Music group Heavy Young Heathens filed a lawsuit on Thursday against NBC, U.S. Figure Skating and figure skating pair Alexa Knierim and Brandon Frazier, saying their copyright for the song "House of the Rising Sun" was violated when the pair used it for their short program earlier this week.
The group, comprised of brothers Robert and Aron Marderosian, are known for their compositions in numerous television shows, movies, trailers, advertisements and video games, such as ESPN's "30 for 30," Adidas, "Deadpool" and "The Simpsons." One of their compositions, "House of the Rising Sun" is based on a traditional folk song, but their version of it "is a signature song of theirs throughout the world," as it has been famously used for the film "The Magnificent Seven" and Ford auto commercials.
During the team figure skating event of the 2022 Winter Olympics, Knierim and Frazier used the composition for the short program portion of the event in which the United States won a silver medal for.
In the lawsuit first obtained by Reuters, the Marderosian brothers allege they were never contacted by Knierim or Frazier, Team USA or U.S. Figure Skating about licensing the track for their performance. They also allege NBC, USA Network and Peacock never inquired either since it was broadcasted on all mentioned platforms.
"These violations cause great harm to the value of (the Marderosians) command for such a well known piece of their recording catalog, and insults the integrity of their professional reputation. While Knierim/Frazier, USFS, NBC, USA, PEACOCK are all profiting from the revenue the 2022 Winter Olympics generate, (the Marderosians) have been and continue to be deprived of what their creation 'House of the Rising Sun' earns them per license," the lawsuit reads.
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Mick Marderosian, the group's attorney and father, told Reuters the Knierim and Frazier's agent "basically refused to listen to our issue." He also said NBC removed posts of the performance since the lawsuit was filed.
The group says they are "entitled to damages in an amount to be proven at trial."
Frazier said their legal team has been addressing the issue, while he and Knierim have been focusing on their skating.
"We actually, and this goes for all legal questions: Alexa and I are lucky to have such a great team that's dealing with all that," he said. "They respected our privacy and focus, that we still had the individual event. So throughout the course of everything that's been going on currently, we haven't taken part in that. We haven't been updated with it.
"We have no information, just because we were trying to stay focused on our competition."
Added Knierim: "We've literally been living in a shell, and keeping all noise away. Because we know that we can address it now, when we're done."
U.S. Figure Skating told USA TODAY they do not comment on legal matters. USA TODAY has reached out to NBC on the lawsuit.
This isn't the first time the group has filed a lawsuit over licensing. In 2017, they sued Warner Bros. over the use of the theme song for FOX's "Lucifer."
Follow Jordan Mendoza on Twitter: @jordan_mendoza5.