Doniger/Burroughs
Even if you donât know the name or the backstory, you probably know the sound: Boom-ch-boom-chick, boom-ch-boom-chick, boom-ch-boom-chick. Listen to pretty much any reggaetĂłn song, and youâll hear that infectious percussion â dubbed the dembow rhythm â playing underneath. That single key element, a historian of the genre once wrote, âunderpins the vast majority of reggaetĂłn tracks as an almost required sonic signpost.â
There was nothing controversial about that fact until 2021, when lawyers for the Jamaican duo Steely & Clevie â Cleveland âClevieâ Browne and the estate of the late Wycliffe âSteelyâ Johnson â filed a copyright lawsuit over the origins of dembow. In it, they argued that the rhythm was ultimately derived from a single song, called âFish Market,â that the pair wrote in 1989.
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When it was first filed, the lawsuit targeted only two tracks and a few artists. But the implication was clear: if their argument was valid, hundreds of artists across reggaetĂłn â a genre that has risen from an underground fusion of rap, dancehall and reggae in the clubs of San Juan, Puerto, Rico, to the very apex of the music industry in the past decade â would also have infringed Steely & Clevieâs intellectual property.
Now, two years later, those stakes are no longer theoretical. The duoâs lawyers are suing more than 150 different artists, including Bad Bunny, Karol G, Pitbull, Drake, Daddy Yankee, Luis Fonsi and Justin Bieber, plus units of all three major music companies. They claim that over 1,800 reggaetĂłn songs featuring iterations of the dembow rhythm were, at root, illegally copied from âFish Marketâ â and that their clients deserve monetary compensation for them.
If that sounds both unusual and potentially disruptive to you, music law experts would agree.
âThis case is jaw-dropping â the plaintiffs are suing over a hundred artists for over a thousand songs, 30 years after the release of their song,â says Jennifer Jenkins, a professor at Duke University School of Law who has written a history of musical borrowing and regulation. âIf they win, this would confer a monopoly over an entire genre, something unprecedented in music copyright litigation.â
Musical pioneers
Legal claims aside, nobody really disputes that the genealogy of dembow leads back to Steely & Clevie, a legendary duo who are widely credited with playing an influential role in the evolution of Jamaican music. When Steely died in 2009, The New York Times said he had perhaps âparticipated in more sessions than anyone else in the history of reggae.â
According to most experts, the story goes like this: Aspects of Steely & Clevieâs âFish Marketâ were incorporated into a 1990 song called âDem Bowâ by the artist Shabba Ranks, which itself was then re-used by producer Dennis âThe Menaceâ Thompson in another 1990 song called âDub Mix II.â It was this track that was then heavily sampled and interpolated in the early days of reggaetĂłn, providing an essential rhythmic element to the nascent genre. According to an article by Wayne Marshall, a historian of Caribbean music and a professor at Berklee College of Music, that portion from âDub Mix IIâ has since âprovided the basis for hundreds if not thousands of other tracks.â
Over the decades that followed, reggaetĂłn blossomed into a global sensation. With roots in the Panamanian âreggae en espanolâ movement and then evolving with Puerto Rican trailblazers like Ivy Queen and DJ Nelson, reggaetĂłn exploded onto the world stage with Daddy Yankeeâs 2004 breakout single, âGasolina,â which spent 20 weeks on the Hot 100. The genre then rose to new heights in 2017 with Luis Fonsiâs mega-hit âDespacito,â which topped the Hot 100 for a record-tying 16 weeks. And last year, Bad Bunnyâs Un Verano Sin Ti became the first Latin album to finish as the No. 1 Billboard 200 album of the year after ruling the chart for 13 nonconsecutive weeks. According to Billboard Boxscore, he also grossed a record-setting $435 million across two tours â El Ăltimo Tour del Mundo and Worldâs Hottest Tour â cementing his place as one of popâs biggest stars.
All of it, according to Steely & Clevieâs lawsuit, on the backs of their intellectual property.
A growing case
The duo first headed to federal court April 2021, accusing Panamanian reggaetĂłn artist and producer El Chombo of infringing âFish Marketâ with his âDame tu Cosita,â a 2018 hit that reached No. 36 on the Hot 100. The suit also named Karol G and Pitbull, who later released a remix of the track.
In their complaint, the lawyers for Steely & Clevie said the âprimary rhythm and drum sectionsâ of âDame tu Cositaâ were pulled directly from the earlier song: âAt no point did defendants seek or obtain authorization from plaintiffs to use âFish Marketâ in connection with the infringing works.â
When the case was first filed, few people took notice. But the lawsuit quickly grew. In October 2021, Steely & Clevie added 10 more songs to the case, including Fonsiâs âDespacito.â In May 2022, they alleged that an additional 44 songs had infringed âFish Market,â including Daddy Yankeeâs âGasolina.â By September 2022, the lawsuit had ballooned: More than 150 total defendant-artists, including Bad Bunny, accused of releasing a staggering 1,800 infringing songs.
The newer versions of the lawsuit also claimed broader intellectual property rights. In the original, Steely & Clevie claimed only to own a copyright to âFish Marketâ itself; as the case evolved, they claimed they also owned rights to âDem Bowâ and âDub Mix II,â the later songs that utilized âFish Market.â
In the most recent version of the complaint, filed in April, it takes a full 25 pages to list out all of the defendants, which also include units of Universal Music Group, Warner Music Group and Sony Music Entertainment. Other notable defendants include Anitta, Becky G, Maluma, Tainy, Rauw Alejandro, and Enrique Iglesias, as well as companies BMG Rights Management, Hipgnosis and Kobalt.
Over a whopping 228 pages, the document lays out how each song, like âDespacito,â allegedly infringed what it calls âgroundbreakingâ drum and bass patterns in the earlier songs.
âThe rhythm section of âDespacitoâ and the âDespacito Remixâ copies original elements of the âFish Marketâ rhythm section,â Steely & Clevieâs lawyers wrote. âThe musical backbones of âDespacitoâ and the âDespacito Remixâ are substantially similar, if not virtually identical, to âFish Market.ââ
âMonopolisticâ? Or âsensationalistâ?
A trial on all those allegations is still years away, even in the fastest scenario. But this past summer, the attorneys representing the artists and labels have been trying to make sure it never gets there.
In a motion filed in June, Bad Bunnyâs lawyer Kenneth D. Freundlich demanded that the case be dismissed immediately, calling it a âtransparentâ attempt by Steely & Clevie to âstake monopolistic control over the reggaetĂłn genre.â
âPlaintiffsâ [lawsuit] impermissibly seeks to monopolize practically the entire reggaetĂłn musical genre for themselves by claiming copyright ownership of certain legally irrelevant and/or unprotectable, purported musical composition elements,â Freundlich wrote for his superstar client.
When the lawsuitâs allegations are âdefrockedâ of their âfaçade,â Bad Bunnyâs lawyer wrote, all that is left is a simple rhythm itself â and âcourts have been consistent in finding rhythm to be unprotectable.â
The majority of the other defendants named in Steely & Clevieâs lawsuit (including Anitta, Pitbull, Karol G, Ricky Martin, Daddy Yankee, Fonsi, Bieber, units of all three majors and more than 70 other defendants) are represented by a single team of lawyers from the law firm Pryor Cashman. Thatâs the same firm, and some of the same lawyers, that won Ed Sheeranâs big copyright trial in May.
In their motion, the Pryor lawyers echoed Bad Bunnyâs genre-monopoly arguments, but they also claimed that the size of the case had turned it into a procedural disaster â a confusing mess in which nobody knows exactly what theyâre accused of doing wrong. They said Steely & Clevie had failed to satisfy âthe fundamental elements of a copyright infringement claim.â
âThe [complaint] is a âshotgun pleadingâ filled with conclusory allegations that lump defendants together, making it impossible for defendants to determine what each is alleged to have done, what works are at issue and what in those works is allegedly infringing,â the attorneys wrote.
In their own response filings, Steely & Clevie remained undeterred. In an August filing, they argued that the gripes about the size and complexity of the case were unfounded â and that the scale of the lawsuit actually underscored the central point of their allegations.
âWhile the copyists are legion here, they certainly did copy, and the sheer amount of copying proves the creative and original nature of plaintiffsâ work,â wrote the duoâs lawyers from the Los Angeles-based law firm Doniger/Burroughs. âDefendants want to exploit plaintiffsâ creativity to build careers and reap financial success while denying plaintiffs their just credit and compensation.â
And in a separate response to Bad Bunnyâs filing, Steely & Clevieâs attorneys blasted the accusation that they were aiming to own an entire genre of music.
âIn the end, Bad Bunnyâs motion boils down to a sensationalist, unsupported suggestion that this case somehow ties up the reggaetĂłn genre. Not so,â the duoâs lawyers wrote. âTo be sure, the unauthorized copying of the Fish Market pattern now is widespread â copying that necessitated this case. But Bad Bunny cites no authority for the proposition that widespread copying of an original work somehow renders that work unprotectable.â
A hearing before a federal judge, where those arguments will be tested in open court, is set for Friday. Attorneys for both sides declined to comment.
âA pretty wild claimâ
With just about every artist in one of the industryâs hottest genres now facing the possibility of copyright liability over a core part of their music, Steely & Clevieâs case could pose something of an existential problem for reggaetĂłn. Artists who want to make songs in the future featuring a similar rhythm would need to ask (and pay for) permission to do so for decades to come â that is, if the case is ultimately successful.
Some copyright experts are skeptical. âThis is a case that zeros in on a particular beat that characterizes an entire genre, and theyâre basically saying, you can trace it all back to our song, and a piece of everything that flows from that belongs to us,â says Peter DiCola, a professor at Northwestern Pritzker School of Law who has written extensively about music sampling. âI think thatâs a pretty wild claim.â
Part of what makes the âFish Marketâ case unusual is the long delay. Steely & Clevie waited 30 years to sue, as an entire world of music built up around a rhythm that they now claim to own â no doubt leading some reggaetĂłn artists to think, perhaps reasonably, that dembow was fair game.
But even if that delay seems vaguely unfair, itâs probably not a great defense. In a 2014 case over the movie Raging Bull, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that there are essentially no time limits to bringing a copyright suit. That decision directly sparked a battle over Led Zeppelinâs âStairway to Heavenâ decades after it was released, as well as many other lawsuits over years-old allegations of infringement.
Instead, the harder questions posed by Steely & Clevieâs case concern the dividing line between historical acknowledgment and exclusive legal ownership. Music historians donât doubt that Steely & Clevie played a key role in reggaetĂłnâs evolution, but does that entitle them, decades later, to control a crucial part of an entire genre? Put another way, the real question â and itâs potentially a multi-billion-dollar question â is whether they can claim a copyright on the dembow rhythm.
In the abstract, sure. Rhythms are just collections of sounds arranged creatively, like the melodies and lyrics that are clearly covered by copyrights. But in reality, U.S. courts have been hesitant to extend protection to musical elements like rhythms, chord progressions and song structures. Earlier cases have declared them either simply too unoriginal for copyright coverage, or ruled they are âscènes Ă faireâ â a copyright law term for stock elements of a given genre that anyone is entitled to use.
Recent legal battles over music have been dismissed with rulings that the accuser could not claim a monopoly on basic âbuilding blocksâ of songs. Led Zeppelin won a case involving âStairway to Heavenâ in 2020, followed by a similar decision in 2022 on Katy Perryâs âDark Horse.â In May, a federal judge dismissed a lawsuit that accused Ed Sheeranâs âThinking Out Loudâ of infringing Marvin Gayeâs âLetâs Get It Onâ saying the case â over a chord progression and harmonic rhythm â was seeking an âimpermissible monopoly over a basic musical building block.â
Legal experts wonder if the claims about dembow may face similar limitations.
âAll credit to them for being really talented musicians,â DiCola says. âBut this thing that theyâve created, this common element that runs through as kind of the DNA of these reggaetĂłn tracks â is that really something anyone can own? To me, it seems very much like a basic building block.â
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