Diddy Says He Was Joking About Paying Sting $5,000 a Day for “I’ll Be Missing You” Sample

After a clip of Sting speaking about the royalties for Diddy’s “I’ll Be Missing You” circulated online, the rapper clarified just how much he pays him.

Recording artists Sting and Diddy attend the 60th Annual GRAMMY Awards at Madison Square Garden
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Image via Getty/Christopher Polk

Recording artists Sting and Diddy attend the 60th Annual GRAMMY Awards at Madison Square Garden

UPDATED April 7, 3:17 p.m. ET: Diddy went on Twitter to clarify that he was joking about the whole thing and doesn’t actually pay Sting $5,000 a day for “I’ll Be Missing You” sample.

I want y’all to understand I was joking! It’s called being Facetious! Me and @OfficialSting have been friends for a long time! He never charged me $3K or $5K a day for Missing You. He probably makes more than $5K a day from one of the biggest songs in history. LOVE ❤️😂🙏🏿💫⚡️✨

See the original story below.

After a clip of Sting speaking about receiving the royalties for Diddy’s “I’ll Be Missing You” circulated online recentlty, the rapper clarified just how much he pays The Police frontman.

In the clip from a 2018 interview with Sting and Shaggy on The Breakfast Club, Charlamagne asked the musician if it’s true he gets paid $2,000 by Diddy every day for the initially unauthorized use of The Police’s “Every Breath You Take” on the 1997 song. “Yeah, for the rest of his life,” he replied. “It ain’t fake news.” Sting clarified that Diddy asked for permission to use the sample, but only after the song was released. “We’re very good friends now. … It was a beautiful version of that song.”

A tweet containing the interview clip got the attention of Diddy, who disputed the figure. “Nope,” he said alongside the video. “5K a day. Love to my brother [Sting]!”

Diddy reportedly pays $2,000 a day to the artist Sting for sampling his hit song “I’ll be Missing you” dedicated to rapper Biggie Smalls without permission “We are very good friends now”

Diddy’s track, which featured Faith Evans and 112, served as a tribute to his late friend the Notorious B.I.G., who was murdered just months prior. Diddy originally did not ask for permission to use the sample, and Sting filed a lawsuit that resulted in him receiving all of the royalties for the track. Despite the contentious nature surrounding “I’ll Be Missing You,” the two came together to perform a live version of it alongside Faith Evans at the 1997 MTV Video Music Awards.

It was a hugely successful release and debuted at No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100. So needless to say, Sting doesn’t seem too upset about Diddy’s use of the sample and they appear to be on good terms.

In an interview with A.V. Club, per Ultimate Classic Rock, The Police guitarist Andy Summers described the song as a “major rip-off.”

“He actually sampled my guitar, and that’s what he based his whole track on,” he noted. “Stewart’s not on it. Sting’s not on it. I’d be walking around Tower Records, and the fucking thing would be playing over and over. It was very bizarre while it lasted.”

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