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Notorious B.I.G. " Ready to Die "

E

edthedeal

Guest
Billboard report

Judge Halts Sales Of Notorious B.I.G. Album


March 20, 2006, 10:30 AM ET

A judge halted sales of late rapper Notorious B.I.G.'s breakthrough 1994 album "Ready to Die" after a jury decided the title song used part of an Ohio Players tune without permission. On Friday, a Nashville jury awarded $4.2 million in punitive and direct damages to the two music companies that own rights to Ohio Players recordings.

The sales ban imposed by U.S. District Judge Todd Campbell affects the album and the title song in any form, including Internet downloads and radio play. It was unclear when or how the ban would take effect. By Saturday evening, a search of BestBuy.com and Amazon.com showed "Ready to Die" was still available for purchase online.

The jury decided that Bad Boy Entertainment and executive producer Sean "Diddy" Combs illegally used a part of the Ohio Players' 1992 song "Singing in The Morning." Bridgeport Music and Westbound Records, which owned the song rights, have filed hundreds of lawsuits over sampling in recent years. Most were settled out of court.

The companies get most of their income from song royalties by their artists, which include funk legend George Clinton, the Funkadelics and the Ohio Players.

"We've just been battling this for such a long time," Armen Boladian, owner of Westbound and Bridgeport said. "So many have been settled because companies didn't want anything to do with it, and we knew we were right."


The defendants, Bad Boy Entertainment, Bad Boy LLC, Justin Combs Publishing and Universal Records, plan to appeal. "We think [the verdict] is without merit," defense lawyer Jay Bowen said. The estate of Notorious B.I.G. was originally sued but was dropped later as a defendant.


<P ID="signature">______________
America most awful Hip Hop station list , KS107.5 Denver , KLUC Las Vegas , and Wired in Philly .</P>
 
Re: Does that mean....

The singles like Juicy, Big Poppa, and One More Chance can't be played on the radio at all anymore?

That will Affect stations like KDAY who rely on gold product to fill their airtime.


> Billboard report
>
> Judge Halts Sales Of Notorious B.I.G. Album
>
>
> March 20, 2006, 10:30 AM ET
>
> A judge halted sales of late rapper Notorious B.I.G.'s
> breakthrough 1994 album "Ready to Die" after a jury decided
> the title song used part of an Ohio Players tune without
> permission. On Friday, a Nashville jury awarded $4.2 million
> in punitive and direct damages to the two music companies
> that own rights to Ohio Players recordings.
>
> The sales ban imposed by U.S. District Judge Todd Campbell
> affects the album and the title song in any form, including
> Internet downloads and radio play. It was unclear when or
> how the ban would take effect. By Saturday evening, a search
> of BestBuy.com and Amazon.com showed "Ready to Die" was
> still available for purchase online.
>
> The jury decided that Bad Boy Entertainment and executive
> producer Sean "Diddy" Combs illegally used a part of the
> Ohio Players' 1992 song "Singing in The Morning." Bridgeport
> Music and Westbound Records, which owned the song rights,
> have filed hundreds of lawsuits over sampling in recent
> years. Most were settled out of court.
>
> The companies get most of their income from song royalties
> by their artists, which include funk legend George Clinton,
> the Funkadelics and the Ohio Players.
>
> "We've just been battling this for such a long time," Armen
> Boladian, owner of Westbound and Bridgeport said. "So many
> have been settled because companies didn't want anything to
> do with it, and we knew we were right."
>
>
> The defendants, Bad Boy Entertainment, Bad Boy LLC, Justin
> Combs Publishing and Universal Records, plan to appeal. "We
> think [the verdict] is without merit," defense lawyer Jay
> Bowen said. The estate of Notorious B.I.G. was originally
> sued but was dropped later as a defendant.
>
<P ID="signature">______________
Happy 20th Birthday Power 106

JOSH, Moderating the whole Radio-Info radio state of California and Indiana too!

www.myspace.com/radiogeek500</P>
 
Re: Does that mean....

> The singles like Juicy, Big Poppa, and One More Chance can't
> be played on the radio at all anymore?
>
> That will Affect stations like KDAY who rely on gold product
> to fill their airtime.
>
>
> > Billboard report
> >
> > Judge Halts Sales Of Notorious B.I.G. Album
> >
> >
> > March 20, 2006, 10:30 AM ET
> >
> > A judge halted sales of late rapper Notorious B.I.G.'s
> > breakthrough 1994 album "Ready to Die" after a jury
> decided
> > the title song used part of an Ohio Players tune without
> > permission. On Friday, a Nashville jury awarded $4.2
> million
> > in punitive and direct damages to the two music companies
> > that own rights to Ohio Players recordings.
> >
> > The sales ban imposed by U.S. District Judge Todd Campbell
>
> > affects the album and the title song in any form,
> including
> > Internet downloads and radio play. It was unclear when or
> > how the ban would take effect. By Saturday evening, a
> search
> > of BestBuy.com and Amazon.com showed "Ready to Die" was
> > still available for purchase online.
> >
> > The jury decided that Bad Boy Entertainment and executive
> > producer Sean "Diddy" Combs illegally used a part of the
> > Ohio Players' 1992 song "Singing in The Morning."
> Bridgeport
> > Music and Westbound Records, which owned the song rights,
> > have filed hundreds of lawsuits over sampling in recent
> > years. Most were settled out of court.
> >
> > The companies get most of their income from song royalties
>
> > by their artists, which include funk legend George
> Clinton,
> > the Funkadelics and the Ohio Players.
> >
> > "We've just been battling this for such a long time,"
> Armen
> > Boladian, owner of Westbound and Bridgeport said. "So many
>
> > have been settled because companies didn't want anything
> to
> > do with it, and we knew we were right."
> >
> >
> > The defendants, Bad Boy Entertainment, Bad Boy LLC, Justin
>
> > Combs Publishing and Universal Records, plan to appeal.
> "We
> > think [the verdict] is without merit," defense lawyer Jay
> > Bowen said. The estate of Notorious B.I.G. was originally
> > sued but was dropped later as a defendant.
> >
>
Last night here in Boston , Jamn 94.5 D J said some joke's about this Judgement and then played "One more chance " by Biggie . <P ID="signature">______________
America most awful Hip Hop station list , KS107.5 Denver , KLUC Las Vegas , and Wired in Philly .</P>
 
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