Usher Accused of Stealing ‘Burn’ From Songwriter

SEE THIS IS WHY IF YOU TRY TO GIVE ME A CD ON STREET, I DONT TAKE IT,HAS ANYONE ON HERE EVER HERD OF A GROUP CALLED “REAL TIGHT” ? I HAVEN’T, NORE HAVE I EVER HERD OF THE GUY WITH CLAIM,PEOPLE KILL ME WITH THIS SHIT #AWAISTOFMYTIME

Usher is on the verge of facing a song theft dispute over allegations of stealing material for his Hot 100 No. 1, “Burn,” from a songwriter named Ernest Lee Straughter.

Last month, a California federal judge found there to be sufficient possibility that Usher and co-defendants who produced the song had access to Slaughter’s work, “Reasons,” created in 1998. The judge accepted a musicologist’s report that noted substantial similarity between the songs and denied a motion to dismiss the case on summary judgment. That means a jury might have the rare opportunity to listen to two songs and determine if the Usher song was stolen.

But before that happens, Usher’s camp is pleading with the judge to re-examine whether there was any chance he was familiar with Straughter’s work.

Attorneys for the defendants, including Usher, producer Jermaine Dupri, EMI April Music, Sony Music, Arista Records, and others filed a motion on Friday that asks U.S. District Court Judge Christina Snyder to reconsider her August order denying summary judgment.

In the case, Straugther alleges he created a song entitled “The Reasons Why,” which showed up on an album by the R&B group Reel Tight under the name “No More Pain” in late 1998.
To make the claims stick, Straughter needs to show two big elements — that the defendants had access to his work and there was substantial similarity in the songs.

An expert for the plaintiffs submitted a report that the two songs shared measurable similarities, including a “highly unusual” 18-bar introduction, musical instruments that enter at the exact same bars, similar guitar and vocal stylings, the pitches and phrasings of certain melodies, and other compositional congruity.

Leaving aside the issue of whether these songs sound alike, the big controversy at the moment in the lawsuit is whether Usher and Dupri had access to Straughter’s song. Straughter offered several theories, some more convincing than others.

In her decision, Judge Snyder didn’t buy the one about Usher and members of Reel Tight having much personal contact with each other. But she did rule it to be an issue of material fact whether a third-party intermediary, Warren G, may have provided the link, having had mutual collaboration with both parties. Further, the judge did her own independent research and found Reel Tight’s album to have reached No. 197 for a single week in 1999 on the R&B/Hip Hop Albums chart. As such, the judge says the song may have been heard by Usher because it was available through “wide dissemination.”

In papers to the court on Friday, Usher’s camp attacks these theories. Usher says there was no attempt by the court to show access by anybody who had responsibility over “Burn,” as Warren G played no role in the song’s creation.

As for “wide dissemination,” the defendants attempt to school the judge on the fact that an album isn’t a song. The plaintiff’s song, it’s pointed out, was a “random and unproven song buried on an album.” Further, they show the song got played on the radio around the nation just three times, twice in Chattanooga, Tennessee and once in Denver.

“The fact that the song had virtually no radio airplay forecloses any inference that it was widely disseminated, let alone remotely popular,” say the defendants to the judge.

Judge Snyder now gets to decide whether to take these arguments and backtrack. Otherwise, this will be the rare song theft case that goes before a jury.

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11 Comments
  1. If it’s the same group that sing “Do You Wanna Ride” than I remember them. But I haven’t heard this song they talking about.

  2. Okay I just listened to the song, as it was sang by Reel Tight (No More Pain) and if no one ever intro this idea Ushers Burn would NEVER have entered my mind..as a comparison.

  3. Usher Has 9 Number 1 Hits, Love In This Club, Yeah!, My Boo, Confessions Part II, Nice & Slow,
    Burn, U Remind Me, OMG, U Got It Bad, How many Hits Does The Guy sueing have 0! This suit is his only claim to fame, The song doesn’t even have the same song title I C’mon Son (Ed Lover Voice). Usher is an ICON don’t try to smudge his legacy let the brother continue what he’s doing For God’s Sake.

  4. SMH ..How long has this been going on? That song is OLD Lawyers gonna meke $$ tho

  5. Which Song Do you Remember? These two songs don’t even have the same tempo, you got to be kidding me. Support Usher! One Love

  6. Usher gunna win this, smh at greedy, broke, R&B wash ups

  7. Is this going to be a new trend to attempt to make money in these days and time??? Laywers and so-called artist are going to attempt to go through all of the songs that come out after their homemade albums that didn’t do anything and match any song that sound no where close? That’s sad bruh …. cuz the only people that will benifit are the courts and lawyers.

    “Them niccas played a g flat chord on that song like the one I put out in 1976, I’m suing!”

  8. I LOOK AT IT LIKE THIS, THEY COULDN’T MAKE IN THE INDUSTRY, THEREFORE THEY’RE GOING TO TRY AND SUE THEIR WAY TO WEALTH… IT WON’T HAPPEN BOO BOO!!

  9. So this is the part where they tried to ruin Usher’s career. But look at it this way, If the whole world turned on you Usher, I promise you, I would be there, right beside you, till the end.

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