A Florida jury on Friday awarded Grammy Award-winning music veteran Alan Parsons nearly $5 million in damages upon finding that his former promoter fraudulently used Parsons' brand to promote shows even after they stopped working together.
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Court Grants Delay But Not Stay In Suit Against Alan Parsons
Law360 (July 12, 2021, 8:53 PM EDT) A Florida judge declined Monday to pause a state court suit filed against Grammy-winner Alan Parsons company by his former promoter while the two duke it out in federal court over alleged knockoff concerts that Parsons says used his name without authorization.
In a hearing conducted over Zoom, Orange County Circuit Judge Denise Beamer denied the request from Parsons loan-out company Appertaining LLC to stay the state court suit filed by World Entertainment Associates of America Inc., which is owned by promoter John Regna.
By: Deborah Speer
cover of Pollstar 12/21/20 issue
Ben Bart might have seemed like another unremarkable music fan as a young man from Knoxville, Tenn., in the 1930s, other than a penchant for traveling between Memphis and Nashville to see the orchestras and bands of the day perform live. The main object of his affection was “race music” – the euphemism of the time for what evolved into R&B and soul music, and the (segregated) domain of Black musicians.
He’d gotten a job at the Gale Agency booking the artists he loved and, by 1945, was ready to break out on his own – taking some of the era’s biggest acts with him. The agency he created, Universal Attractions Agency, celebrated its 75th anniversary on May 15.
By: Deborah Speer
cover of Pollstar 12/21/20 issue
Ben Bart might have seemed like another unremarkable music fan as a young man from Knoxville, Tenn., in the 1930s, other than a penchant for traveling between Memphis and Nashville to see the orchestras and bands of the day perform live. The main object of his affection was “race music” – the euphemism of the time for what evolved into R&B and soul music, and the (segregated) domain of Black musicians.
He’d gotten a job at the Gale Agency booking the artists he loved and, by 1945, was ready to break out on his own – taking some of the era’s biggest acts with him. The agency he created, Universal Attractions Agency, celebrated its 75th anniversary on May 15.