In the latest chapter of the unending struggle to get the Beatles onto
Apple’s popular iTunes music store, John Lennon’s widow Yoko Ono told Reuters no one should be expecting
the Fab Four’s tracks to show up on the site. In an interview with the news
service, Ono applauded Apple CEO Steve Jobs’s business acumen but voiced her
own unspecific concerns about iTunes. "[Apple CEO] Steve Jobs has his own
idea and he's a brilliant guy," Ono said in an interview with Reuters.
"There's just an element that we're not very happy about, as people. We
are holding out.”
One of the most popular bands in the history of music, The Beatles recently
released remastered versions of the band’s entire catalogue, but John, Paul,
George and Ringo fans have not yet been able to legally purchase digital
versions of the songs. In November, a judge approved a temporary restraining
order for digital music site BlueBeat.com over the sale of Beatles songs. EMI
Group, a British music company that owns the rights to the songs, filed a
copyright infringement claim against the site and its parent company Media
Rights Technologies.
The site had been selling Beatles songs for $0.25 apiece; staff members at
Wired successfully downloaded 17 songs from the album "Abbey
Road" for $4.55 by using a Paypal account.
EMI’s lawyers argued the site was “engaged in digital music piracy of the most
blatant kind” and was undercutting and destroying a legitimate digital market.
“Perhaps the most stunning aspect of Defendants’ conduct is the willful and
overtly defiant manner in which they are acting,” the lawsuit read. The suit
makes particular mention of the Beatles tracks that were recently remastered
and rereleased with great media fanfare. “The enormous and irreparable harm…is
obvious and manifest,” the suit argued.
However, the owners of the Beatles catalogue—which includes Ono, former
Beatles members Paul McCartney and Ringo Starr, as well as Olivia Harrison, the
widow of George Harrison—are not always so skeptical of the digital age. When
released last fall, “The Beatles: Rock Band” video game gave the whole industry
a boost and attracted a great deal of media attention. "We're older and
more experienced," Ono told Reuters. "Don't hold your breath...for
anything."