Lawsuit claims Miley Cyrus copied Bruno Mars song for hit 'Flowers'

Miley Cyrus speaks as she is honored at the 2024 Disney Legends Awards during Disney's D23 Expo in Anaheim, Calif., Aug. 11. A lawsuit claims Cyrus' hit "Flowers" copied a Bruno Mars song.

Miley Cyrus speaks as she is honored at the 2024 Disney Legends Awards during Disney's D23 Expo in Anaheim, Calif., Aug. 11. A lawsuit claims Cyrus' hit "Flowers" copied a Bruno Mars song. (Mario Anzuoni, Reuters)


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LOS ANGELES — A federal lawsuit claims pop star Miley Cyrus copied fellow megastar Bruno Mars' hit "When I Was Your Man" in her number-one single "Flowers." The copyright lawsuit was filed in California federal court.

The complaint, filed on Monday by music-rights owner Tempo Music Investments, said that "Flowers" duplicates "numerous melodic, harmonic and lyrical elements" of Mars' song, which topped the Billboard Hot 100 in 2013.

Spokespeople for Cyrus' label Sony Music and attorneys and spokespeople for Tempo did not immediately respond to a request for comment on the lawsuit on Tuesday.

Mars is not a party in the lawsuit, and spokespeople for his label, Warner Music Group's Atlantic Records, declined to comment. Tempo said in the complaint that it bought its share of "When I Was Your Man" from the song's co-writer Philip Lawrence in 2020.

The lawsuit also accused streaming-service owners including Apple and Amazon and retailers including Target and Walmart of infringing Tempo's copyright by distributing Cyrus' song. Spokespersons for the companies did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

Cyrus released "Flowers" on her 2023 album "Endless Summer Vacation." "Flowers" has more than 1 billion streams on Spotify and won the Grammy award for Song of the Year in 2024.

Tempo's lawsuit said that "Flowers" has "striking similarities" to "When I Was Your Man," including melodies, bass lines, chord progressions and lyrical elements. It also cited a Billboard article from 2023, which said that "any listener can detect that (Mars' song) boasts a chorus that is the inverse of what Cyrus sings on 'Flowers.'"

Tempo asked the court for an unspecified amount of monetary damages and an order blocking the alleged infringement.

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Blake Brittain

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