Ghanaian singer, Obrafour has filed a $10 million lawsuit against Canadian rapper, Drake, accusing the Grammy award-winner of sampling his 2003 song ‘Ohene remix’ on his (Drake’s) 2022 popular song ‘Calling My Name’ without his permission.
In the lawsuit filed by his legal team on Friday, Obrafour claimed that Drake had only requested for permission to use the song a week before its release, which was an infringement of his copyrights.
Part of the lawsuit stated:
“The copying of the Sampled Phrase in the Infringing Work is so direct in nature that the audio of the Sampled Phrase heard in the Infringing Work contains little or no audible manipulation, processing, or other alteration to its original character as heard in the Copyrighted Work.
“To date, over the mere 304 days that have elapsed since the Infringing Work was released, the Infringing Work has already been streamed over 4.1 million times on YouTube, streamed over 47,442,160 times on Spotify, and streamed tens of millions of times on Apple Music.”
The Ghanaian singer’s lead counsel, Imran H. Ansari, who addressed a press conference on the lawsuit, said the infringement of his client’s rights by Drake was a “blatant rip”.
“What Drake did was such a blatant rip and sample from our client’s song. More so, we have as part of the complaint, the emails from the woman that clears rights for Drake, reaching out to our client via email and not waiting for him to get the permission,” he said.
“Then Drake dropped the sort of secret album, if you will, without getting the right clearances owned by my client,” Ansari noted.
“Quite frankly, it’s insulting to an artist who is a musician of some popularity, especially in their home country, who takes pride in the creative work that they have put together.
“Only to find out that it’s just disregarded in the sense that Drake samples from his work without permission. The emails are indicative that he knew he needed to do so. And he didn’t do so.”