Lloyd Banks made a freestyle over the Clipse song Ace Trumpets. The former G-Unit rapper shared the track on his social media pages over the weekend. He used the Pharrell Williams beat from the reunion album Let God Sort Em Out. Banks called his version Cheat Code Freestyle and showed off his wordplay skills. He focused on rhyming words that end with the letter O throughout his verses.
The freestyle came about two months after his album A.O.N. 3: Despite My Mistakes. That project was the third part of his All Or Nothing series. Banks worked with guests like Ghostface Killah and Styles P on the record. He released it on streaming services for the first time on his 43rd birthday.
Benny The Butcher recently praised Lloyd Banks for his rap abilities. The Buffalo rapper said Banks has countless clever lines that other artists wish they could write. He thinks people do not give Banks enough credit for his time with G-Unit. Banks continues to prove his skills with freestyles like this one over popular beats.
The Clipse comeback has inspired many artists to create new music. Pusha T and Malice returned after years apart from making albums together. Their lead single features the type of hard beats that rappers love to freestyle over. Banks jumped on the opportunity to show fans he can still compete with younger artists.
The freestyle came about two months after his album A.O.N. 3: Despite My Mistakes. That project was the third part of his All Or Nothing series. Banks worked with guests like Ghostface Killah and Styles P on the record. He released it on streaming services for the first time on his 43rd birthday.
Benny The Butcher recently praised Lloyd Banks for his rap abilities. The Buffalo rapper said Banks has countless clever lines that other artists wish they could write. He thinks people do not give Banks enough credit for his time with G-Unit. Banks continues to prove his skills with freestyles like this one over popular beats.
The Clipse comeback has inspired many artists to create new music. Pusha T and Malice returned after years apart from making albums together. Their lead single features the type of hard beats that rappers love to freestyle over. Banks jumped on the opportunity to show fans he can still compete with younger artists.