Beyoncé has been hit with a copyright lawsuit over her hit song âBreak My Soulâ.
The filing has been put forward by a New Orleans group called Da Showstoppaz, who claim that the pop star is guilty of copyright infringement with her hit ‘Renaissance’Â track.
The issue stems from Beyoncé’s 2022 song sampling Big Freedia â who the band claim unlawfully used lyrics from their track âRelease A Wiggleâ, which they shared back in 2002.
Members of the band, Tessa Avie, Keva Bourgeois, Henri Braggs, and Brian Clark, all filed a complaint to the Louisiana federal court yesterday (May 22). In the filing, they alleged that Bey sampled Big Freediaâs 2014 track âExplodeâ â however, the latter unlawfully used âcopyrighted lyrics, melody, and musical arrangementâ from their own track, making the feature in âBreak My Soulâ unlawful.
As well as the âCowboy Carterâ singer, Big Freedia, Sony Music, Jay-Z and more have been named as defendants.
âDefendants used Plaintiffsâ words, melody, and musical arrangement from their copyrighted works to create an album as homage to âuncle Johnnyâ who exposed the music and culture of the LGBTQ community of greater New Orleans, of which three members are strongly affiliated with themselves, all displayed in its full force â the tone, actual words, melody, musical arrangement of bounce music,â the suit claims (via Rolling Stone).
It goes on to recall how the song has seen huge success due to it topping the US singles chart, being played frequently on her âRenaissanceâ tour, and appearing in her accompanying documentary film about the live shows.
âMrs. Carter, Big Freedia, Parkwood, Sony, and others have received many accolades and substantial profits from âExplodeâ and âBreak My Soulâ and the âRenaissanceâ album, the âRenaissance World Tour,â and the Renaissance: A Film by Beyoncé,â it claims. âDa Showstoppazâs have received nothing â no acknowledgement, no credit, no remuneration of any kind.â
In the lawsuit, the New Orleans group are asking to be credited and for compensation rights on âBreak My Soulâ and âExplode,â as well as royalties for future licences on the tracks.
A spokesperson for Beyoncé did not respond to RSâ request for comment. It appears that Bey licensed the sample of the Big Freedia track ‘Explode’ legally, meaning that the alleged infringement on Da Showstoppaz would have been accidental.
This is a developing story.
Since the start of 2024, Bey has been making headlines for the huge success of her country-inspired new album âCowboy Carterâ.
Shortly after it arrived, it hit countless milestones, including making Beyoncé the first Black woman to reach Number One on the US country chart with âTexas Hold âEmâ, the first Black woman to score a Number One country album in the US charts, and gathering support from huge names including Michelle Obama and Paul McCartney.
The star shared a remix of âTexas Hold âEmâ too, and revealed that she kept much of the original backing track from the original 1968 version of âBlackbirdâ in her cover.
She also confirmed that Stevie Wonder played harmonica on âJoleneâ, and RAYE was credited as a co-writer on one âCowboy Carterâ song.
More recently, Bey’s daughter, Rumi, became the youngest female artist to make it on the Billboard Hot 100 charts, thanks to her feature on the albumâs track âProtectorâ.
âItâs an undeniable thrill to see [Beyoncé] swing so big on a project that dares her to be so intimate and vocal-focused,â wrote NME in a five-star review of the album.
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