What Happens When Justin Bieber Samples Your Music

Published: Feb. 25, 2020, 10 a.m.

b'When Bristol-based producer Laxcity logged onto Twitter to find out that Justin Bieber sampled his music, he was at first unphased. The sampled material came from a royalty-free sample pack on Splice.com, free for Splice users to add to their track. Then accusations of theft started rolling in. Another artist, Asher Monroe, had used the same sample just a few weeks earlier and he accused Bieber of copying the idea. Laxcity inserted himself into the argument to show that the so-called offending sound, was in fact his, but not limited to anyone\\u2019s use. This mixup led to Bieber shouting out Laxcity, giving the nascent producer a career boost. On his episode we speak with Laxcity, Splice CEO Steve Martocci, PEX COO Amadea Choplin and Verge reporter Dani Deahl (who first reported the story) to unpack how sampling works in today\\u2019s music. Then we hear how Beiber\\u2019s new album, \\u201cChanges,\\u201d interprets the sample to convey Bieber\\u2019s personal evolution in the public eye.\\nSongs Discussed\\nLaxcity - Good Morning (Splice Sample)\\nAsher Monroe - Synergy\\nJustin Bieber - Running Over, Sorry, Available, Yummy, Intentions\\nLearn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices'