The Weeknd and Nicolás Jaar Sued for Copyright Infringement Over “Call Out My Name”

Music

The Weeknd and Nicolás Jaar Sued for Copyright Infringement Over “Call Out My Name”

Producers Suniel Fox and Henry Strange claim that their song “Vibeking” is “strikingly and/or substantially similar, if not identical” to the My Dear Melancholy, track

The Weeknd singing

The Weeknd, May 2021 (Christopher Polk/NBC/NBCU Photo Bank via Getty Images)

The Weeknd, Nicolás Jaar, and Frank Dukes have been sued by producers Suniel Fox and Henry Strange for copyright infringement, Pitchfork can confirm. The complaint was filed September 17 in a California federal court, and alleges that the Weeknd’s 2018 My Dear Melancholy, track “Call Out My Name” is “strikingly and/or substantially similar, if not identical” to Fox and Strange’s 2015 track “Vibeking.” The suit points out a number of compositional similarities between the songs. “Both works are in a minor key,” it reads. “Both works are in a 6/8 meter that is less common in popular music. Both works are played at a similar tempo. And both works use features of electronica, ambience, pop, hip-hop, rock, and R&B to achieve a particular atmospheric and melancholic sound.” Find the full complaint below.

Elsewhere in the suit, Fox and Strange allege that the Weeknd’s song uses the same scale degrees as “Vibeking,” specifically in the melody of the hook. The complaint also states that the Weeknd and his co-writers created the song “without a license, authorization, or consent from Plaintiffs.” The suit also includes musical charts comparing the notation between the two songs.

Pitchfork has reached out to representatives for the Weeknd, Nicolás Jaar, and Suniel Fox and Henry Strange for further comment and information.

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