ZANZ KANT DANZ
When David Geffen's Asylum Records purchased his recording contract for $1,000,000 from Fantasy Records (later joined by Warner Bros. Records) – though those rights applied only for North America; Fogerty's worldwide rights remained with Fantasy – John Fogerty finally was able to re-establish himself as a major rock artist with his 1985 hit album Centerfield. The title track, "Centerfield" quickly became one of the best-loved baseball songs in the country. Fogerty couldn't resist tweaking his old nemesis Saul Zaentz at Fantasy with two other tracks, "Mr. Greed" and "Zanz Kant Danz" (about a pig who can't dance but would "steal your money"); after a while, he was forced to change the name of the latter song to "Vanz Kant Danz".
Saul Zaentz perhaps sought revenge by suing John Fogerty for $1,000,000 over another hit single from the same album, "The Old Man Down the Road", alleging that the song basically had the same chorus as the 1970 Creedence Clearwater Revival song "Run through the Jungle" – essentially, Fogerty was being sued for plagiarizing himself! After John Fogerty was able to establish in court that the two were separate songs, he then counter-sued Saul Zaentz for his legal expenses – a case that went all the way to the U. S. Supreme Court.
(January 2013)