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  1. Bagdasarian Productions sued Capitol Records for using Alvin and the Chipmunks' music without the permission of the production company. The licensing agreement, which gave the record company the right to manufacture and distribute songs, was signed in 1968 (about four years before Ross Bagdasarian, Sr.'s death) and was not seen again until 2007.

  2. Aug 18, 2010 · Bagdasarian Productions, LLC appeals from the judgment entered after the trial court ruled as a matter of law that Capitol Records, Inc. (Capitol) had the right under a 1968 sales agreement to license certain master recordings of songs by Alvin and the Chipmunks for use as background music in motion pictures and television programs. We reverse.

  3. Nov 7, 2008 · Bagdasarian Productions, which represents the family, sued the record company Jan. 18 in Los Angeles Superior Court, claiming breach of contract and conversion, and seeking an accounting of ...

  4. Bagdasarian’s son, Ross Bagdasarian Jr., a non-practicing attorney who heads Bagdasarian Productions and who obtained his father’s rights to the animated characters and their music, sued Capitol Records in 2008. He claimed that Capitol’s decades-long history of licensing rights to the music to third parties in industries other than the ...

  5. Bagdasarian Productions won their suit and regained control of the Alvin and the Chipmunks characters in 2002. [3] [4] Capitol Records, Inc. (2008–2011) Part One: (2008, 2010) Bagdasarian Productions sued Capitol Records for using Alvin and the Chipmunks' music without the permission of the production company. The licensing agreement, which ...

  6. Law360, New York (November 22, 2011, 3:00 PM EST) -- The owner of the rights to Alvin and the Chipmunks hit EMI's Capitol Records with a suit on Friday accusing the Los Angeles-based record label ...

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  8. Bagdasarian Productions sued Capitol Records for the use of Alvin and the Chipmunks' music without the permission of the production company. The licensing agreement, which gave the record company the right to manufacture and distribute songs, was signed in 1968, four years before Ross Bagdasarian, Sr. passed away, and was not seen again until 2007.