Todd Edward Imperatrice (born December 9, 1972), known professionally as Todd Edwards, is an American garage house record producer, DJ, and singer. Nicknamed " The God" and known by various aliases throughout his career, he has been credited as a significant influence on electronic music. He inspired the French house duo Daft Punk and played a role in the creation of the UK garage genre.
Edwards began his career producing primarily for New York's Nervous Records in the 1990s, including under aliases such as the Messenger and the Sample Choir. Beginning with his 1993 single "Guide My Soul", Edwards helped pioneer the speed garage genre. His 1994 single "Saved My Life" became a club hit in the UK.
Edwards has remixed hundreds of artists, including Wildchild, St Germain, Benjamin Diamond, Justice, Klaxons and Dimitri from Paris. Edwards has collaborated with Daft Punk on two successful songs, co-producing and contributing vocals on the songs "Face to Face" (2001) and "Fragments of Time" (2013); the earlier reached number one on the Billboard Dance Club Songs chart in 2004, while the latter won him a Grammy Award for its inclusion on Random Access Memories, which won Album of the Year at the 2014 show.
In the late 1990s, Edwards connected with the electronic duo Daft Punk, who attempted to collaborate with him on their album Homework. Although a collaboration didn't materialize due to their then-unknown status, they acknowledged him in their song "Teachers" on the album. In 1999, he reconnected with Daft Punk, resulting in the creation of the song "Face to Face," where he co-produced and performed the vocals. The song was included in the 2001 album Discovery and later released as a promotional single two years later, reaching number 1 on the Billboard Dance Club Songs chart in 2004.
On January 1, 2003, EZ booked Edwards to play at the nightclub at Time & Envy in Romford, England, during EZ's 4by4 sets. Edwards, who had previously declined to play in the United Kingdom despite his music's popularity there, later explained that he had never really DJ'd in a club before. His set was captured on camera, and DJ Mag noted that it has been "constantly regurgitated by various music platforms on social media," including a misunderstanding between Edwards and the MC when the MC asked for a rewind during the set.
In April 2020, London-based house label Defected Records announced that they had acquired Edwards's catalogue, most of which had previously been available exclusively on physical mediums such as vinyl and CDs. In May 2021, Edwards and Defected Records announced that his back catalogue would be available digitally for the first time, with remastered releases, remixes, and previously unreleased songs. Speaking about the remasters, he said that it had "been almost a decade since he got back the music catalog" and that Defected was the perfect label to share his music with both an old and new audience.
On March 22, 2023, a bonus track from the 10th anniversary edition of Random Access Memories titled "The Writing of Fragments of Time" was released. The single is an eight-minute track consisting of multiple spoken discussions and sung improvisations between Thomas Bangalter and Todd Edwards as they work on the lyrics and melody of the song. That same year, Edwards was featured in a documentary released by Daft Punk titled Memory Tapes.
Over time, he began developing his own style, with his techniques of chopping samples becoming an early characteristic of speed garage and later 2-step garage. In separate interviews about his favorite tracks, he included songs by Roy Davis Jr., TJR, Armand van Helden, and other artists from the US and UK garage scenes.
His remix of St Germain's "Alabama Blues" was included in Pitchfork's list of the top 30 best house tracks of the 1990s. Ben Cardew described Edwards's technique as a refinement of MK's style, calling it a "buoyantly rhythmic and geometrically patterned mosaic," which served as an inspiration for Daft Punk. The remixes have also been featured on The Guardian's list of the best UK garage tracks, ranking at number 16, and on Rolling Stone's top 200 Greatest Dance Songs of All Time, ranking at number 138.
Todd Edwards became a committed Christianity in the 1990s after he had negative experiences with religion during his youth. His faith is subtly reflected in his music, as many of his compositions include hidden messages and vocal samples containing religious phrases, often layered within his signature production style. In a 2021 interview with The Guardian, he revealed that he had been experiencing a crisis of faith, admitting "Me and God are seeing other people right now, that’s what I say. I just try to practice the good things from Christianity. ... I have to confess: sorry, I’m struggling with it." In a 2025 interview for Buds Digest, he expressed that he identified as a "deconstructed Christian" and that he required therapy to help him accept himself.
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