They remained calm by singing "I Love You". During the World Trade Center bombing on February 26, 1993, it was reported that seventeen kindergartners were trapped in an elevator for five hours."I Love You" has been compared to longstanding public domain songs such as " Twinkle Twinkle Little Star," " Old MacDonald," and " Rock-A-Bye Baby". Other times, school classes could not be complete without singing the song. "I Love You" was well-known in America the early 1990s during what some call 'Barneymania', the rising popularity of Barney the Dinosaur, A few parents reported that the song became a bedtime prayer for them with their children. A trial on the lawsuit, filed on May 27, 1993, was scheduled for Septemin Seattle, Washington however Barney's producers and an Everett publisher agreed verbally to settle a lawsuit over the rights to the song as announced in June 1994. Warren cited that she bought the rights in 1983 and wanted a cut of the profits. Penney Co (the company and store which had the Barney items at the time) and EMI Records (who released Barney's Favorites, Volume 1 in 1993) for copyright infringement over the rights and lyrics to "I Love You". In 1993, Warren Publishing, the publisher of Piggyback Songs: New Songs Sung to the Tune of Childhood Favorites, filed a lawsuit and sued Bernstein, The Lyons Group, Time-Life Inc (that released most of season one of Barney & Friends on VHS through a mail order service), J.C. An agreement was settled in September 1992 between Lyons and Bernstein as Lyons bought the rights from Bernstein and Bernstein was credited for writing the song and compensation for past and future use in Barney materials. A New York lawyer representing the show acknowledged that "I Love You" was Bernstein's song but also noted the importance of it in Barney & Friends. īernstein and Daniel Glavin, Bernstein's attorney, crafted a letter in July 1992 to The Lyons Group, owners of Barney. While watching the video and listening to the song, she knew it was her tune, but not her original lyrics. They came upon a display rack of videos featuring Barney & Friends, and Elizabeth pointed out that it's from the show she heard it from. Unable to figure out what program her daughter had viewed, she figured it out in June 1992 when she and her daughter were shopping at JCPenney's. In January 1991, Elizabeth, one of Bernstein's daughters who was nine at the time, alerted Bernstein that their song "I Love You" was on television. Lee Bernstein next to a TV with the Rock with Barney title card on it. The song has gone through many variations throughout the years. The song sums up Barney's message of unconditional love and is a symbol of how Barney loves people deeply and how his friends are like family to him. "I Love You" wraps up almost every Barney episode and or video. Due to "I Love You" being a staple song of the video series, it was continually used in the spin-off, used to wrap up every episode, video and or live performance. The song was sung near the beginning of the first five Backyard Gang videos before eventually becoming a closing song for the last videos.Īfter Barney & the Backyard Gang ended, the video series was spun into a television series titled Barney & Friends. Assuming it was of public domain, the song was prominently used in the video series, Barney & The Backyard Gang. Kathy Parker, the co-creator of Barney & The Backyard Gang heard "I Love You" at a toddler playgroup with her child. Bernstein's lyrics were published in the book Piggyback Songs: New Songs Sung to the Tune of Childhood Favorites by Warren Publishing House in 1983. According to Bernstein the song is about "love" and "caring". In 1982, Lee Bernstein penned a song titled "I Love You" to the public-domain tune of "This Old Man", which was one of Bernstein's favorite songs as a child. Warren informed readers that the songs would eventually be assembled into a book with the author of each songs receiving a free copy of the songbook and acknowledgement for their contribution. Warren put a call out for submissions in the November/December issue of the "Totline" newsletter in 1981. Jean Warren, an editor of Warren Publishing, was seeking submissions of original songs that could be sung to the tune of traditional and familiar children's songs.
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