015 10:59 PM

I heard the creator of this site on Entertainment Weekly radio this afternoon.

He said the songwriters who were the worst offenders (though he didn't phrase it that way) were the main writer for One Republic and Avril Lavigne.


www.samethattune.com


What Is Same That Tune?

As a musician and composer, I’m often struck by similarities between pop songs. If you’ve ever listened to a tune on the radio and thought to yourself, “this sounds really familiar,” or “what does this melody remind me of,” (or more bluntly, “this song is a rip-off of …”) then you have shared in the experience. SAME THAT TUNE recognizes musical similarities between songs as a matter of opinion, and provides an informal referendum on whether or not the resemblance to an earlier work is: COINCIDENTAL (original and second may share musical influences, instrumentation, etc.), a TRIBUTE (second intentionally honors/references original), DUBIOUS (second is highly derivative of original), or NON-EXISTENT (original and second do not sound similar).

To paraphrase Pete Townshend, all songwriters are magpies and thieves, owing either to the limited number of chord/melodic progressions and variations in contemporary western music or simply to limited creativity. Or perhaps, as neuroscientist Daniel Levitin describes in his fascinating book This Is Your Brain On Music, our inherent need to “categorize” leads us to group various musical works together (or form mental prototypes, subsequently used for comparison purposes).

Please note this site will not delve into the subject of “subconscious plagiarism” (SEE George Harrison, My Sweet Lord legal controversy or Men At Work, Down Under legal controversy). Likewise, we will try to avoid instances in which a songwriter has created a work similar to his/her very own catalogue (SEE John Fogerty, Old Man Down The Road legal controversy). Everything else, is fair game and open to critical analysis. Let’s make this a fun, connect-the-dots musical collective (keep it honest, clean and insightful). Media clips (hosted elsewhere) have been displayed on this site (via links) strictly for illustrative purposes and to elicit critical discourse. SAME THAT TUNE does not wish to affect or diminish the market or potential market for musical works. Furthermore, statements and observations made by the members of this site are merely their expressed opinion and hyperbole. SAME THAT TUNE does not contain any uploading functionality.

Thanks for visiting!
- Steve Nathanson

life_of_agony 09-05-2015 09:14 AM

There are some big similarities between "Always" and "Meat Hook Sodomy" by Cannibal Corpse.

Faceman 09-05-2015 06:27 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by rolo_tomachi (Post 1192088)
Mana - Clavado en un bar (Intro) // Have A Nce Day (Intro)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RLNdTLlJqi0
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uzWO7O-qHWI

Seems Have A nice Day Intro. In 2002-2003, Jon in a promo interview spoke about Mana music. Interesting.

Well, the Mana intro to me sounds more like Good Loving than HAND.
The last chord doesn't fit to HAND.

Matrix15 09-06-2015 12:32 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by life_of_agony (Post 1193854)
There are some big similarities between "Always" and "Meat Hook Sodomy" by Cannibal Corpse.

I know, right?!

The album version of always is 5.54.

Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Always_(Bon_Jovi_song)

And Meat Hook Sodomy is 5:46.

Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Butchered_at_Birth

The length of both songs is with 8 seconds of each other. Pretty suspicious IMO.

Tiggerbeast 09-07-2015 07:28 PM

It goes the other way to. Ellen Shipley and Rick Nowels wrote Belinda Carlisle's hit 'Heaven Is A Place On Earth'. I has the same chord structure (a different melody) but essentially its the same song. I recall Jon once said 'That b***c stole our song'.

Alphavictim 09-07-2015 09:14 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Tiggerbeast (Post 1193916)
I recall Jon once said 'That b***c stole our song'.

I'd hope he knows better than that.


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