Funkadelic George Clinton owns "bow wow wow, yippie yo, yippie yea"
Comments
STORY TOOLS
More Music News
- Bonnaroo 2010 lineup
- UT Symphony offers free concerts
- Soprano Rachele Gilmore brings renowned voice to 'Lucia'
Share and Enjoy
The phrase "bow wow wow, yippie yo, yippie yea" belongs exclusively to funk legend George Clinton, a panel of federal judges ruled this week.
Bridgeport Music, the company that administers Clinton's work, sued Universal Music Group for copyright infringement over those words in 2001. At issue: the 1998 release of "D.O.G. in Me," a song by hip-hop and R&B group Public Announcement, one of Universal's artists. In the song, Bridgeport claimed, Public Announcement wrongfully used the words "bow wow wow, yippie yo, yippie yea," as well as a repetitive use of the word "dog" in ways that infringe on Clinton's copyright.
Clinton and two other songwriters first penned the phrase in 1982 while writing "Atomic Dog," one of Clinton's best-known works.
Continue reading at The Tennessean.
Please wait while the video player loads. If you do not see it in a few seconds, please download the latest version of Adobe Flash Player, or enable JavaScript for your browser to view the video player.
- Knoxville bands
Check out our list of Knoxville's hottest bands. View profiles, listen to music and more.
Go rock! »
-
Timewasters
Stay a while, play some games, browse about:
Sudoku puzzle, crossword puzzle, Market Square webcam, TV listings.
- Gluten-free vendor fair at Hilton Hotel, Feb. 27
- Williams-Sonoma offers free classes
- The Insider: ET actress Elaine Hendrix not afraid to show her claws for animal rights
- Grub Scout: From start to finish, a sublime dining experience at Echo
- Rusted Root
- New Buffalo Wild Wings in Turkey Creek will give away free wings for a year
- The Insider: ET actress Elaine Hendrix not afraid to show her claws for animal rights | 11
- Is this the best Grammy can offer? | 4
- Music City arrives at music's biggest night | 3
- Two local artists in the driver's seat for upcoming Emporium exhibit | 1
- Clarence Brown Theatre's Greek tragedy addresses current issues | 1
- Man files new claim that he's Eddy Arnold's son | 1

RSS

Comments
Share your thoughts
Comments are the sole responsibility of the person posting them. You agree not to post comments that are off topic, defamatory, obscene, abusive, threatening or an invasion of privacy. Violators may be banned. Click here for our full user agreement.