No, I can't think of an example off the top of my head, but a song like House of New Orleans is kind of similar.
Not sure which keys the songs are in, but say Am for the sake of it. BWM goes Am / E7 / Am, etc. (before the part I mentioned earlier), whereas OW goes Am / G / Am, don't they?
At any rate, I don't think there's any case for calling it theft/plagiarism.
Mark has a lot of songs that are basically a tribute to something. King Of The Road inspired Quality Shoe, Wichita Lineman inspired Hard Shoulder, Bob Dylan inspired It Never Rains, there's no such thing as a truly original song, everyone beg, steal and borrow and Mark is an absolute master of that. He borrows the idea so accurately, that nobody will notice it if not with the help of a microscope. And with him saying in every interview that he's Bob Dylan fan from age 11 and reading the lyrics of his songs in his radio show no wonder, that he ended up using some ideas from Bob here and there.
Thanks quizzaciously.
That was exactly the point I was trying to make. The best songwriters in history will pinch bits and pieces from here there and everywhere. The greatest classical composers directly lifted folk tunes, Dylan took bits from Woody Guthrie and others, music history is littered with examples, anyone who's ever written a 12 bar!! and let's face it, especially in regards to Western music, we are rather limited by our 12 tones.
There are good examples of it with Mark, OW, R&J, to name 2. It's not a bad thing. It's part of the art, and I'm sure a highly intelligent songwriter like MK knew exactly what he was doing....