Sean Michaels 

Beastie Boys star Adam Yauch’s will bans use of his music in advertising

Late Beastie Boy's will states that his image, music and art will never be licensed for commercial purposes
  
  

The Beastie Boys
Beastie Boys star Adam Yauch (right), who died in May, instructed his estate to keep his work out of any future ads. Photograph: Mario Anzuoni/Reuters Photograph: Mario Anzuoni/Reuters

Adam Yauch's image will never be used to sell you anything. According to his will, filed in court this week, the late Beastie Boy's image, music and art are never to be licensed for advertising.

Details of Yauch's will emerged on Tuesday, when his estate filed documents in Manhattan surrogate court. The rapper and film-maker, who died in May, reportedly instructed his estate to keep his work – and even his face – out of any future advertisements.

Yauch's will also states that his fortune, listed at $6.4m (£4.1m), be placed in trust for his wife and

daughter. Yauch's wife, the Tibetan rights activist Dechen Yauch, will manage his artistic property (and has a right to sell it).

While Yauch's instructions are clear with regard to his own image and music, it's not clear how these wishes affect the Beastie Boys' legal right to license the group's songs for advertisements. Earlier this week, the band's surviving members opened a lawsuit against Monster energy drink, accusing them their music without permission.

Yauch, often referred to as MCA, died from cancer. He was 47.

 

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