Race | Business | Music Industry| Trademark Lawsuit | Entrepreneurship

Band Lady A Versus Singer Lady A

How racial protest exposed a costly slip-up by artists in the music industry

Dee Adams
ILLUMINATION
Published in
4 min readSep 3, 2021

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Photo by Garvit Jagga on Unsplash

Last year, the Grammy award-winning country band Lady Antebellum, announced a name change to show support for BLM, and that’s when the trouble began.

Decades earlier, the band had registered the name Lady A to sell their merchandise and were known by their fans as Lady A.

But Anita White, a Blues singer from Seattle Washington known as Lady A for more than 20 years, had also trademarked the name Lady A as a self-distributed artist.

According to the BBC, the band Lady A was unaware someone else was using the name. Apparently, Google and uspto.gov, the government’s free trademark database, were overlooked.

After a Zoom meeting broke down between the band and Anita White, the band filed a lawsuit over the disputed name but did not ask for money or legal fees. The band, formerly known as Lady Antebellum only wanted to ensure their right to use their brand, Lady A, along with Anita White.

Anita White counter-sued.

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Dee Adams
ILLUMINATION

Once a plaintiff in a six-figure + case, I write about overlooked topics on nonpolice racial profiling, health, business, entrepreneurs, and pop culture.