It has been gathered that a US based label owner Tajudeen Bioku (Chairman/CEO of NPC Records) has dragged Alabi’s former record label owner Deaconess Biodun Ibitola (owner of Remdel Optimum Communication Limited) to court, over the alleged illegal production of Alabi’s album ‘Angeli Mi’
Bioku
is seeking N150m being the amount due to the company as royalties from
the production and replication and sales of 20 million copies of the
Audio CD-Cassette work.
The
suit was filed at the Lagos State High Court with Suit Number
ID/1373/2011 under Justice I.O. Kasali, through his counsel Bolaji
Mustapha of Bola Mustapha & Co. The case was recently heard for
‘Substituted Service’ on June 18.
Bioku says that he came in contact with Tope Alabi back in 2005 and signed her to his company’s record label, NPC Records.
Bioku
says he asked Alabi if she was under any record label, and she told him
that she was formerly signed with Remdel Optimum Communication Limited
(ROCL), owned by the defendant Biodun Ibitola, but that her three year
contract with the label had ended in July, 2004.
Mr.
Bioku went on to say that after he told the singer that he wouldn’t be
able to sign her on unless the certificate was produced, Alabi then
suggested that his label produce albums as specially commissioned
projects, instead of being signed under the label.
‘Alabi
did produce the albums and was paid accordingly by me’, Bioku says. ‘I
was about releasing the record titled “Angeli mi” after enough publicity
to ensure patronage/acceptance by the general public when I discovered
that ROCL had gone to replicating companies and also used media
propaganda to diffuse the mind of the general public over the releasing
of the record work to the public.’
The
lawsuit states that the defendant (ROCL) claims that she still had a
standing agreement with the artiste (Tope Alabi) and therefore Bioku did
not have right to release a recorded work of the Artist under any
company other than Remdel Optimum Communication Limited.
Bioku
says Alabi insisted upon questioning that she did not have any ties
with ROCL. When he demanded for the contractual agreement between Alabi
and ROCL, she (Ibitola) ‘refused, failed and neglected to produce the agreement.’
Bioku explains that in order for him not to lose out totally, he decided to allow ROCL to release the ‘Angeli mi‘
on its record label under a master license agreement. The master
License Agreement was executed by both parties, and the agreement was
for a period of three years, from July 7, 2007 –July 7, 2010.
ROCL
were to pay the sum of N7 per Audio CD or Cassette produced or
replicated to the his company as royalties from the record. ROCL were
also to render a statement of account from the replicating companies for
the record produced, to enable both parties ascertain what was due as
royalties.
The lawsuit says Ibitola and her company refused, neglected and failed to pay.
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