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Suit Aims To Halt Release Of Beatles 'Bootlegs'

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Suit Aims To Halt Release Of Beatles 'Bootlegs'

MIAMI (CBS) ― Lawyers for the Beatles filed a lawsuit Friday to prevent the distribution of never-released recordings purportedly made during Ringo Starr's first performance with the group in Germany in 1962, CBS station WFOR-TV in Miami reports.

The dispute between Apple Corps Ltd., the London-based group formed by the Beatles that helps guard their legacy, and Fuego Entertainment Inc. of Miami Lakes, stems from recordings the group made during a performance at the Star Club in Hamburg, Germany.

Eight never-released tracks are said to be among the recordings, including Paul McCartney singing Hank Williams' "Lovesick Blues" and McCartney and John Lennon singing "Ask Me Why."

Apple Corps claims the songs were taped without the consent of the band and that Fuego and sister companies Echo-Fuego Music Group LLC and Echo-Vista Inc. have no right to distribute them. "This
appears to us to be a garden-variety bootleg recording," said Paul LiCalsi, a New York-based attorney for Apple Corps.

But Fuego Entertainment says the recordings were legally made. "Don't claim that these were just bootlegged," said Fuego president Hugo Cancio. "It's not like today that you just go in with a phone or a blackberry and you record."

The lawsuit, first reported by WFOR news partner The Miami Herald, contends the recordings are poor quality and that circulating them "dilutes and tarnishes the extraordinarily valuable image associated with the
Beatles."

Cancio said he had not been served with a copy of the lawsuit, but that the filing demanding at least $15 million in damages was not expected. "I'm surprised because up to a few weeks ago, we were in good-faith conversations with Apple," he said.

Also named in the lawsuit is Jeffrey Collins, a partner of Cancio who obtained the recordings, though it's unclear how Collins obtained the recordings.

Cancio intended to release the songs as "Jammin' with The Beatles and Friends, Star Club, Hamburg, 1962."

"It's unfair to millions of Beatles fans not to allow this recording to be put out. The world deserves to hear these tracks," he said. "The fact is that we have it, they don't and that is what's bothering them."












(© 2009 CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.)

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