Rhythmix: nadir or Nirvana for band names?
With all that the dust whipped up by the glamorous showbiz dispute over the band name Buck's Fizz, barely settled (writes the IPKat's friend Andy Johnstone), here comes news of a new trade mark row in the music world, reported here by the Press Association. It concerns a band consisting of teenagers currently appearing on th eX Factor TV show called Rhythmix -- and a charity based in the South East of England, also called Rhythmix.
It appears that the charity has owned the UK figurative trade mark 2411527 (right) since 2006 which registered in class 41 (education) although it says it's a music-based organisation providing opportunities for children, hence its concern over possible confusion. At present the band is refusing to back down.
It appears that the charity has owned the UK figurative trade mark 2411527 (right) since 2006 which registered in class 41 (education) although it says it's a music-based organisation providing opportunities for children, hence its concern over possible confusion. At present the band is refusing to back down.
A closer look at the name Rhythmix shows that neither of the aforementioned entities has any claim to originality. There is the CTM E2146090 LP Rhythmix (left) registered to a Bloomfield, Connecticut, company for goods in class 15 (musical instruments) -- first registered in 2002 but with a priority date of 2000), not to mention a California-based organisation called Rhythmix Cultural Works which claims to have been 'inspiring the community [of Alameda, Califorma] to engage in the arts and strengthen the value of creativity and discovery in everyday life' for the past five years.
Nor does the story end there. Also from the United States we have a DJ and producer/remixer named appropriately Rhythmix, a female a cappella group, a company in Illinois providing a rhythmic gymnastics program which seeks to differentiate its identity by calling themselves RhythMix, and not forgetting the album entitled Rhythmix put out by a Belgian group called Univers Zero, and something described as a computer game in which 'maths quiz meets rhythm games' called Rhythmix Calculix. A heady mix indeed, says Andy who adds: "We may have to wait for the eventual winner to be announced!".