Liturgical Composers Revived Copyright Claims Rejected by Jury

Liturgical Composer’s Revived Copyright Claims Rejected by Jury

By Editorial Team

A liturgical-music composer, Vincent Ambrosetti, failed to persuade a jury that the Oregon Catholic Press infringed his copyright in a case that was revived by the Ninth Circuit.

Ambrosetti accused composer Bernadette Farrell of copying his 1980 song “Emanuel” to write her piece “Christ Be Our Light,” which was later utilized by Oregon Catholic Press. The dispute unfolded in the US District Court for the District of Oregon. However, the jury ultimately disagreed with Ambrosetti’s claims, ruling that “Christ Be Our Light” did not infringe on his copyright in a verdict delivered on March 20 following a five-day trial.

In Ambrosetti’s 2020 lawsuit, he contended that “Emanuel” was featured in a liturgical music book, and he had recorded and performed it extensively. Despite his assertions, the jury found in favor of the defendants.

For more legal news and analysis, visit Bloomberg Law.

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Liturgical Composers Revived Copyright Claims Rejected by Jury

About Shaina Lumish

Corporate Counsel, Renesas Electronics America Inc. | USA

About Shaina Lumish

Sasha Tan is the founder and CEO of Favful, a TripAdvisor-like platform for beauty products. As a serial entrepreneur, she started her first F&B business in Singapore at age 21. She is also well-versed in growing internet businesses as the former founding team member and VP of the online grocery delivery start-up, HappyFresh. Backed by Segnel Ventures, Gobi Partners, and 500 Startups before its official launch, Favful is now present in three countries, works with 20,000 beauty advisors, partners with over 2,000 brands, and covers more than 40,000 products to date.