Emil Milton Cadkin
He was not on the list.
American composer known for his work with Harry Bluestone (1907-1992) and William Loose (1910-1991). He was born in Cleveland, Ohio on August 26, 1920. He was the youngest of 3 children. He died December 16, 2020 at the age of 100. His place of death is unknown. He married Lila Cadkin until her death in 2012. It is unknown whether he had children or not.
Emil Milton Cadkin (August 26, 1920 – December 16, 2020) was
an American TV and film composer who worked mainly as a production music
composer. He worked with William Loose (1910–1991) and Harry Bluestone
(1907–1992). Some of his music was also featured on APM Music. Cadkin composed
music for 1940s, 1950s and 1960s TV series, films and cartoons including Gumby
and Hanna-Barbera's Augie Doggie.
He was born in August 1920 in Cleveland, Ohio, the youngest
of three children to Isadore and Sarah Cadkin, who had emigrated from the
Russian Empire in 1905. His father was a cabinet maker in Los Angeles by 1936.
Cadkin attended Yale University, where he majored in music, with special
emphasis in Music Composition and Music Theory. He was in Los Angeles writing
and teaching music by the time he enlisted in the Air Force in 1942. His song I
Have Everything I Want But You was copyrighted in 1938.
After being discharged from the Air Force, he scored films
like "The Big Fix" for bottom-of-the-barrel studio PRC. Cadkin was an
associate editor of ASCAP's ‘The Score’ when it was created in 1948, and got a
job in 1958 as musical director at Ritco Productions, a low-budget company that
churned out westerns starring Forrest Tucker. Cadkin switched from ASCAP to BMI
the following year. He graduated to become musical director and arranger for
Columbia Pictures and Screen Gems. He also got into the business of supplying
taped music programming for radio stations, as Billboard of May 23, 1970
reveals he had been appointed music director of popular products (as opposed to
classical) for American Tape Duplicators. But he spent a decade writing his own
music and co-writing music along with Bill Loose, which ended up in various
libraries, including Capitol Hi-Q. Billboard of December 23, 1967 reveals
distribution rights to that music, previously in the PMS, OK and PM libraries,
which had belonged to Capitol, had been purchased by Emil Ascher, Inc.
Emil Cadkin is widely credited with the idea for, and the
creation of, the United States' first production music libraries (PMS, OK &
PM) in the early 1950s.
From about 1959 until the 1970s, plaintiff Emil Cadkin wrote
thousands of musical cues, solely and with William Loose. Licensing of the cues
was administered by GRH Music, a partnership formed by Cadkin and Loose.
Plaintiff, represented by attorney Marty O'Toole, alleged
that defendants, Loose's heirs, removed plaintiff's name as an author of the
works, incorporated the cues including the ones written solely by Cadkin in
their own music library, and registered the works with the Copyright Office
with defendant's name as sole author, thus depriving plaintiff of receiving
royalties from the licensing of the works.
Defendants moved to dismiss the second amended complaint,
and plaintiffs moved for voluntary dismissal without prejudice, which the
district court granted. Defendants subsequently moved for attorney's fees under
Section 505 of the Copyright Act which provides "In any civil action under
this title, the court in its discretion may allow the recovery of full costs by
or against any party [and] . . . the court may also award a reasonable
attorney's fee to the prevailing party as part of the costs."
The district court awarded attorney's fees and costs to
defendants, and the Ninth Circuit reversed. Ninth Circuit precedent (Corcoran
v. Columbia Broadcasting System, Inc., 121 F.2d 575 (9th Cir. 1941)) held that
a defendant could recover attorney's fees under Section 505 when a plaintiff
voluntarily dismissed the action without prejudice. However, the court stated
that the 1941 decision was no longer good law in light of the 2001 U.S. Supreme
Court decision Buckhannon Bd. & Care Home, Inc. v. W. Va. Dep't of Health
& Human Res., 532 U.S. 598 (2001) which held in the context of the Fair
Housing Amendments Act that prevailing party status turns on whether there has
been a "material alteration of the legal relationship of the
parties."
In Corcoran, the district court denied defendants' motion to
dismiss but granted their motion for a more definite statement on a copyright
claim. Rather than amending the complaint, plaintiff voluntarily dismissed
without prejudice, and the district court ultimately awarded defendants
attorney's fees. The Ninth Circuit rejected plaintiff's contention that
dismissal without prejudice does not confer prevailing party status under the
Copyright Act, stating "Where, as here, a defendant has been put to the
expense of making an appearance and of obtaining an order for the clarification
of the complaint, and the plaintiff then voluntarily dismisses without amending
his pleading, the party sued is the prevailing party within the spirit and
intent of the statute even though he may, at the whim of the plaintiff, again
be sued on the same cause of action."
In the case at hand, the court determined that Corcoran
cannot be reconciled with Buckhannon's material alteration test because
Corcoran focused on the expense the defendants incurred and expressly
disregarded that the parties' legal relationship had not changed as a result of
the voluntary dismissal, and the Corcoran court construed "prevailing
party" in light of the policies underlying the Copyright Act, rather than
relying on the plain meaning of the phrase, as the Supreme Court did in Buckhannon.
The court also noted that its holding is consistent with
every circuit court that has considered whether Buckhannon governs prevailing
party status under the Copyright Act. See, e.g., Riviera Distribs., Inc. v.
Jones, 517 F.3d 926 (7th Cir. 2008) (holding voluntary dismissal with prejudice
of copyright claims confers prevailing party status on defendants under
Buckhannon); Torres-Negron v. J & N Records, LLC, 504 F.3d 151 (1st Cir.
2007) (holding Buckhannon material alteration test applies to copyright claims
and concluding dismissal for lack of subject matter jurisdiction does not
confer prevailing party status); see also Bridgeport Music, Inc. v. London
Music, U.K., 226 F. App'x 491 (6th Cir. 2007) (unpublished) (applying
Buckhannon to copyright claims).
The Ninth Circuit concluded "Because the plaintiffs in
this lawsuit remained free to refile their copyright claims against the
defendants in federal court following their voluntary dismissal of the
complaint, we hold the defendants are not prevailing parties and thus not
entitled to the attorney's fees the district court awarded them."[10]
Case summary: Emil Cadkin and Marty O'Toole prevailed in
that all compositions have now been correctly credited to Cadkin via Broadcast
Music Incorporated (BMI).
Filmography
The Big Fix (1947) (Music Score)
Three on a Ticket (1947) (Music Score)
Gunsmoke in Tucson (1958) (Musical Direction/Supervision,
Songwriter)
The Killer Shrews (1959) (Music Score)
The Devil's Bedroom (1964) (Music Score)
Navajo Run (1966) (Music Score, Screenwriter)
Television series
Real People (TV Series) (composer: theme music - 50
episodes) 1979-1984
Tarzan (TV Series) (orchestrator - 7 episodes) 1967
Lassie's Great Adventure (composer: stock music -
uncredited) 1963
Hazel (TV Series) (music editor - 40 episodes) 1961-1962
Our Man Higgins (TV Series) (music supervisor - 1 episode)
1962
Davey and Goliath (TV Series) (composer - 3 episodes)
1960-1962
The Donna Reed Show (TV Series) (music editor - 40 episodes)
1961-1962
Courageous Cat and Minute Mouse (TV Series) (composer - 93
episodes) 1960-1962
Window on Main Street (TV Series) (music editor - 7
episodes) 1961
Tallahassee 7000 (TV Series) (composer: theme music) 1961
Quick Draw McGraw (TV Series) (composer - 37 episodes)
1959-1960
Happy (TV Series) (composer: theme music) 1960
The Ruff & Reddy Show (TV Series) (composer - 61
episodes) 1957-1960
The Huckleberry Hound Show (TV Series) (composer - 1
episode) 1960
Dennis the Menace (TV Series) (composer - 5 episodes) 1959
Father Knows Best (TV Series) (composer - 203 episodes)
1954-1960
Soundtrack
SpongeBob SquarePants (TV Series) (music - 2002 - present)
Camp Lazlo (TV Series) (music - 60 episodes) 2005-2008
The Loud House (TV Series) (music - 1 episode) 2016
Tender Waves (writer: "Busy People") 2013
Paranormal Activity 4 (writer: "Alien Abduction",
"Evil Alien Attack 1") 2012
Frankenweenie (writer: "Death of the Alien 1")
2012
The Rum Diary (writer: "Go Cat Go") 2011
Boardwalk Empire (TV Series) (writer - 1 episode) 2010
The Back-up Plan (writer: "Daisy Belle",
"Golden Slippers") 2010
The Mighty B! (TV Series) (music - 1 episode) 2009
Public Enemies: The Golden Age of the Gangster Film (TV
Movie documentary) (music: "Battle to the Death", "Lurching
Monster" - uncredited) 2008
Sunday Pants (TV Series) (music - 1 episode) 2005
Jiminy Glick in Lalawood (writer: "Romantic
Closing") 2004
30 Days Until I'm Famous (TV Movie) (arranger: "La
Cucaracha") 2004
Ren & Stimpy 'Adult Party Cartoon' (TV Series) (music -
2 episodes) 2003
In America (writer: "Finger of Suspicion" Pt. 1)
2002
Frida (writer: "Battle to the Death") 2002
Boo Boo Runs Wild (TV Short) (music: "Eccentric Comedy
(5-TC-300)" - uncredited) 1999
The World's Greatest Magic 3 (TV Special) (music:
"First Night" - uncredited) 1996
Jimmy Hollywood ("Musical Excerpts") 1994
Flesh and Bone (writer: "Music From 'The Untouchables'
Original T.V. Series") 1993
The Best of Benny Hill (music: "Foxtrot" -
uncredited) 1974
Night of the Living Dead (music: "Battle to the
Death", "Finger of Suspicion" - uncredited) 1968
Finders Keepers, Lovers Weepers! (music: "Let's
Tango" - uncredited) 1968
The Hellcats (music: "Come On Baby" - uncredited)
1968
Out of This World (Short) (music: "Light Vermillion
(PG-263)" - uncredited) 1964
Century 21 Calling ... (Short) (music: "PG-263 - Light
Vermillion", "PG-275 - Daffodil Yellow" - uncredited) 1962
The Killer Shrews (music: "Finger of Suspicion 1",
"Finger of Suspicion 2", "Cliffhanger 1" - uncredited) 1959
Gunsmoke in Tucson (writer: "I Need a Man") 1958
Gopher Broke (Short) (music: "Comic Cues #26" -
uncredited) 1958
Hook, Line and Stinker (Short) (music: "Puzzled
Pup" - uncredited) 1958
Space Master X-7 (music: "Whirlybirds" -
uncredited) 1958
The Gumby Show (TV Series) (music - 1 episode) 1957
Composer
Mission to Death 1966
Navajo Run 1964
The Devil's Bedroom 1964
Shannon (TV Series) 1961
The Hathaways (TV Series) 1961
The Killer Shrews 1959
Judge Roy Bean (TV Series) 1956
Bury Me Dead 1947
Philo Vance's Secret Mission 1947
Heartaches 1947
The Big Fix 1947
Three on a Ticket 1947
The Devil on Wheels 1947

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