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[[caption-width-right:350: From left to right: Scorpio, The Kidd Creole, Grandmaster Flash, Keef Cowboy, Rahiem, and Melle Mel.]]

Grandmaster Flash and the Furious Five are one of the pioneers of HipHop. They introduced many innovations that are still a cornerstone of the genre today. Grandmaster Flash was a skillful DJ and turntable expert, who introduced the backspin technique, punch phrasing and perfected scratching. Band member Keef Cowboy was the first to use the word ''hip hop'', while Cowboy's brother Melle Mel was the first rapper to call himself ''MC'' (Master of Ceremony).

They are best known for their three hit singles ''Music/TheMessage'', ''The Adventures of Grandmaster Flash on the Wheels of Steel'' and ''White Lines (Don't Do It)'' and are seen as the progenitors of ConsciousHipHop and PoliticalRap. While many other hip hop acts were basically clowning around, Grandmaster Flash and his band used their skills to provide socially conscious messages about the hardships of modern life.

Despite being huge during the early 1980s the band faded away halfway the decade. Grandmaster claimed his label didn't pay their royalties and tensions in the band caused a split. Grandmaster Flash, Kid Creole and Rahiem continued as ''Grandmaster Flash'', while Melle Mel, Cowboy and Scorpio went on as ''Grandmaster Melle Mel & The Furious Five''. They briefly reunited in 1987 for a charity concert. Band member Cowboy died of a cocaine overdose in 1989. A definitive reunion came about in 1994, but they never managed to return to the charts again. Their musical contributions haven't been forgotten, though. In 2002 they became the first rap act to have one of their songs, ''The Message'' inducted in the UsefulNotes/NationalRecordingRegistry and in 2007 they were the first hip hop artists to be honored into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. Grandmaster Flash, Melle Mel, Scorpio, and Raheim all continue to make music and perform, but The Kidd Creole was charged with second-degree murder in 2017 and was convicted of manslaughter in April 2022.

Albums by the band:
* ''Music/TheMessage'' (1982)
* ''On The Strength'' (1988)

Albums by Grandmaster Melle Mel & the Furious Five:

* ''Grandmaster Melle Mel & The Furious Five'' (1984)
* ''Piano'' (1989)

Albums by Grandmaster Flash:

* ''They Said It Couldn't Be Done'' (1985)
* ''The Source'' (1986)
* ''Ba-Dop-Boom-Bang'' (1987)

Grandmaster Flash is also interviewed in the 1986 HipHop documentary ''Film/BigFunInTheBigTown''.

!!The classic lineup:
* Grandmaster Flash (Joseph Saddler)
* Keef Cowboy (Keith Wiggins)
* Melle Mel (Melvin Glover)
* The Kidd Creole (Nathanial Glover)
* Scorpio (Eddie Morris)
* Raheim (Guy Williams)

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!! Tropes on the Wheels of Steel:
* AddedAlliterativeAppeal: '''F'''urious '''F'''ive
* AlliterativeName: '''M'''elle '''M'''el.
* AndTheRest: Grandmaster Flash is backed by five furious, yet uncredited rappers.
* TheBigRottenApple: "New York, New York" directly talks about the dog-eat-dog, hand-to-mouth world of the poor districts of New York. "The Message" also contains the same themes, though it doesn't name the city.
* ConsciousHipHop and CrapsackWorld: One of the first rap bands to start rapping about poverty, violence and dead-end lives of Afro-American youth.
* DespairEventHorizon:
** "The Message":
---> ''Don't push me\\
Cuz I'm close to the edge.\\
I'm trying not to lose my head...''
** "New York, New York" talks about a young mother who went insane upon having the stress of a TeenPregnancy and poverty visited upon her.
* DrugsAreBad: "White Lines (Don't Do It)" is an anti-cocaine song.
* EarlyInstallmentWeirdness: Their first few singles, [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7L_YHWQMFu4 "Superappin'"]], [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hFh8baehGpE "Freedom"]] and [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kdKwEVT1_9U "The Birthday Party"]], didn't have the social-conscious element present in later recordings, being not too different in theme from other contemporary rap groups' recordings, and also were longer than their later material.
* EarlyBirdCameo: Melle Mel's last verse in "The Message" had already appeared in their single [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7L_YHWQMFu4 "Superappin'"]], three years earlier, also as Melle Mel's last verse in the song.
* EpicRocking: "The Message" and "The Adventures of Grandmaster Flash on the Wheels of Steel". Even then, both are outdone by their first single, "Superappin'", that clocks in at twelve minutes.
** They did this a lot, particularly for a hip-hop act. Lots of their other songs also pass the six-minute mark with ease, from "Flash to the Beat" (almost eleven minutes long!) to "Beat Street Breakdown" to "White Lines (Don't Do It)" to "World War III" to "New York" and on and on, though many of them have been released in several different mixes of varying length. The three-disc anthology ''[[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adventures_on_the_Wheels_of_Steel Adventures on the Wheels of Steel]]'' has an average song length of just under six minutes and twenty seconds.
* IAmTheBand: Grandmaster Flash and the Furious Five.
* InstrumentalHipHop: "The Adventures of Grandmaster Flash on the Wheels of Steel" is a track made entirely out of samples.
* NonAppearingTitle: Nowhere in "The Message" is the word "message" actually used.
* OldSchoolIntroductoryRap: In what might be the only straight example of this structure in actual hip-hop music, the song "Birthday Party" has this as a line. Even then, the second half of the bar uses neither "in a major way" nor "in the U.S.A.".
--> "Melle Mel and I'm here to say, I was born on the 15th day of May".
* OneWomanSong: "That girl is fresh!" in "She's Fresh".
* PoliticalRap[=/=]ProtestSong: "The Message" talks about the hardships of living in the ghetto, "Survival (Message II)" continues the themes, while "White Lines (Don't Do It) warns of the dangers of cocaine use.
* PrisonRape: The fate of one who does not heed the message in "The Message" and "Survival (Message II)".
* {{Sampling}}: Used samples often. "The official adventures of..." from "The Adventures of Grandmaster Flash on the Wheels of Steel" would be [[StockShoutOuts sampled in itself countless times]].
* SingerNamedrop: Just like any other hip hop band, they enjoyed doing this too.
* SirNotAppearingInThisTrailer: Despite being credited under the group's name, Grandmaster Flash himself doesn't actually appear on many of the group's songs and was more visible during stage performances when he played the turntable.
* ThisSongGoesOutToTVTropes: "Dreamin'" opens with a dedication to Music/StevieWonder, "cause he's the greatest!"
* AWildRapperAppears: Music/{{Steppenwolf}} rerecorded "Magic Carpet Ride" in 1988 with Grandmaster Flash.
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