On Friday, February 19, a Manhattan Supreme Court judge denied Kesha's bid to free herself from a six-album contract that ties her to Sony and super producer Dr. Luke — the man Kesha says raped and abused her over the course of their ten-year business
It's hard to listen to Kesha without feeling powerful. “We were born to break the doors down, fighting till the end,” she sings on her 2012 song “Warrior.” “It's something that's inside of us. It's how we've always been.” Her music broadcasts an
On Friday, February 19, a Manhattan Supreme Court judge denied Kesha's bid to free herself from a six-album contract that ties her to Sony and super producer Dr. Luke — the man Kesha says raped and abused her over the course of their ten-year business
On Friday, Manhattan Supreme Court Justice Shirley Kornreich denied Kesha's request for a preliminary injunction to temporarily render her contract with Sony producer Lukasz Gottwald nullified. The decisions comes after Kesha accused Gottwald in 2014
But that story at least had a resolution with accountability—unlike the court ruling today in Kesha's case against Sony, where the artist sought injunctive relief against the label to void or amend a recording contract that required her to either work