Chicago-based Trax Records has been sued over its alleged failure to pay royalties.
17.06.2020 - 13:29 / msn.com
Jay-Z and Beyonce are facing a federal copyright infringement lawsuit from Dr L’Antoinette Stines, a Jamaican artist who claims they took her work without giving her proper credit or money. According to TMZ, the couple contacted Steins in March 2018 when they were seeking local dancers to perform in a promotional video for their tour.
Chicago-based Trax Records has been sued over its alleged failure to pay royalties.
So this is pretty crazy!!!
Beyoncé has dropped a new a capella rendition of ‘Black Parade’, the powerful new track she dropped last week to mark Juneteenth, the day commemorating the end of slavery in the US.‘Black Parade’ is co-written by Jay-Z, as well as longtime collaborators Derek Dixie, Caso and Kaydence.
following claims made by Coleen Rooney on her social media.Rooney said she had put the settings on her Instagram account in such a way that her posts could only be viewed by one other account, owned by Vardy.
Clarence Avant and Quincy Jones along with Azoff Company chairman/CEO Irving Azoff and entertainment attorney Ron Sweeney."Many have come together in the past to address rampant racism in our business and society," states Avant in a release announcing the coalition’s launch.
Beyoncé is celebrating Juneteenth weekend with the release of a timely new track.
Jay Z and Beyonce are facing a lawsuit for their Everything Is Love standout track "Black Effect" after Jamaican choreographer and academic Dr. Lenora Stines called out the couple for allegedly recording her vocals and using them in the song without her permission or credit.
Beyonce and Jay-Z have been sued by a Jamaican choreographer and academic whose voice is heard at the start of ‘Black Effect’, a track on their 2018 collaborative album ‘Everything Is Love’.
Tom Tapp Deputy Managing EditorBeyonce and Jay-Z face a copyright infringement lawsuit in Los Angeles for allegedly using a monologue voiced by an uncredited Jamaican choreographer for their 2018 track “Black Effect” without permission, according to court papers obtained today.In the suit, filed late Tuesday in federal court, dancer Lenora Stines alleges she spoke on tape of her feelings about “unconditional love” at the request of the celebrity couple.
Beyonce and JAY-Z are being sued by Jamaican dancer L’Antoinette Stines, who claims the superstar couple didn’t give her proper credit for her part in their song Black Effect.In the papers, filed on Tuesday in federal court and obtained by TMZ.com, Stines claims Beyonce and Jay sought her out in March, 2018 to help them find the best dancers for a video promoting their tour.
Beyonce and Jay-Z are being sued by Jamaican singer Dr. L’Antoinette Stines, who claims the superstar couple didn’t give her proper credit for her part in their song Black Effect.
Beyonce and JAY-Z are being sued by Jamaican dancer L'Antoinette Stines, who claims the superstar couple didn't give her proper credit for her part in their song Black Effect.In the papers, filed on Tuesday in federal court and obtained by TMZ.com, Stines claims Beyonce and Jay sought her out in March, 2018 to help them find the best dancers for a video promoting their tour.
Beyonce and Jay-Z are being sued by Jamaican dancer L’Antoinette Stines, who claims the pair didn’t give her due credit for her role in their song Black Effect.In papers filed on Tuesday and subsequently obtained by TMZ, Stines claims the couple contacted her in March 2018 to help them find the best dancers for a video promoting their ‘On The Run II’ tour.After helping them, Stines claims they asked her to record her opinions on love and was told it would be used in the video “for promotional
Josh Feola On top of an ongoing trade war and pandemic, a new point of tension between the U.S. and China involves the Black Lives Matter protests sparked by the May 25 death of George Floyd in police custody.
Billboard, the suit claims Scott and his collaborators were “pretending to be interested in a collaboration”, only to “intentionally [break] the rules by exploiting plaintiffs work without consent or a license, masquerading as if plaintiff’s music is their own”.The three plaintiffs are songwriters Olivier Bassil, Benjamin Lasnier and Lukas Benjamin Leth, who filed the suit yesterday (June 9) against Scott and his collaborators, including Oz (Ozan Yildirim), Nik Dejan Frascona, Mike Dean, Jimmy