Dallas County, Texas, pastor David Paul Moten
sued West, his label Universal Music Group, and its subsidiaries
Def Jam Recordings and the West-founded G.O.O.D. Music on
Tuesday in Dallas federal court. The copyright infringement
lawsuit says at least two sections of "Come to Life" feature
excerpts from Moten's sermon.
UMG and an attorney for Moten did not immediately respond to
requests for comment on the lawsuit. West, who legally changed
his name to Ye last year, could not immediately be reached for
comment.
Moten claims samples from his sermon comprise over 20% of "Come
to Life," which appeared on West's hit album "Donda" last year.
Named for West's late mother, "Donda" went to the top of the
Billboard charts and was nominated for a Grammy award for album
of the year.
Moten said in the lawsuit that West has shown an "alarming
pattern" of "willfully and egregiously sampling sound recordings
of others without consent."
West has previously settled lawsuits over samples of a Hungarian
singer on the 2013 song "New Slaves," a child's prayer on the
2016 song "Ultralight Beam," and a theater work about Jamaican
activist Marcus Garvey on "Freeee (Ghost Town Pt. 2)," a 2018
collaboration with rapper Kid Cudi.
(Reporting by Blake Brittain in Washington, D.C.; Editing by
David Bario and David Gregorio)
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