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Friday Story: Reed & Cle Say Banana's To Warhol Foundation

There must be some Velvet Underground fans amongst you out there -something to get Reed and Cale  talking - that's very rare!

 

 

Bloomberg reports


Velvet Underground Sues Warhol Foundation Over Banana Album

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-01-12/ziggo-mmpi-velvet-underground-banana-medianews-intellectual-property.html



The Velvet Underground sued the Andy Warhol Foundation, accusing it of infringing the trademark for the banana design on the cover of the rock group’s first album in 1967.
The band’s founders, Lou Reed and John Cale, said that the foundation infringed the design by licensing it to third parties, according to the complaint filed yesterday in federal court in Manhattan.
The band, which was active from about 1965 to 1972, formed an artistic collaboration with Warhol, who designed the banana illustration for “The Velvet Underground and Nico,” which critics have labeled one of the most influential rock recordings of all time, according to the complaint.
The Warhol Foundation claimed it has a copyright interest in the design, according to the lawsuit. The Velvet Underground partnership said in the complaint that the design can’t be copyrighted because the banana image Warhol furnished for the illustration came from an advertisement and was in the public domain.
Warhol, one of the most celebrated Pop artists, began his collaboration with the band in 1965. The group performed at his New York studio, the Factory, and in his traveling light show, the Exploding Plastic Inevitable. Warhol died in 1987.
Nina Djerejian, a spokeswoman for the New York-based foundation, didn’t return messages seeking comment on the lawsuit.
Warhol’s copyrighted works have a market value of $120 million and the foundation has earned more than $2.5 million a year licensing rights to those works, according to the complaint.
The Velvet Underground is seeking a judicial declaration that the foundation has no copyright to the banana design, an injunction barring the use of any merchandise using the artwork and monetary damages. The group is requesting a jury trial.
In the so-called Banana Album, the Velvets chronicled the 1960s hard-drug scene in songs written by Reed such as “Heroin” and “I’m Waiting for the Man.” Released by MGM Records, the album was a commercial failure, the complaint states. The catalog of MGM became part of Vivendi SA (VIV)’s Universal Music Group, which has re-released the album.
The case is The Velvet Underground v. The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, 12-0201, U.S. District Court, Southern District of New York (Manhattan).