×
Skip to main content

Justin Bieber’s Vocal Producer Sues Scooter Braun for Breach of Contract

Chris "Tek" O'Ryan worked with the pop star for years, but says Braun broke a deal to give him a point on 'Justice' tracks including "Holy" and "Lonely." A rep for Braun said the producer's claims…

Chris “Tek” O’Ryan, a music producer who specializes in tuning vocals so that they sound pristine on recordings and during performances, filed a lawsuit against Justin Bieber‘s manager Scooter Braun and the company JRC Entertainment on Thursday (April 7), alleging that Braun “reneged” on a deal to pay the producer for his work on Bieber’s tracks.

O’Ryan claims that he was promised a point — 1% of the master recording revenue — on dozens of Bieber songs he helped produce starting in 2018. But in the filing in Los Angeles Superior Court, O’Ryan’s attorneys allege that Bieber’s representatives subsequently backed out of this agreement. As a result, the producer is suing Braun for breach of contract, promissory estoppel and intentional interference with contract.

Related

“Having now been effectively cast aside by the artist he spent more than a decade helping to build up, Tek has no choice but to turn to the courts to ensure that Bieber’s team lives up to the parties’ bargain and properly credits and compensates him after years of loyal service,” O’Ryan’s attorneys write.

Trending on Billboard

In a statement, a representative for Braun called O’Ryan’s claims “deeply unfortunate” as well as “inaccurate, misleading and deceitful.” “His false claims take away from the hard work of album producer and lead engineer/mixer Josh Gudwin and his team,” the statement added.

A representative for Bieber did not respond to a request for comment.

O’Ryan got his break working with Chris “Tricky” Stewart, a star writer-producer known for helping to craft modern standards like Beyoncé’s “Single Ladies” and Rihanna’s “Umbrella.” When Stewart co-wrote and co-produced “Baby,” Bieber’s first top 10 hit on the Billboard Hot 100, O’Ryan tuned the vocals, according to the lawsuit.

Millions of listeners have heard this single, but it’s likely that few knew about O’Ryan’s contributions. That’s because vocal tuners “are an under-appreciated class of music producers who operate largely in the shadows of the music industry,” according to the lawsuit. “Many professional musicians are hesitant to openly acknowledge [vocal producers’] contributions for fear of reputational harm (i.e., opening themselves up to accusations that their performances are not completely ‘authentic’ or ‘natural’).”

But O’Ryan’s lawyers argue that vocal producers are “indispensable to modern pop music.” The attorneys write that “the level of attention to detail required for [this] work cannot be overstated, often involving timing and pitch shifts measured in mere fractions of a millisecond or semitone, with individual words split into dozens of manipulable pieces before being expertly reassembled.”

O’Ryan’s suit claims that he helped polish and finesse Bieber’s vocals both in the studio and during live performances for film and TV. O’Ryan charged the singer $1,200 or $1,500 per track until 2018, when he sent an email to Allison Kaye, an executive at Braun’s company SB Projects, asking for a new deal.

“Can we do 2k and a point?” O’Ryan asked. “I feel like I’ve made a great contribution to all these songs that have made so much money for everyone else and at the end of the day I don’t have much to show for it.” Kaye wrote back “that works for us,” according to the legal filing, and in 2019, O’Ryan also entered into a contract that promised him a point on 18 tracks.

But after working on songs for the Justice album, including the hits “Holy,” “Lonely,” and “Anyone,” the producer’s suit claims that O’Ryan was “informed by Bieber’s team that his entitlement to a point on any recordings was considered to be purely within their discretion, and that he could not necessarily expect to receive a royalty on any” of the tracks. Braun later wrote to O’Ryan that “we didn’t know you are on some songs and some songs I have given too many pts to the producers.” “In other words,” the suit reads, “Braun did not deny the terms of the 2018 Agreement, but rather admitted he had already allocated Tek’s rightful point to someone else.”

In a statement, a rep for Braun challenged several aspects of O’Ryan’s legal filing. “No contract was ever entered into with Mr. O’Ryan promising compensation and a point on 18 tracks,” the statement claims. “Mr. O’Ryan only worked on one track on this album and when he came forward with his demands, his services were no longer used by Mr. Gudwin or his team. To see Mr. O’Ryan show up two years later demanding money is disappointing. There is no merit to his claims.”

O’Ryan’s lawyers also argue that the producer is not properly credited on a number of tracks he worked on. By 2017, O’Ryan had worked with Bieber for nearly a decade, but “he was no longer even being reliably given his already ambiguous engineering credit, including on… ‘Despacito,'” the attorneys write. The allegedly “inaccurate depiction” of O’Ryan’s contribution on this track and other more recent songs from Bieber’s Justice album prevented the producer from reaping “significant professional benefits, exposure, and recognition,” according to the lawsuit.

O’Ryan is seeking “monetary damages in an amount to be proven at trial.”