World

German group Kraftwerk lose copyright case in top court

German electronic music pioneers Kraftwerk performing in Berlin PICTURE: Jens Kalaene/AP
German electronic music pioneers Kraftwerk performing in Berlin PICTURE: Jens Kalaene/AP German electronic music pioneers Kraftwerk performing in Berlin PICTURE: Jens Kalaene/AP

GERMAN electronic music pioneers Kraftwerk have suffered a legal setback at Germany's highest court in a battle over a two-second sample.

The verdict is a victory for German music producer Moses Pelham, who had used a beat from Kraftwerk's 1977 work Metall auf Metall without permission or payment.

Mr Pelham had argued that restricting the use of even short sequences would limit his artistic freedom because rap and hip hop rely heavily on sampling.

The ruling by Germany's Constitutional Court means lower courts will have to reconsider several verdicts in Kraftwerk's favour.

The court left open the possibility that the German parliament could make payment for samples obligatory.

It also proposed transferring the Kraftwerk case to the European Court of Justice since copyright law was harmonised across the European Union in 2002.