Contract on Love: Difference between revisions

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Relatively straightforward and uncontroversial use of legal concepts by Mr. Wonder, who elsewhere has musically ruminated on the formalities of executing [[deed]]s in [[Signed, Sealed, Delivered]].
Relatively straightforward and uncontroversial use of legal concepts by Mr. Wonder, who elsewhere has musically ruminated on the formalities of executing [[deed]]s in [[Signed, Sealed, Delivered (I’m Yours)]].


Here Mr Wonder addresses the formal ingredients of a binding legal agreement. “You've got to sign/My contract on love,” he sings. “Write it in your heart/That you'll never do anything/To ever make us part.”
Here Mr. Wonder addresses the formal ingredients of a binding legal agreement. “You've got to sign/My {{tag|contract}} on love,” he sings. “Write it in your heart/That you'll never do anything/To ever make us part.”


Clearly, the formalities of evidencing a ''[[consensus ad idem]]'' are important to Mr Wonder — of course at the forefront of his mind in [[Signed, Sealed, Delivered]], when he finally implores his contractual counterparty of love to: ''“Sign it. Sign it. Sign it. Sign it.”''
Clearly, the formalities of evidencing a ''[[consensus ad idem]]'' are important to Mr Wonder — of course at the forefront of his mind in [[Signed, Sealed, Delivered]], when he finally implores his contractual counterparty of love to: ''“Sign it. Sign it. Sign it. Sign it.”''


This does sound rather like the [[JC]]’s own [[Confidentiality Agreement - Rock ’n’ Roll Style]] — ironic isn't it —but be assured the intellectual property in our song was developed entirely in ignorance of Mr. Wonder’s song, which we only found by googling this afternoon. It really just goes to show how authentically rock ’n’ roll our confi song really is.


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*[[Confidentiality Agreement - Rock ’n’ Roll Style]]