Duke Bootee joined the Sugar Hill Records house band in the early 1980’s where he played on hits by The Sequence, Spoonie Gee, Grandmaster Flash & The Furious 5, The Funky 4 Plus One, and other acts signed to the label which is credited with birthing rap music as an industry. Fletcher, who earned the nick name Duke Bootee due to his admiration of shapely women wrote "The Message" based on the changing environment that he witnessed out of the basement window of his Jersey home.
“There was a park across the street from my house, and every now and then you’d hear someone break a bottle,” he told The Foundation in 2007. “That’s where the intro ‘broken glass everywhere’ comes from.” "The Message" is widely credited as the first rap song to inject social commentary into rap music, forever changing the possibilities for its use as a tool to uplift and educate. After his stint at Sugar Hill, Fletcher went on to record for Mercury Records, releasing the hits "Live Wire" and "Same Day Service" from his 1984 album Bust Me Out. Fletcher also played an integral part in 1985’s anti-apartheid anthem "Sun City."
In the same year he established Beauty & The Beat Records, launching the careers of Word Of Mouth & DJ Cheese, The Z-3 MC’s, The Point Blank MC’s, and MC Crash. Edward Fletcher taught Critical Thinking & Communication at Savannah State University from 2007 until he retired in 2019.
Learn more about Owen Fletcher here.