Thursday, March 28, 2024

Jay Z Attends Start of Trial Over 1999 Track ‘Big Pimpin’’

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*The copyright infringement trial involving Jay Z‘s hit song “Big Pimpin’” began Tuesday with an attorney for heirs of an Egyptian composer accusing the rapper of misusing music from a popular 1950s love ballad.

Jay Z, whose real name is Shawn Carter, listened as a lawyer for the heirs of Egyptian composer Baligh Hamdi accused him and Timbaland of violating rights to Hamdi’s 1957 hit, “Khosara Khosara” to create “Big Pimpin,’” reports Page Six.

Attorney Pete Ross accused Jay Z of using Hamdi’s melody without getting the proper permission. Lawyers for Carter and Timbaland say they secured the appropriate rights to feature “Khosara Khosara” on “Big Pimpin’.”

Timbaland (Timothy Moseley) also attended the opening of the trial. His attorney, Christine Lepera, told jurors that he initially used elements of Hamdi’s work thinking it was royalty-free, but he later secured the appropriate rights.

Ross disputes that statement, and accused the men of violating Hamdi’s “moral rights,” a legal concept he said is well-established in Egypt that would have required them to get permission to use elements of “Khosara Khosara” in a song celebrating a promiscuous lifestyle.

“Khosara Khosara” was featured in a 1957 Egyptian film and became a major hit, Ross said.

Lepera denied “moral rights” were at issue in the case and said evidence would show that Hamdi’s heirs had been repeatedly paid for the incorporating the composer’s music into “Big Pimpin.’ ” She also denied that the rap song used major elements of Hamdi’s work, saying much of its music was simple and not copyrightable.

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