![how deep is your love song only how deep is your love song only](https://lineimg.omusic.com.tw/img/album/1307382.jpg)
![how deep is your love song only how deep is your love song only](https://www.musicroom.com/product/image/medium/dam381281_0.jpg)
#How deep is your love song only movie#
Three more songs from the movie would later also make the Top 100 "Night Fever" by the Bee Gees. Barry from Sauquoit, NyOn December 14th 1977, the disco-themed movie 'Saturday Night Fever' had its world premiere in New York City.Īt the time three songs featured in the movie were on Billboard's Hot Top 100 chart "How Deep Is Your Love" by the Bee Gees was at #2, "Stayin' Alive", again by the Bee Gees, was at #52, and Tavares' version of the Bee Gees' "More Than A Woman" was at #86.I really need to learn 'cause we're living in a world of foolsīreaking us down when they all should let us be How deep is your love, how deep is your love? (Oh) This part of the song make me Wanna Sing too! Until now many people keep playing this song It's never classic Siahara Shyne Carter from United StatesI heared this on Baywatch movie and it stuck in my head that time.This is one reason why music publishers and songwriters refuse to hear most unsolicited material. Henceforth, a songwriter had to prove that the infringing party actually heard the song before the case could move forward. The case underscored the problem of juries making judgments on music, and it led to a landmark ruling that "striking similarities" between songs was not enough to prove plagiarism (something George Harrison would have appreciated). Selle later appealed, and was once again rebuffed. The judge, however, nullified the verdict. The jury bought it, and ruled that the Bee Gees did copy Selle's song. The case was based on the similarities between the songs, and an expert witness for Selle - a musicologist named Arrand Parsons - tried to convince the jury through technical analysis of the notes that the Bee Gees plagiarized the song. The Bee Gees claimed that they had never heard "Let It End," and there was no evidence that they did (that song was never released - Selle made a home recording that he had sent to music publishers). A songwriter/antiques dealer in Illinois named Ronald Selle sued the Bee Gees, claiming a song he wrote in 1975 called "Let It End" was the basis for "How Deep Is Your Love." The case went to a jury in 1983.