Unfortunately 50 exudes the charisma three men rolled in to one, so Lloyd may always be seen as second fiddle. Occasionally it seems a bit ironic Banks rolls with 50 because on his own or in any other group he’d be the alpha male, as his ruggedly gruff voice and smooth delivery make even the filthiest of sentiments come out clean.
If it ain’t broke don’t fix it right? So far there’s no evidence anything about Lloyd broke during the two year interim. Rule number one, keep your gun or get your ass hitīy the same niggaz you used to party with” I wouldn’t buy a chick a pump that got asthmaĭamn near chauvinist, hand over the plasticĬause they wanna see your man go in a casket
This ain’t a free ride, you gotta have the gas ma Two in the front, in the back got the plasma I’m a rap star, who ‘posed to be ridin around in that car Look miss, get a grip and let a muh’fucker be It mean the world to her, it’s nuttin but a nut to me I’m soakin it all up, while your girl’s suckin me
“Yeah, it feels so good to live sucker free Listening to the the pounding dancefloor beat of “Hands Up,” produced by Eminem, Dangerous LLC and Bang Out with a catchy hook sung by 50 it’s clear the formula hasn’t changed one bit: They started off with a couple of hot singles, got a buzz going, and then released an album that largely lived up to the public expectations. In fact it’s not unlike the patient wait G-Unit fans had for his solo album “The Hunger for More” the first time around, because at the time Banks was the first member of 50’s family after the G-Unit group album. You may have thought they were too embroiled in feuding with The Game or dealing with their various legal problems to record any albums, but on the low Christopher Lloyd, b/k/a Lloyd Banks has been diligently been putting in work.