Marty O'Donnell, the composer behind the original Halo series' timeless score, is no stranger to legal battles. But his latest feud with Microsoft seems to have been pleasantly short-lived, with him and fellow composer Michael Salvatori claiming they've «amicably resolved» a lawsuit concerning unpaid royalties going back 20 years.
In February, Eurogamer reported that O'Donnell and Salvatori had filed suit back in June claiming Microsoft had failed to pay royalties on the pair's original Halo score, which was used under license prior to O'Donnell's employment at Bungie—and he claims the tracks remained that way thereafter, owned by the composers' joint company and licensed out to Bungie and Microsoft.
«It was never work-for-hire,» O'Donnell told the outlet. «It was always a license deal. So that's what we did with Halo. With the first Halo music ever, that was written and recorded in 1999 for the first time. It was licensed to Bungie. Bungie didn't get bought by Microsoft for over a year.»
The pair claimed that Microsoft had been dragging their feet on the matter for the past decade, which prompted them to take legal action. O'Donnell even explored the possibility of filing an injunction against Paramount when marketing for the Halo TV show used the iconic monk chant.
But yesterday, O'Donnell tweeted that he and Microsoft had settled their differences—and to celebrate, the composer reuploaded footage of a Halo 2 jam session featuring legendary guitarist Steve Vai (via GameDeveloper).
Looks like I'll be able to share some of those videos once again! Microsoft and O’Donnell/Salvatori, Inc., are pleased to have amicably resolved their differences.https://t.co/ZLnhFgblr6April 18, 2022
Of course, O'Donnell is no stranger to
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