
Artist
Lloyd Banks
Lloyd Banks is a hip-hop artist from Queens, New York, USA formed in 1999. 33 releases are catalogued on Riffiter.
Hip-Hop · Queens, New York, USA · Best hip-hop albums
- 33
- Releases
- 2004–2026
- Active years
- 1999
- Formed

Artist
Lloyd Banks is a hip-hop artist from Queens, New York, USA formed in 1999. 33 releases are catalogued on Riffiter.
Hip-Hop · Queens, New York, USA · Best hip-hop albums

Most popular
The Hunger for More
2004

Rotten Apple
2006

The Course of the Inevitable 2
2022

The Course of the Inevitable
2021

Money in the Bank
2018

The Cold Corner 2
2011
Rookie of the Year
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On Fire Mixtape
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Mo' Money in the Bank Pt. 2
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HHVI THE SIX OF SWORDS
2025

The Course Of The Inevitable 3: Pieces Of My Pain
2023

Dead Nig*a Storage
2018

The Shitty City
2018

Lamborghini Lloyd
2014

Bank$ Taking My Popoff
2014

The Return of Blue Hef
2011

Cashing in Mo Money in the Bank, Pt. 3
2010

The Return of the Plk
2010
H.F.M. 2 (The Hunger for More)
2010

H.F.M. 2 (Hunger for More 2)
2010

The Cold Corner
2010
The Bank Vault, Part 7
2010

Mo Money in the Bank
2009

Mo' Money in the Bank, Pt. 4
2008

Southside (The Prequel)
2005
Releases by other artists featuring Lloyd Banks.
Christopher Charles Lloyd (born April 30, 1982), better known by his stage name Lloyd Banks, is an American hip hop recording artist and member of East Coast hip hop group G-Unit along with childhood friends and fellow American rappers 50 Cent and Tony Yayo. Raised in South Jamaica, Queens, he dropped out of high school in 1998. G-Unit released two albums, Beg for Mercy in 2003 and T.O.S. (Terminate on Sight) in 2008. Banks released his first solo album The Hunger for More in 2004 with the top ten hit single "On Fire". He followed with Rotten Apple in 2006 and left Interscope Records 2009. In 2010 G-Unit signed with EMI to distribute Banks third studio album H.F.M. 2 (Hunger for More 2), which was released on November 22, 2010. Banks was born in New Carrollton, Maryland and raised in Queens, New York City; he is of mixed Puerto Rican and African American descent. His father spent most of Lloyd's childhood in prison, leaving his mother to raise him and his two siblings. Lloyd attended August Martin High School but dropped out at age 16. For his stage name, he took his great, great-grandfather's name Banks, which was passed on by his uncles who also shared it.