South Sudanese musician and unofficial Copyright Commander Anyar Yol is not laughing
In a plot twist nobody saw coming (except maybe Anyar), his song Dhuengdu magically reappeared online, now featuring John Frog, courtesy of Slatine, who apparently thought “permission” was just a Western concept.
Anyar, the original composer of the track (and apparently the last honest man in the music industry), has given the remixing duo 48 hours — not to meditate, apologize, or send flowers, but to explain how they remixed his child without parental consent.
In a scathing post, Anyar made it clear: he owns the beat, the idea, the melody — basically everything but the bad decision to remix it without permission. Now, he wants answers or consequences will rain like an unpaid studio invoice. “Slatine has no right to feature anyone without my approval.” Translation: Slatine, bro, I’m the dad here. You can’t just adopt the song and give it a new singer like it’s a foster program.
Now, if the two don’t respond in time, they may face the full wrath of Anyar, which could include strongly-worded posts, emotional voice notes, and possibly a diss track with real legal disclaimers and potential Hai Thoura legal team going head to head.
Slatine Pro and John Frog, the timer’s on. And Anyar’s mood? Somewhere between nyan shirkat promised a plate of chapati and a producer who just found out his beat is on TikTok with no tag.