Chris Brown and Lil Durk face lawsuit over ‘Till The Wheels Fall Off’ collaboration

Chris Brown and Lil Durk are in trouble for the song “Till the Wheels Fall Off” they made together.

TMZ says that music producer Micah Foster is making fun of Chris Brown and Lil Durk by saying that they stole parts of his track. Foster says that Brown stole the chorus, hook, and arrangement from his song “Wheels Fall Off,” which came out in 2019โ€”three years before their duet became popular. This is what the court documents say.

Also, Foster says he shared his track with Brown while they were making music for the record Breezy. Even though they are musical friends, Foster says he hasn’t gotten any income from his own work. Now he’s going to court to demand money. Breezy, on the other hand, is keeping calm and hasn’t replied to the case yet.The new case probably won’t come as a surprise to fans of the triple threat, since he’s been sued a lot lately.

Four fans, Larry Parker, Joseph Lewis, Charles Bush, and Da Marcus Powell, are suing Chris Brown and Yella Beezy for assaulting them backstage at Brown’s show in Fort Worth on July 20. This happened during Brown’s “11:11” Tour in July. TMZ says the lawsuit describes an event in which Bush met Brown at first, but when someone from Brown’s group brought up a past fight, Brown is said to have said, “Oh yeah, we were.” How are you, n*gga? “I don’t forget shit,” he said, telling his men to charge.

As things got worse, Brown is said to have told his team to “fuck up” Parker. Parker says he was punched and kicked for more than ten minutes, leaving the plaintiffs with serious injuries that needed ongoing medical care, with one person still in the hospital. Brown started his “11:11” tour in Detroit, where he joked about reports that he was being blackballed: “For an n-gga they say is blackballed, this don’t look blackballed to me!”Brown quickly called in the legal team and asked lawyer Levi G. McCathern II to take on the civil case. McCathern quickly said that the trouble started when Charles Bush, a personal injury lawyer from Dallas, and his group of unwanted friends showed up to make things worse. “When these people approached Chris, they had a clear plan.” “They were looking for trouble and are directly responsible for what happened,” McCathern said, stressing that Brown “never made physical contact with anyone.”

McCathern also pointed out how quickly Bush hired Houston lawyer Tony Buzbee to file the lengthy 50-page lawsuit, claiming that “Chris was unfairly targeted in this incident.” These people saw him as a way to make money, and they should not have been allowed backstage in the first place. The whole show was clearly a set-up.