RSS  |  Favorite 
Home  |  Artist  |  Album  |  Lyrics  |  Add Or Correct Lyrics  |  Forum
  • Looking for Mel Street biography ? click here
  • Mel Street Album List
  • 1 A Noite Mais Linda Lyrics
  • 2 Asas Partidas Lyrics
  • 3 Beijos E Suspiros Lyrics
  • 4 Caso Encerrado Lyrics
  • 5 Com Vocãƒâª No Pensamento Lyrics
  • 6 Como Eu Te Amo Lyrics
  • 7 Cobertor Lyrics
  • 8 De Janeiro A Janeiro Lyrics
  • 9 Deixe O Tempo Passar Lyrics
  • 10 Desejos E Loucuras Lyrics
  • 11 Anjo Querubim Lyrics
  • 12 Deu Medo Lyrics
  • 13 Ainda ãƒâ© Tempo Lyrics
  • 14 Do Meu Lado Lyrics
  • 15 E Tome Amor Lyrics
  • 16 Fica Comigo Lyrics
  • 17 Frente A Frente Lyrics
  • 18 E-Mail Lyrics
  • 19 Indiferente Lyrics
  • 20 Incertezas Lyrics
  • 21 Homem Da Lua Lyrics
  • 22 Loucura De Amor Lyrics
  • 23 Jogo Marcado Lyrics
  • 24 Luz, Camera, Aãƒâ§ãƒâ£O Lyrics
  • 25 Mentira Que Virou Paixãƒâ£O Lyrics
  • 26 Festa Da Padroeira Lyrics
  • 27 Fantasias Lyrics
  • 28 Meu Neguinho Lyrics
  • 29 Minha Vida Sem Vocãƒâª Lyrics
  • 30 Nãƒæ’O Dãƒ? Pra Ser Feliz Lyrics
  • 31 O Homem Da Lua Lyrics
  • 32 Necessidade Lyrics
  • 33 Pilera 2003 Lyrics
  • 34 Ponto Final Lyrics
  • 35 Play Record Lyrics
  • 36 Porque Nãƒâ£O Ver Lyrics
  • 37 Pra Sempre Lyrics
  • 38 Pra Sempre Com Vocãƒâª Lyrics
  • 39 Porque Nãƒâ£O Vãƒâª Lyrics
  • 40 Preso No Apartamento Lyrics
  • 41 O Que Tiver De Vim Vira Lyrics
  • 42 Sem Amor Nãƒâ£O Dãƒâ¡ Lyrics
  • 43 Nãƒâ£O Vou Deixar Lyrics
  • 44 Sem Vocãƒâª Nãƒâ£O Da Lyrics
  • 45 Sempre Te Esperei Lyrics
  • 46 Seu E-Mail Lyrics
  • 47 Toma Conta De Mim Lyrics
  • 48 Toda Sua Lyrics
  • 49 Tudo Sãƒâ³ Por Esse Amor Lyrics
  • 50 Um Sonho De Amor Lyrics
  • 51 Uma Canãƒâ§ãƒâ£O De Amor Lyrics
  • 52 Tudo Deu Em Nada Lyrics
  • 53 Viagens E Emoãƒâ§ãƒâµes Lyrics
  • 54 Tentei Te Esquecer Lyrics
  • 55 Veneno Lyrics
  • 56 Seu Nome Lyrics
  • 57 Vivendo De Solidãƒâ£O Lyrics
  • 58 Voltei Lyrics
  • 59 Um Amor De Novela Lyrics
  • Biographyby John Bush

    Lyrical leader of the original Furious Five and founder of a splinter version of the group during the mid-'80s, Melle Mel wrote many of the legendary raps featured on Grandmaster Flash tracks. Born Melvin Glover, he and his brother Nate (aka Kidd Creole) (not the Caribbean dance-popster of the same name) joined up with Cowboy (Keith Wiggins) in 1978 to form the Three MC's, with production handled by Grandmaster Flash (Joseph Saddler). After Scorpio (originally Mr. Ness, aka Ed Morris) and Raheim (Guy Williams) joined up as well, the group recorded two singles (one as the Younger Generation and Flash & the Five) before they became Grandmaster Flash & the Furious Five and recorded the magnificent "Superappin'" for Enjoy, owned by R&B legend Bobby Robinson.

    One year later, the group began recording for Sugar Hill and scored on the R&B charts with the wild party jams "Freedom" and "Birthday Party." In 1982, "The Message" became an instant rap classic, one of the first glimmers of social consciousness in hip-hop, and Melle Mel was responsible for many of the cutting lyrics. The record's enormous success ended up fracturing the group, however, despite subsequent successes like "New York New York" and "The Message II (Survival)." Melle Mel wasn't happy about sharing composer credits for "The Message" (especially with Sylvia Robinson), and Flash sued Sugar Hill, citing Robinson's conflict of interest (she not only co-owned the label, but produced and managed the group). Though most of their beefs were directed at Sugar Hill and not inwards, Grandmaster Flash & the Furious Five split down the middle, with Flash departing for Elektra with Kidd Creole (Mel's brother) and Raheim while Melle Mel stayed put and formed his own version of the group with Cowboy and Scorpio. (After a court battle regarding rights to the name, Melle Mel was allowed the use of "Grandmaster" as well.) Late in 1983, Sugar Hill released Melle Mel's "White Lines (Don't Don't Do It)," variously described as anti-drugs or pro-drugs, though the death of one of Mel's friends, a drug dealer, a few weeks before release caused him to add the parentheses.

    Mel's best year came in 1984, when he rapped over Chaka Khan's platinum, Grammy-winning "I Feel for You" (the first exposure to rapping for mainstream audiences). He was also drafted for the rap film Beat Street, where Grandmaster Melle Mel & the Furious Five performed their new hit "Beat Street" (aka "Beat Street Breakdown") and appeared next to Afrika Bambaataa, the Treacherous Three, Doug E. Fresh, and Rock Steady Crew. Mel recorded a pair of LPs for Sugar Hill during the mid-'80s, then reunited with Flash and the rest of the original Furious Five for a 1988 LP titled On the Strength. It failed miserably in an atmosphere that was decidedly anti-old school, and neither of them recorded for almost ten years. A 1997 record, Right Now, paired Melle Mel with Scorpio, but also failed to sell. His new project, Die Hard, debuted in 2001 with On Lock.

    Sponser