Inside the Mwini Zinthu saga: Bensam says Ril B lied

Advertisement
mwini-zinthu-video

As musicians Ril B and Blaze continue fighting over ownership of their hit song Mwini Zinthu, Blaze’s manager Bensam has blasted Ril B for lying that he financed the production of the song.

The feud surrounding the hit song has been the centre stage of confusion to people that love Malawi music in the country and in neighbouring countries. But what really happened? And what will be the way forward to these fights as this also comes at a time when the song is the potential song of the year if we go by any pending awards.

Blaze told Malawi24 in a recent interview that it depends on how people choose to define ownership.

“If it is defined by who paid for the studio session then it is Ril B’s song but if it is defined by who wrote the song then it is my song,” Blaze said.

mwini-zinthu-video
Mwini Zinthu video part of the controversy.

After the remarks from Blaze, Ril B has also been claiming ownership of the song and he recently posted on his Facebook page saying he paid for everything during production, including Blaze’s services.

“A very simple case study would be Imagine Me by Kirk Franklin all we hear is a girls voice but we barely get to know who she is, well as of dominance she dominated the song but as to who owns it, it remains Kirk Franklin’s song. My point being every expense that was to do with the song, I catered for it, from buying the beat and as of Blaze’s services I paid and met every need and request he made.

“His Manager called me to cater for some expenses during the video shoot including paying dancers and some logistical issues, he did this knowing it was my song, if it was Blaze’s song wasn’t Bensam as the managing team supposed to take care of all expenses? Or should we say they failed as management? I respect Blaze and Bensam both, but we should all agree my beat made Blaze, as much as it made me, that explains the drama, but point remains I own Mwini Zinthu,” posted Ril B Mw

But in a telephone interview, Blaze’s manager Bensam revealed that at first the song had no owner but Ril B began claiming ownership after it started to enjoy massive airplay on major radios.

“Ril B and Blaze are friends from way back and my artist [Blaze] told me it was an agreement to put Ril B on the map since 100 percent of the song was written by Blaze and Ril B paid for the beat and studio session,” said Bensam.

“On the claims that the artist is making to have paid us and even for the video are wrong, Ril B came to my house and stayed during the days we were shooting the video I catered for over K100,000 to get the video set while he only gave out 40,000 kwacha for the video budget,” he added.

Several local artists have since weighed in on the feud between Ril B and Blaze.

Commenting on the saga, poet and former rapper Q-Malewezi said the story is complicated.

Blaze
Blaze performing Mwini Zinthu on stage alone last month.

“There are some things that need clarification. What does buying a beat and covering expenses entail? Does these actions have a legal basis for someone to claim ownership? How many writers does the song have? I feel the issue of copyright ownership has nothing to do with paying for beats, studio, or video. If both of them wrote their parts for the song then they both own the copyright. But I guess that might not be the issue. The issue is who gets to use the song on their album?” queried.

On his part, minister of ghetto affairs Fredokiss said artists should make their agreements formal to avoid similar scenarios.

“These are things that need to be addressed at the onset we need to start utilising contracts to formalise agreements because COSOMA does not make decisions or judgements pertaining to ownership of unregistered,” he said.

But legendary female rapper Rina claimed that the artists would still be fighting even if they had signed contracts.

“This argument would still be there even if they signed paperwork. The public would still see the song being Blaze’s song. And that is the part Ril b disagrees with. People have accepted it that the song is owned by two. But one person is making money out of the two.

“The only thing he [Ril B] would’ve gotten out of signing a contract with Blaze and his management is that if they had a clause that gave Ril B part of the performance fee for Blaze performing a co-owned song. Which will then transfer into the producer wanting his rights on production and payment per performance etc. Pointing fingers won’t change anything,” explained Rina.

*Additional reporting by Thomas Siveliwa Jnr

Advertisement

72 Comments

  1. Ril _B is a owner of that track coz sizingatheke oyimba otchuka kukatenga woyimba oti wangobwera mu industry mkumati timedye collabo titchuke .oyamba kumene ndiamene amatenga ma artist otchuka kuti nayenso apange dzina AMen

  2. hahaha things r getting confusing.the question is who should we believe.aliyense is claiming kuti nyimbo ndiyake .but from my understanding nyimbo ija imalembedwa kuti ril ft blaze and sometimes ril b and blaZe .koma to observe thourary nyimbo ija anaimba kwambili ndi blaze,he gave life to that song to the extent that u cant help it but to think that blaze owns the song.so ril b kuti apange claim nyimbo imene ija few will believe him.thats wat happens wen upcoming artist collaborate with those that r doing well in music.i dont know if thats the case with these artists.so mr ril b ngati nyimbo ili yanu fight 4 it and if nyimboyi mukudziwa kuti siyanu mukungofuna attention kuti anthu akudziweni u hv played ur cards wright ,koma let me remind u kuti mukulimbana ndi munthu olakwika coz blaze ndi power house

  3. iya blaze ndidolo enao kaya ndamvera nyimbo yake pa ufulu fm mukuti lil b ndimbola zanyimboyi tifuse gaffa the producer atiuza mwina zoona apo bii basi ndizingomvela mbenjere chifukwa amaimba yekha

  4. I think the song should be Blaze’s coz he is the one who wrote it.

  5. Either none of all of them are liars. Wtf does ownership matter? …. I think I get the picture. The song is so popular. It will probably get nominated for a Grammy. Isn’t that what it’s all about, Blaze? Ril B? Awards!

  6. Lakula ndi dyela kusafuna kugawana kanganyase akumakapezako ..nde malawi ameneyo single kukuzunguzani mutu what if it was album mukanadulana makositu…

  7. Ngati poyamba mudakhalilana pansi kuti mzanga tiyeko tiyimbe nyimbo ndekuti ndizongodziwilatu ndiyanonse basi so mukanganilananji? chabwino tangogawanani tiwone kuti dolo akhalandani

  8. at first when the was released nobody cAme to the open and claim the ownership Of the song, but becoz it is now a hit song mukukanganiranano umwin wa nyimbo

  9. I have listened to the remix done by ril b & some guy. Its a gospel tune called yesu ndi konkala. It is very terrible. Blaze amatha

    1. We are talking about ownership here and not who is better than the other. Athuwa ndi zitsiru onse chifukwa choona akuchidziwa but they are all being economical with the truth. By The way who is the main artist and who is the featured artist in this song? Eish….. Koma umphawiwu?…aaaaah

  10. Bas ma artist try to bring something great on your own enawa amangofuna potchukila bas ..……ma featuring amenewa muziyaluka nazo choncho……blaze go go go dzuka iwe Malawi tadzuka

  11. kuno ku Joz nde nyimbo za amalawi tikulemera nazo kwambiri,,, just imagine ndikumatha kupanga 1000 copies nkugulitsa iliyonse pa ntengo wa R15.masiku atatu zikumatha ine nkupeza R15000,,, azikangana ife nde odyerera luso lawolo

    1. Making money at the expense of someone else’s talent is not good. I hope Patric Sleyman you are just joking,you are just trying to make us laugh

Comments are closed.