Which songs are plagiarized rather than covered?

1: Kenya Chua, a pillar of shame in Chinese music: "Red High Heels" composition and arrangement plagiarized;

Singaporean national Kenya Chua is also a pillar of shame in Chinese music, with a stiff upper lip.

"Red High Heels"

Lyrics: Chua;

Composition: Chua;

Vocals: Chua;

The arrangement, compositional intervals, and chorus of the main song of this song are exactly the same as that of the song Take It From Me by the American band The Weepies.

The chorus is similar to the 'Everybody knows i love you' interval progression. Musically speaking, it's a copycat stitch. There is no in-depth composition of similar song rhythmic samples amongst 'My Sky'.

Cai Jianya surprisingly was exposed to plagiarism after also not deny so talk:

"Hear so say very hard, I myself very clear about their own creative state, do anything have not been sorry for their own, the world of coincidence a lot of things, not to mention the notes only 12."

It's true that there are only twelve semitones in an octave, but there is no end to the way intervals can be arranged, the tempo of the music, the overall tempo, the style of arranging, and the way in which emotions can be expressed. The 100% similarity in terms of arrangement and sound is no longer summarized by coincidence, it's plagiarism. It's really treating Mandarin listeners like fools.

Similarly, the chorus and chorus of Cai Jianya's new song "Halfway" is plagiarized from Moldy Mildew's (Taylorswift) "safe & sound".

It's Chua who has benefited the most from the musical tailor compared to Lee Yuan Jie.

2: Guo Jingming + Hunan TV - Tian Entertainment: 'Time to Cook the Rain': serial plagiarism.

This is probably the most famous plagiarism incident, but also in line with the consistent urine of Guo Jingming Hunan TV and Tian Entertainment Media, directly dry on the CCTV news:

Yukovi sang "time to cook the rain", the music production by Tian Entertainment Media, and Cai Chunjia "waiting for a sunny day" is exactly the same.

Then netizens discovered that Cai Chunjia's "Waiting for a Sunny Day" was also plagiarized from the Japanese song "Windmill"

Then Cai Chunjia's side released: "Waiting for a Sunny Day" has the copyright of the cover of the Japanese song "Windmill", which is a legal act.

This wave of serial plagiarism, straight up. It's not bad for you, Amusement, to go back to the Japanese cover era of the 1980s and 1990s, which is 9012 years ago.

Here are the creators of "Time to Cook the Rain":

"Time to Cook the Rain"

Sung by Yu Kewei;

Lyrics: Guo Jingming, Lok Lok;

Composed by Liu Dajiang;

This Liu Dajiang, who is the Tian Entertainment personnel, is considered one of the more well-known music producers in the mainland, and before he came to Tian Entertainment, he had been a producer at SONY Before he came to Tian Entertainment, he worked as a producer in SONY Records. Help Gu Jiuji did "like a friend", "not drunk will not", Zhao Lei did "you do not think of me".

Then "Time to Cook the Rain" also hastened to add the copyright of "Windmill", only to save the legitimacy. But after things broke out, the official website and Baidu above, Liu Dajiang's composition was changed to an arrangement. And the composition was changed to the composer of "Windmill": Satoshi Takebe;