THE MESSAGE AT 40: CELEBRATING DUKE BOOTEE'S CONCEPTUAL GENIUS BY SHELDON TAYLOR
Dig deep in rap’s archival history and you'll unearth many watershed moments. One of them is undoubtedly the release of Grandmaster Flash and the Furious Five’s 1982 single The Message forty years ago this month. Painting panoramic scenes of urban blight and decay, The Message pushed rap beyond typical party-hearty themes that resonated with listeners. I was 13 years old when the record dropped. In my mind's eye, I can still see Furious Five lead emcee Melle Mell on Soul Train menacingly wielding a baseball bat. His depiction of dopefiends with larceny in their cold hearts was chilling: Junkies in the alley with the baseball bat...... Reveling in its vividness I committed the song to memory. It was next-level freshness. Young rap fans like me loved it. Older listeners weaned on Gil Scott-Heron or The Last Poets' would connect the dots and lavish praise. Rap records were arriving at a dizzying pace. While the E...