Royalties row: ‘Freed From Desire’ singer Gala fighting for her anthem rights
It’s the 1996 Eurodance classic which has become a football match and protest march mainstay, a resurging pop banger whose catchy “Na-na-na-na-na” chorus is inescapable.
We’re talking, of course, about Gala’s ‘Freed From Desire’ – a worldwide hit which has sold well over 6 million copies.
As joyful and vibrant as the 90s anthem is, the behind-the-scenes story is far less cheerful.
Gala – whose full name is Gala Rizzatto – has been unable to reap the financial rewards of her song and its renewed success.
The 49-year-old Italian singer spoke to French magazine Paris-Match about how she has been robbed of royalties and “taken advantage of” for 30 years, having signed “a very unfair deal” with an unscrupulous producer named Max Moroldo.
When she met Moroldo in 1995, Rizzatto knew nothing about copyright, royalties and other musical property rights. She was in it for the music.
“I signed an outrageously unfair contract (...) I wasn't stupid, I was ignorant,” Rizzatto shared. “But also, there were things down behind my back that I didn’t know about.”
She also shared how she has been living “penniless in Brooklyn with friends in rented rooms” for four years now, and that the situation is “quite difficult.”
“People think I’m drinking a Martini on a Carribean island and that I’m a billionaire because of my song but it’s not the case. I don't have the money to buy a flat. I live like a nomad. In the last six weeks, I've changed addresses four times!”
She confessed that it has taken her a long time to talk about her current situation and that when she sees “thousands of remixes being cut and put out, where I don’t have a say, it’s terrible. And it’s your name. And Gala is not my artist name – Gala is my name.”
Une publication


