Crime & Police

Did Bobby Kent Invent “Da Da Da Da Da Da Charge!” or Steal It?

You know at a stadium, when they play that "Charge!" thing over the PA? It's the kind of annoying tradition that people never stop and think about -- and certainly people never wonder who first came up with it.Well Bobby Kent (pictured), co-owner of Pompano Beach's Hollbrand Music Publishers, says...
Carbonatix Pre-Player Loader

Audio By Carbonatix

You know at a stadium, when they play that “Charge!” thing over the PA? It’s the kind of annoying tradition that people never stop and think about — and certainly people never wonder who first came up with it.

Well Bobby Kent (pictured), co-owner of Pompano Beach’s Hollbrand Music Publishers, says he invented that shit in 1978, when he was the musical director for the San Diego Chargers. And now he wants to get paid.

In a lawsuit filed last week in Miami-Dade County against the American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers (ASCAP), Kent claims that the licensing corporation negotiated “blanket
licenses” including his song to the MLB, NFL, NBA, NHL, NCAA and NASCAR,
without payment or his permission.

Kent says he copyrighted “Stadium Doo Dads” in 1981, and
received $10,000 to $20,000 a year from the San Diego Chargers for its
use, according to the suit. (At the time, Kent was going by Ira Brandwein. He since changed his name.) “The operative and most commonly known part of Kent’s Composition goes ‘da da da da da da… CHARGE!‘ the suit says. ASCAP has “collected millions of dollars” from his creation, Kent
claims, and failed to track “performances” of the song that could have
netted millions more in royalties.

In preparation for the suit, Kent’s Brickell-based attorney Richard C.
Wolfe says he wrote letters to major sports teams demanding information
on their use of the song. The worst
offender: the Texas Rangers. By the attorney’s count, “they used it 31
times during the World Series.”

But wait, it’s not simple. A little bit of digging from Gus Garcia-Roberts at Miami New Times shows that a University of Southern California student named Tommy Walker
dreamed up an identical song more than two decades before Kent’s
composition. Walker — who died in 1986 at age 64 — and buddy Dick Winslow
copyrighted “Trojan Warriors, Charge!” back in 1955.

“If this guy is claiming that he wrote it, he’s lying,” says Tony
Fox, director of the USC Trojan Marching Band. “USC has been using it
since the 1950s. He’s full of you-know-what.”

“If he’s copyrighted it, then he’s violated Tommy and Dick’s
copyright,” says Milo Sweet of Sweet Music, Inc., the record label which
filed for the original license. “His copyright is worthless.”

Related

Tommy Walker’s invention of the theme hasn’t been a well-kept secret. In 1990, Sports Illustrated wrote a story on the subject. According to SI,
Walker, a World War II veteran who would go on to become director of
entertainment at Disneyland, first blasted the trumpet call at a USC
band practice:

“I played a few notes on the
trumpet–Da-da-da-DAH-da-DAH–and the band yelled, ‘Trojan warriors,
charge!’ ” he said. “It seemed kind of effective, so we decided to try
it that Saturday.”

The tune was a hit on campus. Walker granted USC its rights in
“perpetuity”, says Tony Fox. Its popularity exploded when it was first
used at Los Angeles Dodgers games. From SI:

In the spring of 1959 the Dodgers put on sale, at $1.50 apiece, 20,000
toy trumpets, all of which played one tune: “Da da da DUT da DUH.” The
song really took off after NBC’s broadcasts of Games 3, 4 and 5 of the
1959 World Series, between the Dodgers and the White Sox.

Related

Asked if his university might have a legal interest in defending “Trojan
Warriors, Charge!”, Tony Fox says: “He doesn’t want to battle USC, let
me put it that way.”

To hear the different version of the Charge! song, go here.


Follow The Juice on Facebook and on Twitter: @TheJuiceBPB.

Related

GET MORE COVERAGE LIKE THIS

Sign up for the Things to Do newsletter to get the latest stories delivered to your inbox

Loading latest posts...