Music Publisher Discovers A Song In Its Catalog Has Been Heavily Sampled For Decades… Sues Everyone

from the statute-of-limitations? dept

Over at THREsq, they have the story of a small music publisher by the name of Drive-In Music. Apparently it holds the rights to the song “Let A Woman Be A Woman” by Dyke & The Blazers:

A UK-based band called The Heavy apparently used the music in that song as the basis for its song “How You Like Me Now?”

The music seems pretty clearly to come from the earlier song. Of course, Drive-In only noticed all of this after Hyundai used this song in a commercial it ran during last year’s Superbowl:

Rather than just suing those behind the Heavy’s song, Drive In has basically gone on a legal rampage. It sued pretty much everyone even loosely connected with the song. So, it sued the label… but also the ad agency that put together the ad, the NFL for having the commercial during the Super Bowl and CBS for airing the ad. Apparently that lawsuit was settled, which is too bad, as it seems like many of those parties could push back on the claims.

Since then, however, Drive-In has suddenly discovered that the song has been sampled in a bunch of other songs, and has decided to sue over all of them. THREsq has a list:

  • In July, Drive-in Music sued Sony BMG, Ruthless Records, and others for use of “Let a Woman Be a Woman” in the seminal gangster rap hit, “Menace to Society” by the group, Above the Law
  • In August, Drive-in Music sued Capitol Records for use of “Let a Woman Be a Woman” in the 1990 rap song, “Diss You” from rapper, King Tee
  • In September, Drive-in Music sued Busta Rhymes, Warner Music, Elektra Entertainment, Atlantic Recording Company and others for use of “Let a Woman Be a Woman” in 1991 old-school hip hop song, “Case of the P.T.A.”
  • In September, Drive-in Music sued Universal Music Group, Interscope-Geffen-A&M Group, and Beck Hansen for use of “Let a Woman Be a Woman” in the 1997 Beck song “Jack-Ass” from the Odelay album
  • In fact, just this week, Drive-in Music has filed a second lawsuit over that very same Beck song. The company is going after the publisher, Cyandide Breathmint Music, the Dust Brothers, and various subsidiaries of UMG.

Of course, if I remember correctly (and you copyright lawyers out there, feel free to chime in), the statute of limitations on copyright is three years. I believe that this doesn’t prevent Drive-In from suing over those older songs, but it would limit any damages to what’s happened with those songs in the past three years (meaning: likely not very much).

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Companies: drive-in music

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Comments on “Music Publisher Discovers A Song In Its Catalog Has Been Heavily Sampled For Decades… Sues Everyone”

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25 Comments
Zangetsu (profile) says:

Is there a limit to the number of songs mankind can write?

Has anyone done a study to determine how many different bars of music you can actually create? Sure you can put those bars of music together in different manners, but at the base you still have x notes being played. Don’t we, mankind, run out of music at some point? Are we at that point? If you want to make a record sound like 50’s music, don’t you have to “plagarize”?

PW (profile) says:

Missed opportunity

While I like The Heavy’s version of the song, in reading your post and being exposed to the original song, I started looking to purchase it. I actually like the original better. Of course, it’s not available as an MP3 download only as part of CD compilation. If these folks had been reading your posts, they’d know that simply making people aware that The Heavy’s song had been sampled from this Dyke & The Blazers’ version, they would have probably been able to ride the coattails of The Heavy’s success. It would have driven new interest in this great song. Sad that the only creative solution they could think of is litigation.

Neil says:

So… is the main objection folks here have is that a third party who bought the copyright is trying to make an opportunist buck? What if the case had been filed in a timely manner by a destitute songwriter watching his song make someone else rich? Just curious at what point people here think a copyright case would actually be justified. (I’ll also accept article/book suggestions)

I would argue that Zangetsu and PW’s arguments sound a little na?ve… Z: Haven’t we also said all the words in the English language in one order or another thus making any copyright on a book useless? PW: do you really think that politely raising his hand will get the original creator his piece of the pie?

Jon Silva says:

sample vs. cover version

As far as I can see, The Heavy did not sample the original but replay the tune which renders it a cover version. I can only speak for Germany (but assume copyright law is pretty similar in the UK): 10 years after release of the original, you do not even have to ask the original author(s) if you want to re-record a tune in order to come up with your own interpretation (i.e. cover version).

Anonymous Coward says:

Re:

To be honest any musician that sues today is bad in my book I don’t care what their financial situation is.

That musician should be asking how are they making money and I’m not if we are doing the same thing?

He should start doing what others are doing, then he may discover that a) Other are not making that much more b) He was doing it wrong and that is why he wasn’t making money.

Joey Bags says:

Was the publisher ever contacted to clear the samples for any of those tracks? Were they even available for contact or did they abandon and neglect their intellectual property? It’s hard to believe that not one the labels involved attempted clear the sample.

If this is true then it’s a real bitch ass move by the publisher to pull this after the fact. And pretty dumb not having the Mp3 available for purchase.

On the other hand, if the publisher was contacted and denied the sample clearance requests then by all means they should sue.

Neil says:

Clearly Anonymous Coward’s comment is a ridiculously ill thought out blanket statement, but I’m afraid it reflects a pretty widely held trendy philosophy these days that all copyright litigation, regardless of merit, is ‘uncool’.

Suppose you write an original song, someone covers it, and their version winds up on a superbowl commercial without your consent or credit. Are you somehow at fault for not selling it first? Should you wait until some blogger finds out it’s your song, then wait for people to come buy your version — all while some other unscrupulous person makes off with tens, maybe hundreds of thousands of dollars?

Jed says:

Re: Neil

Neil I find your premise to be faulty.

“Suppose you write an original song, someone covers it, and their version winds up on a superbowl commercial without your consent or credit.”

If you right an original song and someone covers it, that implies that your song got recorded and you got paid for it. Otherwise how would they know about it to cover it? (yes, I know that it is theoretically possible, but it is extremely unlikely) Also assuming your premise isn’t flawed and it did happen it would make more sense to capitalize on the popularity of the song that covered your song. Think about it this way if you publicize that this new song just covers your song a lot of people who like the new song will like your song too. Most people identify as much if not more with the melody/beat of a song than they do with the lyrics. Not suing over the unauthorized cover would also engender good will in the fans of that band/song toward you.

As to the question in your earlier comment:

“Just curious at what point people here think a copyright case would actually be justified.”

I think that suing another party for any reason should be considered a last resort and not an initial reaction. When many companies (and individuals) see something they don’t like they decide to sue. When instead they should first question do I have any legal standing to sue and second is suing going to give me/us the best overall outcome down the road. In many cases (some of which have been outlined here on Techdirt) even when they win the lawsuit they lose things that are much more valuable (like the respect and good will of there customers). Very few people buy products from companies they hate/don’t respect unless they don’t have any other options.

Neil says:

Re: Re: Neil

“If you [sic] right an original song and someone covers it, that implies that your song got recorded and you got paid for it.”

And *my* premise is flawed? So how does the writer get paid in your example? Anyone can cover a song as long as they pay the writer a mechanical license of $.09 per unit. So let’s say the artist covering the song presses 1000 CDs: the writer gets paid $90. The cover version gets sold to a superbowl commercial for tens of thousands of dolllars. The writer legally has to approve of and be cut in on that deal.

You seem to be living in a fantasy world where writers get compensated with a warm fuzzy feeling when people hear their song. Oh, what’s that… someone else made $50,000 dollars it? No problem, I wouldn’t want to be perceived as crass for wanting my share. Lucky for me, my landlord accepts respect and good will in lieu of money.

Anonymous Coward says:

Of course, if I remember correctly (and you copyright lawyers out there, feel free to chime in), the statute of limitations on copyright is three years. I believe that this doesn’t prevent Drive-In from suing over those older songs, but it would limit any damages to what’s happened with those songs in the past three years (meaning: likely not very much).

Not a copyright lawyer, but my understanding is that it depends on what circuit you’re in. In some circuits you can collect for the entirety of the infringement, and in others you can only collect for the three years prior to the action being filed.

Not an electronic Rodent says:

Just a thought.....

If you’re going to have copyright laws and conflate it with theft, shouldn’t there also be a statute of limitations on copyright “theft”?

Odelay (as the first example I googled) is about 14 years old. Isn’t that past the statute of limitations for REAL theft in most places? And that’s where the owner of the object reported it missing.

If someone “steals” your “work” and you don’t even notice for 14 years isn’t it just a tad more ludicrous than usual to sue them? OOoooo I’ve come over all philosophical. If a tree falls in a forest with no-one to hear…. Pah! Child’s play!

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