Taylor Swift will not be putting forward the re-recorded version of her ‘Fearless’ album for the Grammys and Country Music Association Awards this year. Why? Well, she just got so many bloody awards for that collection of songs already.
04.02.2021 - 20:59 / thefader.com
Utah’s Evermore theme park is suing Taylor Swift for trademark infringement, Pitchfork reports. The fantasy-themed experience park, which opened to the public in September 2018, has stated that Swift’s late-2020 release of an album titled Evermore has resulted in confusion among guests, an impacted Google search rating, and more.
Per court documents Pitchfork has viewed, the park seeks “millions” in damages, as well as legal fees. The park also claims that Swift’s Evermore merchandise range
.Taylor Swift will not be putting forward the re-recorded version of her ‘Fearless’ album for the Grammys and Country Music Association Awards this year. Why? Well, she just got so many bloody awards for that collection of songs already.
Chris Willman Music WriterTaylor Swift’s nearly six-month-old “Evermore” has returned to the top of the album chart, surprisingly — or, at least it might have been a surprise to anyone not tracking the tweets of Swifties, ecstatic that the vinyl copies they’d ordered in December were finally arriving on their doorsteps.Album sales for Swift are being tracked as they’re shipped, not as they’re ordered, so nearly a half-year’s worth of “Folklore” LP orders stacked up all at once.
Taylor Swift’s Evermore is once again on top of the charts.
Taylor Swift is back on top!
according to Billboard.It sold more than 40,000 copies just three days after its May 28 release — already surpassing the biggest single-week sales record since MRC Data began tracking in 1991.The title had previously been held by Jack White’s “Lazaretto,” which sold 40,000 copies in the week after it launched in June 2014.It’s likely sales of “Evermore,” Swift’s ninth studio album, will continue to soar through the end of the tracking week on Thursday.The 31-year-old singer’s chartbusting comes
Ellise Shafer administratorThis week is off to a record-breaking start for both Olivia Rodrigo and Taylor Swift, two of pop’s leading singer-songwriters.Rodrigo’s debut album, “Sour,” which released on May 21, debuted at the top of the Rolling Stone album chart on Monday for the week of May 21-27.
Taylor Swift has broken another record, scoring the biggest one-week vinyl album sales in the US with ‘Evermore’.The album was originally released in December 2020, but only arrived on vinyl last Friday (May 28).In the three days following the record being made available, Swift racked up over 40,000 copies sold in the US, Billboard reports.
Another day, another record broken by Taylor Swift.
The greatest legal battle in living memory is sadly over without ever getting to trial. Taylor Swift and the theme park Evermore Park have agreed to drop their respective lawsuits against each other.
Taylor Swift and Evermore, a theme park in Utah, have dropped their lawsuits against each other, which were both lodged last month.“As a resolution of both lawsuits, the parties will drop and dismiss their respective suits without monetary settlement,” a representative for Swift said in a statement on March 24, according to Rolling Stone.NME has reached out to Evermore theme park in Utah for comment.On February 2, Evermore park sued Swift for trademark infringement, claiming her album of the
Chris Willman Music WriterAnd they shall sue one another… nevermore.Taylor Swift and Evermore Park, a theme park in Utah, have dropped the lawsuits they filed against one another, according to Swift’s camp.
Taylor Swift has been sued by a theme park in Utah for copyright infringement over use of the name Evermore. The theme park shares a name with Swift's latest album, released in December 2020.
reported on Tuesday. Swift’s attorneys are calling the park’s claims “baseless,” and ignored the cease and desist letter sent to the singer on Dec.
Taylor Swift is being sued by a theme park in Utah with the same name as her recent album. The lawsuit was filed by Evermore Parks, claiming trademark infringement following the December 2020 release of Swifts’ album, "Evermore." The park, which first opened in 2018, offers guests of all ages a chance to immerse themselves in a fantasy world complete with baby dragons, dwarves, Knights and other magical elements put on by effects crews and costumed actors.
Taylor Swift is being sued by a theme park in Utah that shares the same name as her most recent album Evermore, which was released in December 2020.
Taylor Swift has been sued by a US theme park for trademark infringement. Evermore Park in Utah says that the musician’s latest album, ‘Evermore’, is causing confusion.