The reason why some Universal Music artists are still on TikTok might be explained by a contractual loophole that could become more common.
In this week's Legal Beat, a decades-old Mary J. Blige song draws a lawsuit, Madonna responds to concert claims, Morgan Wallen charged with felonies, and much more.
Sunday night's (April 7) incident reportedly took place at Eric Church's Chief's Bar on Broadway.
An oft-sampled 1973 song at the heart of hip hop history – and music law history – is now the basis of a new copyright case against UMG over Blige’s 1992 “Real Love.”
A judge says Tyrone Blackburn — lead counsel in a high-profile case against Sean Combs — aimed to “embarrass defendants" with "salacious allegations.”
The Queen of Pop wants a federal judge to dismiss a class action claiming she broke the law by starting concerts two hours later than advertised.
The singer and rapper's attorneys dispute Rod's alleged connection to the shooting, which took place on Sunday (March 31).
Mickey Leigh says that Linda Cummings-Ramone already granted approval - in writing - for the development of the Pete Davidson movie she’s now suing to stop.
The lawsuit, alleging discrimination and other wrongdoing, is just the latest to level bizarre claims about West's now-closed school.
The rockers have reached an “amicable resolution” with Kyle Christner, acknowledging that he made "valuable contributions" at a "pivotal time."