LIMP BIZKIT Slams Universal Music With $200 Million Lawsuit | News @ METAL.RADIO.FM
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LIMP BIZKIT Slams Universal Music With $200 Million Lawsuit



hard rocklimp bizkit
15:46 Wednesday, 9 October 2024
LIMP BIZKIT Slams Universal Music With $200 Million Lawsuit

The band says the label used "systemic" and "fraudulent" policies that were "deliberately designed" to conceal royalties from artists.

Billboard is reporting that Limp Bizkit and frontman Fred Durst are suing Universal Music Group (UMG) over allegations that the label owes the band more than $200 million, with Durst’s lawyers writing that he had “not seen a dime in royalties” over the decades — and that hundreds of other artists may have been treated similarly.

In a lawsuit filed Tuesday (October 8) in Los Angeles federal court, attorneys for Durst and the 1990s rap rock band accused UMG of implementing a “systemic” and “fraudulent” policy that was “deliberately designed” to conceal royalties from artists and “keep those profits for itself.”

“UMG’s creation of such a system, while holding itself out as a company that prides itself on investing in and protecting its artists, makes plaintiffs’ discovery of UMG’s scheme all the more appalling and unsettling,” Durst’s lawyers write, adding that “possibly hundreds of other artists” had also “unfairly had their royalties wrongfully withheld for years.”

In a stunning claim, Durst alleges that as recently as August, Limp Bizkit had “never received any royalties from UMG,” despite the band’s huge success during its turn-of-the-century peak. The lawsuit said the band’s albums had all sold millions of copies, and that Limp Bizkit continues to have “millions of streaming users per month on Spotify alone.”

“Despite this tremendous ‘come back,’ the band had still not been paid a single cent by UMG in any royalties until taking action against UMG, leading one to ask how on earth that could possibly be true,” Durst’s lawyers write.

A spokesman for UMG did not immediately return a request for comment on Tuesday.

Read the full report at Billboard.com.




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