Singer Muni Long faces a lawsuit from former managers Chaka Zulu and Jeff Dixon seeking more than $600,000 in unpaid commissions. The managers claim that their company, Ebony Son Entertainment, helped revive her career and secure performance deals following her recent commercial success.
Court documents state Long agreed at the 2023 Essence Festival to pay 20 percent of gross earnings plus expenses. The lawsuit alleges she stopped commission payments in October 2024 and ended communication by January 2025.
Ebony Son Entertainment says it generated over $5 million in total revenue for the artist through tours and songwriting opportunities. The firm accuses Long of concealing assets through multiple business entities.
The company seeks full repayment, financial disclosure, and legal recognition of the verbal management contract. Long has not publicly responded to the allegations.
Court documents state Long agreed at the 2023 Essence Festival to pay 20 percent of gross earnings plus expenses. The lawsuit alleges she stopped commission payments in October 2024 and ended communication by January 2025.
Ebony Son Entertainment says it generated over $5 million in total revenue for the artist through tours and songwriting opportunities. The firm accuses Long of concealing assets through multiple business entities.
The company seeks full repayment, financial disclosure, and legal recognition of the verbal management contract. Long has not publicly responded to the allegations.