Can I Legally Use The Weeknd One Of The Girls Lyrics?

2025-11-05 01:25:29 229

3 Answers

Sophia
Sophia
2025-11-06 13:18:14
I'm curious about this stuff too, so here's the short-but-thorough take from someone who obsesses over music rights and creative projects: you generally cannot just reproduce lyrics from 'One of the Girls' by 'The Weeknd' without permission. Lyrics are protected by copyright just like the melody and the recording, and copying them into a blog post, merch, video, or anything you publish is reproduction that belongs to whoever holds the publishing rights.

That said, context matters. If you quote a very short excerpt for critique, commentary, or review, that might be covered under fair use in the U.S. — but fair use isn't a free pass; courts look at how much you quoted, whether it affects the market for the original, and the purpose of your use. In many other countries (like the UK, Canada, Australia) the exceptions are narrower, so what feels safe in a tweet might still be legally dicey elsewhere.

If you want to legally use full lyrics in a monetized video, on merchandise, or in an app, you usually need to license them. For videos you need a synchronization license from the publisher; for recordings of covers distributed commercially you need a mechanical license; for live performances venues usually cover public-performance rights via blanket licenses from ASCAP/BMI/SESAC or international collecting societies. Services like LyricFind or Musixmatch handle licensed lyrics for many platforms, and companies like the Harry Fox Agency or services in your country can help with mechanical rights.

Practical route: identify the publisher (PRO databases or the song's credits), request permission, or alternatively quote a very small excerpt with clear attribution and link to the official source — or paraphrase the meaning instead. Personally, I usually link to the official lyric video or use a short quoted line and a strong commentary angle; it keeps the vibe alive without a copyright headache.
Stella
Stella
2025-11-07 03:32:42
If I were planning a creative project that references 'One of the Girls' by 'The Weeknd', I'd break it down into what kind of use it is and then act accordingly. Are you quoting a line in an essay? That could fall into fair use territory if it's for critique or education and you're not hurting the market for the song. Are you putting the words on a T-shirt or using them in a commercial ad? That almost certainly needs a clear license from the publisher and possibly the record label.

From my experience releasing covers and collaborating with creators, different licenses apply: mechanical licenses let you distribute audio covers; sync licenses let you pair the song (or its lyrics) with video; public performance is handled by PROs for live gigs or radio; and posting lyrics as text usually needs the publisher’s permission. For covers, platforms like DistroKid or services from agencies can obtain mechanical licenses for you. For on-screen lyrics in a video, you typically need to negotiate sync rights.

I’ve saved myself headaches by contacting publishers early. Look up the song in PRO databases (ASCAP, BMI, SESAC) or international equivalents to find who to contact. If you want to avoid that hassle, summarize the lyric or quote a very short phrase with attribution and a link to the official source — that lowers risk, though it’s not bulletproof. Personally, when my projects riff on a song, I try to either license properly or keep it transformative: focus on commentary, reaction, or a brief quoted line and make clear it's commentary rather than a replacement for the original. That approach has kept my channels monetized and my stress levels down.
David
David
2025-11-08 21:44:00
Here’s the no-fluff practical view I use when deciding whether to use lyrics from 'One of the Girls' by 'The Weeknd': lyrics are copyrighted, so copying them wholesale into a commercial project, product, or published work is not legal without permission. If you're posting a short excerpt while reviewing or critiquing the song, that might be fair use in some places, but it's a gray area and depends on the amount you quote and the purpose. If you want to record a cover and distribute it, get a mechanical license through the proper agency; if you want the words on merch or in a video, you'll need a publisher’s license or a sync license.

For casual use on social platforms, many platforms have deals with rights holders that allow clips and user-generated singing clips — but those deals vary and aren’t a substitute for explicit permission if you monetize or go beyond the platform’s allowances. A safer, low-cost route is to paraphrase the lyrics, link to the official lyric source, or use very short quoted lines while adding original commentary. Personally, I tend to paraphrase or quote a single short line and add my own spin — it keeps things legal and still meaningful to fans.
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