You can look but you can't touch it
If you touch it imma start some drama
You don't want no drama
No no drama, no, no, no no drama
So don't pull on my hand, boy
You ain't my man, boy
I'm just trying to dance, boy
And move my hump
Objectively, there's no evidence to support the claims. I'm an engineer, not a counselor.
I'm trained to think logically (kinda why I saw Rihanna's flop era coming ).
If the artist doesn’t like a cover of their song, do they have a legal right to sue?
That law doesn’t apply in the United States, that law applies in your country [England]. Enya is a great example. Puffy went to sample Enya and she initially denied it, which of course Puff doesn’t like, and Puff got on the phone with her and got it reversed and got it approved. But the whole basis was, Enya can deny covers. I was like “how is that possible?” and that’s where I learned about copyright outside the United States.
Quote:
I’d like to imagine what a conversation between Enya and Diddy would be like.
The brilliance of Puff is… a lot of meetings had taken place and initially David Bowie had denied Puff for a sample and I hooked it up with Henry Bordeux, Puff’s manager. Puff sat down with Bowie, years ago to make that happen. [Deborah is referring to the Diddy song “Been Around The World”, which samples David Bowie’s “Let’s Dance”].
When people would say “no” to Puff, we would get Puff to sit down and meet with people. I have to tell you something, as much as the press covers him as, you know, this big mouth, attitude, blah blah blah, there’s a side of him, like where he called a friend of mine, who is the manager of this band, and when he called himself he didn’t even introduce himself as Puff. He introduced himself by saying [shy, quiet voice] “hi… this is Sean Combs, also known as Puffy.” That’s how he introduced himself. He was very respectful, very polite. There’s another side of him that people don’t always see, that I see and the people that I’ve introduced him to have seen.
Objectively, there's no evidence to support the claims. I'm an engineer, not a counselor.
I'm trained to think logically (kinda why I saw Rihanna's flop era coming ).
The fact that you think that the rule of thumb is not to believe a woman who says she was raped And I am an engineer as well, about to get a masters degree from the second best university in the world in my field as well.
Confused because all 3 of those songs are on different tiers of success. How much will COG4 (Child of God 4) sell?
Well obviously Applause is the most successful of the 3 but yea Dr. Luke's Informant 4 will sell around 400k in the US and maybe 1M worldwide if she's lucky (she'll get a bunch of fake RIAA certs for 5x plat or something though and kats will gloat).
My crystal ball is also showing a lead single peak of #4 and 1.3M sold in the US. Tons of streams and radio payola though.
refuses to speak for Houston gays -> changes the 7/11 video to fit a gay theme
Does tons of covers where she looks whiter than Britney Spears -> Records a song that is supposedly about black people (but its the same self-aggrandizing **** actually)