The Score Magazine July 2019 issue | Page 23

MEGHAN KHARSYNRAP Borrowing tunes from Bollywood When Indian Grammy Award winner A. R. Rahman tweeted about his collaboration with William Adams (will.i.am) in 2014 for the song ‘It’s my birthday,’ it was reminiscent of a greater musical dialogue. Although Adam’s sampling of A. R. Rahman’s “Urvasi Urvasi” from the 1994 movie “Kadhalan” was done legally, it brought to light the kind of music- borrowing-culture that exists today and that has become rampant because of the internet. But Adam’s definitely didn’t start this music trend. This culture called ‘sampling’ originates from the 80’s. How it works is a musician would essentially borrow snippets like a melody or beat from a particular song and remodel it to make something else. You could think of it as a collage of music snippets. Some songs are so influential they’ve been sampled over a 1000 times like “Funky Drummer” by James Brown. But then the question arises that if the remodeled song sounds way different from the actual song that was sampled, can we still think of it as original? Can we consider it theft of intellectual property? And what about creativity? It’s no surprise that several classics from Bollywood have been sampled to make hits. In the past, musical cultures borrowed from each other often, but we had no idea that a song we listened to could have originated from somewhere else. Consider how Pritam’s ‘Pehli Nazar Mein’ sung by Atif Aslam was actually sampled from Korean song “Sarang Hae Yo” by Kim Hyung Sup. Today, the web exposes us to different music and exposes us to the borrowed tunes as well. Some popular examples of sampled Bollywood songs would be "What's Happenin" by Method Man feat. Busta Rhymes that sampled "Dum Maro Dum" by Asha Bhosle; "Toxic" by Britney Spears also contains a sample from "Tere Mere Beech Mein" by Lata Mangeshkar; Black Eyed Peas is famous for sampling Bollywood with “Elephunk Theme”, “My Humps” and “Don't Phunk with My Heart” and many others. But there’s been a fair share of drama when it comes to sampling. RIGHT OR WRONG? song was Shari Watson’s (professionally known as ‘Truth Hurts’) debut single. The sample was not cleared when it was used, resulting in Saregama’s $500 million lawsuit against Universal Music Group, Interscope Records and Aftermath Entertainment in 2002. Today, sampling is mainstream culture because production tools are easily accessible in digitized form. This means anybody could potentially be a producer. But if famous musicians fail to abide by the law when it comes to sample clearances, it isn’t hard to imagine the extent of sampling related crimes all over the world. The procedure of obtaining clearance is also difficult. If you want to borrow music and sample it legally you have to obtain a license from the copyright holder. There are two licences you need to obtain: you need to get a license from the record label for the sound recording and also from the music publisher for the melody or lyrics. The Indian Copyright Act 1957 protects expressions of ideas rather than the ideas themselves. If interpreted in one way it really broadens the horizon for what can be sampled. Sampling can mean different things for different people. Courts all over the world consider nature (commerciality) , sustainability, purpose and marketability when determining whether art has been appropriated illegally. When an artist is earning HUGE figures from sampling a part of your home made piece without credit, you’d definitely want to reconsider the morality of sampling. One of the most notorious sampling related issues is DJ Quik’s song “So Addictive” for Dr. Dre’s female mentee Shari Watson featuring Rakim that sampled Bappi Lahiri's "Thoda Resham Lagta Hai". It even made the list on COMPLEX’s ‘25 Most Notorious Uncleared Samples In Rap History’. The The Score Magazine highonscore.com 21