Let's Go Crazy

Last updated
"Let's Go Crazy"
Prince Crazy.jpg
US 7" single
Single by Prince and The Revolution
from the album Purple Rain
B-side
ReleasedJuly 18, 1984 [1]
RecordedAugust 7, 1983
Studio The Warehouse, St. Louis Park
Genre Hard rock, funk rock [2]
Length3:50 (7"/video version)
4:39 (album version)
7:35 (12"/movie version)
Label Warner Bros.
Songwriter(s) Prince [3]
Producer(s) Prince and the Revolution
Prince singles chronology
"When Doves Cry"
(1984)
"Let's Go Crazy"
(1984)
"Purple Rain"
(1984)
Purple Rain singles chronology
"When Doves Cry"
(1984)
"Let's Go Crazy"
(1984)
"Sex Shooter"
(1984)

Certifications and sales

Certifications and sales for "Let's Go Crazy"
RegionCertification Certified units/sales
United Kingdom (BPI) [29] Silver200,000
United States (RIAA) [30]
1984 sales
Gold1,000,000^
United States
digital sales
964,403 [8]

^ Shipments figures based on certification alone.
Sales+streaming figures based on certification alone.

Lenz v. Universal

In 2007, Stephanie Lenz, a writer and editor from Gallitzin, Pennsylvania made a home video of her 13-month-old son dancing to "Let's Go Crazy" and posted a 29-second video on the video-sharing site YouTube. Four months after the video was originally uploaded, Universal Music Group, which owned the copyrights to the song, ordered YouTube to remove the video enforcing the Digital Millennium Copyright Act. Lenz notified YouTube immediately that her video was within the scope of fair use, and demanded that it be restored. YouTube complied after six weeks—not two weeks, as required by the Digital Millennium Copyright Act—to see whether Universal planned to sue Lenz for infringement. Lenz then sued Universal Music in California for her legal costs, claiming the music company had acted in bad faith by ordering removal of a video that represented fair use of the song. [31]

Later in August 2008, U.S. District Judge Jeremy Fogel, of San Jose, California, ruled that copyright holders cannot order a deletion of an online file without determining whether that posting reflected "fair use" of the copyrighted material. In 2015 the court affirmed the holding that Universal was required to consider fair use before sending its initial takedown request.

See also

Related Research Articles

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References

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