Tag: Music rights

  • Entertainment Industry Shaken as 960 Music Group Sues Over Burna Boy Catalogue

    Entertainment Industry Shaken as 960 Music Group Sues Over Burna Boy Catalogue

    According to Channels Television, the Nigerian music industry is facing a high-stakes legal battle as the 960 Music Group has filed a lawsuit to void the multi-million dollar sale of Burna Boy’s music catalogue. The group, which claims to be a major shareholder, argues that the sale of the “crown jewel” assets was finalized without their knowledge, consent, or board approval.

    The lawsuit seeks to freeze the proceeds of the sale and restore the ownership rights to the original stakeholders. This case highlights the growing complexity of music rights and intellectual property in Africa’s booming entertainment sector, where global investors are increasingly looking to acquire the libraries of Afrobeats stars.

    Burna Boy’s catalogue is considered one of the most valuable in African music, containing global hits that generate significant streaming and licensing revenue. The outcome of this case could have far-reaching implications for how contracts are structured and how minority shareholders are protected in the Nigerian creative industry.

    Further reporting from The Punch and Tribune provides additional context. The Punch reported that “international buyers are closely watching the case as it affects the stability of Nigerian music investments,” while Tribune noted that “Burna Boy’s management has yet to release an official statement regarding the litigation.”

    Echotitbits take: This is the “Big Corporate” side of Afrobeats. As our music goes global, the legal battles will only get messier. This case will be a litmus test for IP laws in Nigeria and how “Legacy” labels handle the exit of their biggest stars to global giants.

    Source: Channels TV – https://www.channelstv.com/2026/02/09/960-music-group-sues-to-void-multi-million-dollar-burna-boy-catalogue/, February 10, 2026

    Photo credit: Channels TV

  • SZA blasts the White House over song use in pro-ICE clip, calls it ‘evil’ and ‘boring’

    SZA blasts the White House over song use in pro-ICE clip, calls it ‘evil’ and ‘boring’

    Photo credit: Variety (Instagram post referencing Variety coverage)

    According to Variety, SZA criticised the White House after her song was used in a pro-ICE social media post, describing the tactic as ‘evil’ and ‘boring’.

    The backlash spread quickly across entertainment media as artists and fans debated consent, political messaging, and the ethics of repurposing pop culture for government content.

    The story gained extra heat as outlets tracked the reaction cycle, including follow-up statements and broader comparisons to earlier music-use controversies.

    • Rolling Stone (website): “…calling their post ‘evil and boring.’”
    • Billboard (website): “White House Responds to SZA…”

    Analysis/Echotitbits take: This is bigger than one clip—it’s a collision between culture and messaging power. When artists push back, the next phase is usually legal and commercial: clearer licensing terms, faster takedown demands, and public positioning by brands that partner with artists. Watch for whether more musicians join in, and whether platforms tighten rules on how official accounts use copyrighted music.

    Source: Rolling Stone Australia— 2025-12-10 — https://au.rollingstone.com/music/music-news/sza-blasts-white-house-snl-song-ad-88609/

    2025-12-10