Kanye West and Ty Dolla $ign’s song ‘Vultures’ removed from Spotify

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Kanye West and Ty Dolla $ign aren’t feeling the Valentine’s Day love like their Vultures 1 The song “Good (Don’t Die)” has been removed from Spotify after less than four days on the streaming service.

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“Good (Don’t Die)” was removed from Spotify on Wednesday afternoon (Feb. 14), but remains available on other streamers such as Apple Music. The electro-pop deep cut seems to interpolate elements of Donna Summer’s 1977 hit, “I Feel Love,” into the pensive chorus.

Hours later vultures Landing on streamers over the weekend, Donna Summer’s estate alleged “copyright infringement” and disapproved of Kanye’s use of the alleged sample.

“Kanye West…asked for permission to use Donna Summer’s song I Feel Love, was denied…changed the lyrics, had someone re-sing it or used AI, but it’s I Feel Love…a!!!” copyright infringement!!!” the farm wrote in a Instagram Story on Donna Summer’s official account on Saturday (February 10).

“I Feel Love” peaked at No. 6 on the Billboard Hot 100 in 1977 and spent 23 total weeks on the chart. The track is one of 14 songs to reach the top 10 on the Hot 100 during Summer’s lifetime.

“Good (Don’t Die)” was far from the only sampling issue Kanye and Ty faced Vultures 1.

A tentatively titled track “All” It was played in New York vultures listening event that seemed like a sample of the Backstreet Boys anthem of the same name, but was supposedly unauthorized and I didn’t make the first volume of vultures in transmission.

Rock star Ozzy Osbourne called out Kanye West as an “anti-Semitic” after an earlier version of “Carnival” featured a live performance of Black Sabbath’s “Iron Man.” West went back to the drawing board and changed “Iron Man” to an interpolation of My beautiful dark and twisted fantasy‘s “Hell of a Life” in the final version.

“We get a lot of requests for these songs,” Sharon Osbourne said. Billboard last week. “And when we saw that request, we just said no way… We’ve been in contact with his team… And it’s also a matter of having respect for another artist.”

Billboard has contacted Spotify for comment. Listen to “Good (Don’t Die)” below.

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