On Sunday, Nov 17, Ed Sheeran posted claims that Band Aid is using his vocals without his permission on a new mix to his ...
Ed Sheeran, who sung on the 2014 version, is included on the new one, and it turns out he’d prefer not to be involved.
"A decade on and my understanding of the narrative associated with this has changed," he said, referencing criticisms of the ...
Band Aid is facing calls for it to be cancelled as a musicians distance themselves from a 40th anniversary rerelease of Sir ...
Sharing a separate statement by Ghanaian-British star Fuse ODG, the singer-songwriter said his understanding of the narrative ...
Sheeran sang alongside Coldplay, Sinead O'Connor, Sam Smith, One Direction and Rita Ora on Band Aid 30 in 2014. A new mix, ...
Ed Sheeran referenced a post by Ghanaian-English artist Fuse ODG who said Band Aid "perpetuates damaging stereotypes that ...
ED Sheeran says he would have stopped his vocals being used on a new version of Band Aid’s Do They Know It’s Christmas? over ...
Ed Sheeran is one of the voices on the new "ultimate" Band Aid mix, alongside Sting, Boy George, Harry Styles, Rita Ora and the Sugababes. The singers are backed by a house band that includes Paul ...
The post Ed Sheeran Says New Version of Band Aid Song Used His Vocals Without Permission appeared first on Consequence. Ed ...
Ed Sheeran has complained that his vocals have been used without permission on a "dehumanising" charity track to benefit Africa.
Ed Sheeran's Band Aid stance highlights a shift in leadership: reject performative gestures, empower autonomy, and amplify unheard voices for real impact and relevance.