Salt-N-Pepa are telling their file label to not push it as they combat for the rights to their music.
The groundbreaking duo behind hip-hop classics, together with 1993’s “Shoop” and 1987’s “Push It” says in a lawsuit that Common Music Group is violating copyright legislation by refusing to agree to show over the rights to their grasp recordings.
Cheryl “Salt” James and Sandra “Pepa” Denton filed the lawsuit in federal court docket in New York on Monday, asserting that the Copyright Act of 1976, which says that after a number of many years artists can terminate earlier agreements and reclaim possession of their recordings, clearly now applies to them.
The combat, which has led to UMG pulling Salt-N-Pepa’s music from streaming companies, comes as many artists with beloved legacies are making profitable gross sales of their catalogs, whereas others get caught in basic record-label battles over outdated contracts.
“UMG has indicated that it will hold Plaintiffs’ rights hostage even if it means tanking the value of Plaintiffs’ music catalogue and depriving their fans of access to their work,” the swimsuit says.
UMG representatives didn’t instantly reply to an electronic mail looking for remark.
The lawsuit means that conditions like Salt-N-Pepa’s are the very cause the availability of the copyright act exists.
It permits artists who made offers “at the beginning of their careers” once they have been comparatively powerless to make use of the cultural standing and musical legacy they later established.
The swimsuit says James and Denton filed to terminate their settlement beneath the legislation in 2022, “eager to retake full ownership of their art and legacy,” however that, “Inexplicably, UMG has refused to honor” their rights.
James and Denton say that by legislation, they need to now have the ability to personal early recordings, together with these from their 1986 debut album, “Hot, Cool & Vicious,” and 1987’s “Push It,” a B-side whose remix caught on and have become their breakthrough hit.
They are saying different recordings ought to legally be theirs later this 12 months and in 2026, together with the 1993 album “Very Necessary,” which incorporates “Shoop” and “Whatta Man.”
The duo is looking for each precise damages for cash misplaced and punitive damages in quantities to be decided for UMG’s actions. The swimsuit says precise damages may “well exceed $1 million.”
In addition they need a everlasting injunction confirming their rights to the recordings.
They stated by pulling the songs from streaming and different industrial platforms, the label has “maliciously punished” Salt-N-Pepa “for daring to assert their rights.”
The label’s legal professionals stated in letters included as displays within the lawsuit that they’ve inspired mediation and wish to attain a “mutually acceptable resolution.”
However the UMG legal professionals stated within the letters that James and Denton weren’t even personally events within the 1986 settlement that lined their preliminary albums, and there’s no proof that they granted the label copyright that they will now reclaim.
UMG maintains that the recordings have been “works made for hire,” which might not permit for the reclaiming of rights. Salt-N-Pepa’s lawsuit says the ladies’s agreements with the label make it very clear that they weren’t.
The Queens, New York, duo of James and Denton turned Salt-N-Pepa in 1985.
They have been later joined by DJ Spinderella, who was not a part of the early agreements beneath dispute and isn’t concerned within the lawsuit.
“Salt-N-Pepa boldly changed the look of rap and hip-hop,” the lawsuit says. “They were not afraid to talk about sex and to share their thoughts about men. Their sound recordings ‘Let’s Talk About Sex’ and ‘None of Your Business,’ for example, were huge hits. They talked candidly about women’s sexuality and empowerment when such topics were frowned upon, heavily criticized, and called taboo.”
In 1995, they turned the primary feminine rap group to win a Grammy, and in 2021, they obtained a Grammy lifetime achievement award.
Later this 12 months, they’ll grow to be members of the Rock & Roll Corridor of Fame once they obtain the group’s Musical Affect Award.