±«Óătv

Charlie Sloth

On Air Now 16:00Ìę– 17:45

« Previous | Main | Next »

Love In This Club vs Garageband

Post categories:

Mistajam | 11:42 UK time, Thursday, 10 April 2008

HipHop fans will remember when the producer Swizz Beatz was sued by Casio for allegedly stealing demo songs from their keyboards, making beats out of them and putting rappers like DMX and Eve over those beats. Well, Polow Da Don is screwing right now! If you don't know who he is - don't worry, Wikipedia says he "is an Atlanta-based music producer who rose to fame in late 2005 and early 2006 through hit singles by artists including Ludacris, Jamie Foxx, Kelly Rowland, Pussycat Dolls, Fergie, Rich Boy, Ciara, and Kelis." - so the guy has pedigree right?

Well, Polow has recently worked with Usher on his new single 'Love In This Club' which is currently tearing up clubs and radio all over the world. It seems that the beat Polow made for Usher is actually a preset synth sound on Apple's Garageband music making software, given for free on mac computers. Take a look at this:

Polow recently spoke about this to site :
“That’s not where I got them from, but they’re definitely in there,” Polow said of the sounds used in “Love in This Club,” telling SOHH he had yet to view the YouTube video. “There’s this keyboard I have that a lot of sounds come in.” Polow noted that the song contains a live bassline and that Robin Thicke was enlisted to play piano on the record. “If a ten-year-old can make ‘Love in This Club’ and save Usher’s career and make black women want to f*ck him again, after they was done with him for getting married, then sh*t he’s a genius just like me,” Polow said. “I also wrote the hook - that’s not a preset.”

I'm torn on this. Most of me agrees with Polow - anyone can sample records or synths or sounds to make a beat but it's what you do with it that turns it into a hit. What do you think? Has he done enough with the sounds to warrant Apple not trying to sue for part of the copyright or not?

This post is closed to new comments.

±«Óătv iD

±«Óătv navigation

±«Óătv © 2014 The ±«Óătv is not responsible for the content of external sites. Read more.

This page is best viewed in an up-to-date web browser with style sheets (CSS) enabled. While you will be able to view the content of this page in your current browser, you will not be able to get the full visual experience. Please consider upgrading your browser software or enabling style sheets (CSS) if you are able to do so.