Nicki Minaj to Pay Tracy Chapman $450,000 in Settlement of Copyright Infringement Lawsuit

Music, News

Nicki Minaj and Tracy Chapman have settled a copyright dispute that began in 2018 over Minaj’s sampling of Chapman’s 1988 song “Baby Can I Hold You” in her leaked track “Sorry.” According to documents filed in a California federal court this week and viewed by Pitchfork, Chapman and her team have accepted a $450,000 offer that Minaj and her team tendered in December. The sum includes all costs and attorney fees related to the case.

Pitchfork has reached out to representatives and attorneys for Nicki Minaj and Tracy Chapman for comment.

Minaj had previously denied that “Sorry” infringed upon “Baby Can I Hold You,” a claim that she formalized in court documents filed in February 2019. She did, however, tweet about not being granted sample clearance from Chapman. In September 2020, Minaj was handed a small victory in the case when Judge Virginia A. Phillips said that the rapper did not commit copyright infringement when she wrote and recorded “Sorry.”

The song became public in the summer of 2018 when Funkmaster Flex leaked the track online, although it was later removed from his website. Chapman sued for copyright infringement on the basis that “Sorry” had used her and directly lifted Chapman’s original lyrics.

Revisit “Why Tracy Chapman Would Probably Win Her Lawsuit Against Nicki Minaj” on the Pitch.

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