Rapper, producer, and (now) best-selling author Logic took to Twitter on Monday (May 6) to vent his frustrations over recent sample clearance issues, following a frustrating battle to clear the use the late Lou Reed’s “Walk On The Wild Side” for the Supermarket soundtrack.
“Just want to take a moment and say, Fuck sample clearence. Fuck clearing samples,” he wrote, making special mention producers who prit f samples, and companies that control the when and where for clearance.
Just want to take a moment and say, Fuck sample clearence. Fuck clearing samples. Fuck people taking all a producers money for not doing shit and fuck the companies that say no just cuz. This is hip hop. I’m tired replaying shit. Fuck the money. This why mixtapes was so good.
— Bobby Bestseller (@Logic301) May 7, 2019
The comments rubbed many the wrong way, including producer and voice-over actor Issac Hayes III, the son the late soul singer (and actor) Isaac Hayes, who called the comments absurd.
“Publishing and masters are musical real estate,” Hayes wrote. “If someone wants to come and build a NEW record on top someone else’s record they should absolutely be compensated.”
This is absurd @Logic301.
Publishing and Masters are musical real estate. If someone wants to come and build a NEW record on top someone else’s record they should absolutely be compensated.You don’t have to sample you know. You can always be creative without samples. ??♂️
— Isaac Hayes III (@IsaacHayes3) May 7, 2019
He continued — echoing numerous others — that Logic could be creative and not sample if the tedious task clearing samples isn’t his cup tea. Dipset co-founder and producer Digga added Instagram: “don’t use Hip Hop to justify your frustration with the business music and copyright law.”
Legendary D.I.T.C. producer Buckwild also chimed in, fering “as a producer you should kno who doesn’t clear samples.”
As a producer you should kno who doesn’t clear samples…. this why the 90s 2000s were so dope people didn’t sample just anything????????
— IG : BUCKWILD_DITC (@BUCKWILD_DITC) May 7, 2019
The original tweet stems from the song “Can I Kick It,” co-produced by Logic, 6ix, and Juto, which samples Tribe Called Quest‘s interpolation Reed’s track. Unbeknownst to the trio, Tribe had no stake, and Reed’s estate controls — and is demanding — all the publishing.
“Finding out Tribe owns zero publishing and I have to give up 100 percent my publishing to Lou Reed, and not Quest is insanity,” Logic said in a lengthy explanation posted on Tuesday (May 7).
He also conceded that the most significant issue he had was that Juto is losing out on the financial spoils most significant placement his career to date.
Upon its March 26 release, Supermarket peaked at number 56 on the Billboard 200.
Regarding samples pic.twitter.com/wBcezTdqAZ
— Bobby Bestseller (@Logic301) May 7, 2019