King Edward J (real name: Edward J. Landrum) is a legend in the Atlanta Hip-Hop/Rap scene. He was the leader of the J-Team, a group of DJs who would later come to craft the Atlanta Booty Bass genre. The Atlanta "Booty Bass" genre was a derivative of the Miami Bass sound. However, rappers from Atlanta were more-so known for adding lyrics to the electro/dance sound. The J-Team consisted of DJ Kizzy Rock and Mr. Collipark (f/k/a DJ Smurf) to name a few. Success-n-Effect was an Atlanta based hip hop group, known for their controversial 1989 single, "Roll It Up My Nigga". The group started out as part of a mixed tape crew named Edward J & the J Team. King Edward J as he is referred to now, is credited as being the original mixed tape king in Atlanta, Georgia. King Edward J is responsible for the first generation of the J Team that included Edward J, Lady DJ, Dangerous D, MC Shy D, DJ Man, DJ Len, and Professor Lazy Rock. The second generation formed after DJ Len and Professor Lazy Rock signed their recording contract, and included King Edward J, DJ Kizzy Rock, MC Jamm, Magic Mark, Playa Poncho, DJ Smurf, Dee Most Def, Erica D, China, DJ Majesty, DJ Dlx, DJ T-Bone, DJ Jaycee (Ludacris' official DJ), and Tre Luv. Success-n-Effect's hit song used extreme racial language but ends on a positive anti-drug, pro-education message.[citation needed] The group is considered one of the more well known early political hip hop groups.[1] DJ Len and Professor Lazy Rock were among its core members.[2] They released two of their three albums on Ichiban Records. King Edward J later became the Pastor of Smith's Chapel United Methodist Church King Edward J on FaceBook • https://www.facebook.com/edward.j.landrum Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.