quincy
Senior Member
We all appreciate the thanks, Alma.Thank you for your time
Good luck with your sound creations and sound library.
We all appreciate the thanks, Alma.Thank you for your time
Understood - and previously answered.I want to use a quick analogy as a food for thought.
I walk into a room and see the Monalisa for the first time. I decide I want to try to paint it myself, but I have no idea what colors were used. So, I start to make my own combinations of colors until I come up with colors very similar to the famous painting. I am now very happy with the final painting but decide not to try to sell it. INSTEAD, I put together a color kit of the colors I use to paint the Monalisa that I want to sell as an aide for others who are trying to also paint her. They are my color combinations not Da Vinci's. I could sell those. But then the question would be: Can I NAME those colors with using the Monalisa name in them for example, Monalisa Crimson #56? This is kind of what I am taking about with the music.
Monalisa was an example. Let's switch it with a painting of Madonna instead.Understood - and previously answered.
As one probably unnecessary note: Mona Lisa is in the public domain and would not create the problems you can have using the name Madonna (the recording artist, not the Virgin Mary).
Let's not.Monalisa was an example. Let's switch it with a painting of Madonna instead.
Good. I am glad you checked it out.By the way, the answered I got today from an IP attorney is that the name can be used as long as there is an apostrophe after the name but not the actual name and artist of the song. So for example, I can name it "Madonna's Like A Virgin Piano" but not Madonna - Like A Virgin (Piano). This sounds similar to what Quincy described yesterday so thank you.