Jay Z and Timbaland set to testify in Big Pimpin' lawsuit

Duo likely to appear in court to respond to accusations that their sample of the Egyptian song Khosara Khosara was illegal

Following the star appearances in the Blurred Lines case – in which Robin Thicke managed to show the world that he didn’t write the song, but just took the writing credit for it – two more music superstars will be hoping a court appearance doesn’t go horribly wrong.

Jay Z and Timbaland are expected to testify in a lawsuit brought by the descendants of an Egyptian composer over a sample used in the 1999 hit Big Pimpin’. The case goes to court in California on 13 October.

Osama Fahmy, the nephew of the late Baligh Hamdi, is suing the pair over the flute sample in the track, which came from the 1960 song Khosara Khosara, written by Hamdi for the film Fata Ahlami. The suit was filed in 2007, and Fahmy’s lawyer, Keith Wesley, told the New York Post: “I haven’t seen a case last this long. I don’t think there’s a single answer — complex litigation can last for years, but this has been unusual.”

Timbaland, who produced Big Pimpin’, had initially believed the sample was in the public domain. He then paid $100,000 to EMI Music Arabia, which claimed to have the rights to the sample, for its usage. Fahmy, however, says EMI did not have the right to license the sample.

Fahmy also argues that using it in a song of Big Pimpin’s nature was a violation of Hamdi’s moral rights under Egyptian law. “They used it with a song that, even by Jay Z’s own admission, is very vulgar and base,” Wesley told the Guardian earlier this year. “That’s really why this is so significant to my client. They not only took music without paying. They’re using it in a song that is, frankly, disgusting.”

Contributor

Guardian music

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
Legal battle over Jay Z's sampling on Big Pimpin' comes to head after eight years
Descendent of Egyptian songwriter Baligh Hamdy claims rapper and producer Timbaland sampled the 1960 song Khosara Khosara without proper licences

Jared Malsin in Cairo

05, Apr, 2015 @5:58 PM

Article image
Timbaland: 10 of the best
It's time to round up the pick of the futuristic R&B and hip-producer's choicest tracks, from minimal beats to dance-pop with Katy Perry

Ben Beaumont-Thomas

14, May, 2014 @2:17 PM

Article image
The week in music: David Bowie dress-up, Nicki Minaj's wax disaster and more
Our weekly music news roundup includes one man’s quest to live like David Bowie for a year, Coldplay’s role in indie band Interpol’s lineup change and Morrissey opening up to Larry King

Tshepo Mokoena

21, Aug, 2015 @2:34 PM

Article image
Jay Z heads to court for Big Pimpin' copyright trial in long-running lawsuit
The music mogul and his producer Timbaland are accused of using a sample of Baligh Hamdi’s Khosara Khosara in their 1999 hit Big Pimpin’ without permission

Nigel M Smith in Los Angeles

14, Oct, 2015 @5:30 PM

Article image
Simon Reynolds's Notes on the noughties: When will hip-hop hurry up and die?

Simon Reynolds: Our series of oblique angles on the muscial decade continues, with a look at how hip-hop's vigour and invention at the start of the noughties made the last five years of rap seem stale

Simon Reynolds

26, Nov, 2009 @12:54 PM

Article image
How R&B got its groove back
In the late 00s, R&B had lost its edge. But in 2015 it reigns supreme again thanks to innovative, introspective artists such as Frank Ocean, Drake and Miguel, all of whom are due to release eagerly awaited albums soon

Sam Wolfson

29, Jun, 2015 @10:00 AM

Article image
Jay Z goes down the tube with Timbaland and Coldplay's Chris Martin

The superstar rapper surprises London commuters by taking an underground train with famous friends to his O2 gig

Alexandra Topping

13, Oct, 2013 @4:44 PM

Article image
Jay Z's Tidal washout: has the rapper lost touch with his fans?
Jay Z’s journey from rapper to mogul has left casualties along the way, but the music made fans overlook them. With Tidal, has their indulgence run out?

Christina Lee

05, May, 2015 @5:14 PM

Article image
From fear to fury: how the Arab world found its voice | Music

For years, musicians in Tunisia and Egypt were terrified of aggravating the authorities. Then a song by a little-known rapper showed it was possible to protest and survive, inspiring other artists, writes Andy Morgan

Andy Morgan

27, Feb, 2011 @12:03 AM

CD: Timbaland, Shock Value

(Polydor)

Alexis Petridis

29, Mar, 2007 @11:00 PM