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ThirdWorldMusic.AI is more than a legal tool — it’s a cultural and historical mission.
We are building a global coalition of artists, estates, lawyers, historians, and fans
who believe in correcting the record and empowering creators.
Join our global community working to restore justice and recognition to creators worldwide
Share your experience with uncredited work or withhelroyalties. Your story drives change.
Join our global statement to protect reggae as cultural heritage and demand transparency.
Help fund our visual archive of Sid Bucknor's legacy and the forensic music revolution.
Book our team for university panels, legal symposiums, or music conferences.
From Jamaica to the UK, artists and families are uncovering the hidden layers of music history — and reclaiming what was lost. These testimonials are not just stories — they are legal and cultural evidence that drives systemic reform.
"For decades, our family's contributions to reggae music went unrecognized. ThirdWorldMusic.AI helped us uncover documentation that proved our grandfather's role in seminal recordings."
"The forensic analysis revealed my father's bass lines in songs he was never credited for. This technology is giving voice to the voiceless and justice to the forgotten."
Partnering with our movement provides strategic advantages for legal professionals and their clients in the entertainment industry.
By aligning with a movement rooted in historical justice, lawyers and firms gain trust and visibility within the global creative community.
Public support for underserved artists builds ethical credibility in litigation, arbitration, and media relations.
Participation increases exposure to clients with unrecovered royalties, misattribution claims, or archival rights issues.
Access to international working groups and lobbying platforms focused on PRO reform, CMO audits, and metadata correction.
Adds weight to lawsuits by framing them within a broader civil rights and cultural ownership context, creating stronger cases and public support.
Join thousands of artists, legal professionals, and advocates working to restore justice and recognition to creators worldwide.
For decades, reggae was seen as a cultural rhythm — a genre of resistance and roots.
But what if the genre had an author no one credited?
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