Gregorian Rant

The original composers of the haunting, unmistakableHaloscore have announced that they have “amicably resolved” a long-running dispute with publisher Microsoft for alleged unpaid royalties.

Marty O’Donnell and Mike Salvatori, who composed the iconic score for the interstellar sci-fi shooter, claim that they originally licensed the music toHalo: Combat Evolveddeveloper Bungie prior to the studio’s sale to Microsoft in 2000. The composers argue that they are owed royalties on the subsequent usage of theHalofanfare and its famous Gregorian chant — royalties that go back some two decades.

halo dispute composers music microsoft

Microsoft, according to commentsmade by O’Donnell to Eurogamer, refused the validity of this claim, stating that the composers sold the score as a “work-for-hire” project, and thus were not owed any further monies than those originally paid to them by Bungie at the time. O’Donnell and Salvatori finally took the case to court in 2020, bringing a total of six cases against the publisher, and even considering an injunction to block the launch of the recentHaloTV adaptation.

It seems, however, that all is now done and settled. While the details of the “amicable resolution” were not revealed, O’Donnell shared the newson social mediathat the matter is, essentially closed. O’Donnell also posted an interesting video of the team working with guitarist Steve Vai on theHalo: Combat Evolvedscore. O’Donnell promises to release further behind-the-scenes videos soon.

Wuyang OW2 ultimate

The most recentHalorelease,Halo Infinite, is available now on PC and Xbox platforms.

https://twitter.com/MartyTheElder/status/1516198370544480258?s=20&t=b5sHqRKBXHYngXwV8ja8kA

Football Manager 26 promo art

Cover for Max Payne

Black Ops 7 key art work

PEAK mesa biome text

Article image

CoD BO7 The Guild robot

Drag x Drive passing

A ruined police station in Raccoon City in Resident Evil Requiem.