A distinguished ’90s hip-hop duo is suing Common Music Group for withholding royalties tied to what they’re alleging is a “sweetheart” deal the label reached with Spotify within the late 2000s.
Filed Wednesday (Jan. 4) in U.S. district courtroom in New York by attorneys representing Andres Titus (Dres) and William McLean (Mista Lawnge), members of the hip-hop duo Black Sheep, the lawsuit claims UMG owes its artists roughly $750 million in royalties deriving from the corporate’s inventory in Spotify. Below a licensing deal they declare UMG and the streaming big reached in 2008, the label agreed to obtain decrease royalty funds in alternate for fairness within the then-nascent streaming firm. However Titus and McLean say the label breached their contract with Black Sheep and different artists by withholding what they argue is the artists’ rightful 50% share of UMG’s now-lucrative Spotify inventory — and in any other case failing to compensate them for the decrease royalty funds they obtained on account of the alleged deal.
“Fairly than distribute to artists their 50% of Spotify inventory or pay artists their true and correct royalty funds, for years Common shortchanged artists and disadvantaged Plaintiffs and Class Members of the total royalty funds they have been owed beneath Common’s contract,” the criticism reads. Titus and McLean additional declare that Common intentionally omitted from royalty statements each the corporate’s possession of Spotify inventory and the decrease streaming royalty funds that resulted from its alleged cope with the streaming service.
“Over time, the worth of the Spotify inventory that Common improperly withheld from artists has ballooned to a whole bunch of hundreds of thousands of {dollars},” the criticism continues. “These and the opposite wrongful conduct detailed herein resulted within the Firm’s breaching its contracts with artists, violating the covenant of excellent religion and honest dealing that’s implicit in these contracts, and unjust enrichment on the expense of its artists.”
In an announcement despatched to Billboard, a UMG spokesperson denied Titus and McLean’s claims: “Common Music Group’s modern management has led to the renewed progress of the music ecosystem to the advantage of recording artists, songwriters and creators around the globe. UMG has a well-established observe document of combating for artist compensation and the declare that it might take fairness on the expense of artist compensation is patently false and absurd. On condition that that is pending litigation, we can not touch upon all facets of the criticism.”
In keeping with the lawsuit, Titus and McLean signed a document contract with Polygram in July 1990 (later amended and revised in July 1991) as Black Sheep — the duo finest identified for the hit rap single “The Alternative Is Yours (Revisited)” from their RIAA Gold-selling 1991 album A Wolf in Sheep’s Clothes. Black Sheep’s document contract was then assumed by UMG after the corporate merged with Polygram in 1998.
UMG acquired simply over 5% of Spotify shares “in or across the summer season of 2008” in a licensing settlement in alternate for decrease royalty funds, the criticism provides, citing a 2018 Music Enterprise Worldwide report. It claims that Common acquired extra Spotify shares via its 2011 buy of EMI, which had acquired shares within the streaming firm across the identical time, the swimsuit alleges. It then cites UMG’s personal prospectus, launched in September 2021, revealing that the label held roughly 6.49 million, or roughly 3.35%, of Spotify shares as of June 30, 2021, valued at 1.475 billion euros ($1.79 billion).
It’s price noting that UMG’s stake in Spotify has grow to be considerably much less profitable since June 30, 2021, nonetheless. As of Wednesday’s closing value, UMG’s stake in Spotify is now price simply $560 million — the results of Spotify shares falling 70.5% over the previous 18 months. Notably, Spotify isn’t the one streaming service UMG has fairness in; in accordance with the identical prospectus, it additionally owns 0.73% of Tencent Music Leisure shares, a stake that’s at present price $112.5 million.
Included as an exhibit within the criticism is Black Sheep’s amended July 1991 contract with Polygram, which states that royalties paid to Titus and McLean “‘shall be a sum equal to fifty p.c (50%) of [Universal’s] web receipts with respect to’ the ‘exploitation’ for any ‘use or exploitation’ of ‘Grasp Recordings’ created by Plaintiffs.” The plaintiffs declare they and different UMG artists are thereby entitled to 50% of the labels’ Spotify inventory however that UMG has did not pay it. This demand stems from a few broad assumptions: that every one artists within the class signed related contracts and that they have been equally not compensated with a portion of UMG’s inventory holdings in Spotify.
The plaintiffs are asking for compensatory damages, punitive damages and an injunction “or different applicable equitable reduction” requiring UMG “to chorus from partaking in misleading practices” as outlined within the lawsuit.
UMG isn’t alone among the many main labels in buying Spotify inventory — each Sony and Warner Music, in addition to indie Merlin, even have or had stakes within the firm. In Might 2018, Sony offered half of its 5.707% stake in Spotify for an estimated $761 million, whereas that very same month Merlin introduced it offered its complete stake for an unknown quantity and had shared the proceeds with its members. Warner adopted swimsuit in August 2018 when it offered its complete 2% stake within the streamer for $504 million, with the corporate asserting that round $126 million of the proceeds could be paid out to the corporate’s artists.
UMG has but to promote any of its inventory within the streaming big.
-Extra reporting by Glenn Peoples
You may learn the total lawsuit under.