Sixteen years after Til the Casket Drops, Clipse are back to finish what they started. The legendary Virginia duo—Pusha T and No Malice—have officially announced their long-awaited reunion album, Let God Sort Em Out, set to drop July 11, 2025. For fans who’ve been clinging to fragments and features for over a decade, this is more than an album—it’s a reckoning.
The announcement ignited the internet like dry leaves under a magnifying glass, fueled by a stunning animated album cover and a jaw-dropping tracklist that reads like a hall of fame cipher.
Pharrell Williams, the man responsible for the cold, skeletal beats that defined Clipse’s early run, is back behind the boards, and you can hear his fingerprints all over this project. The drums snap like cracked bones. The synths shimmer and convulse. This isn’t just Neptunes nostalgia—it’s an evolved, moodier, more operatic version of their sound. Gospel choirs and stark piano stabs sit side by side with trap minimalism, creating a space where grief, grace, and grit collide.
The features? Ridiculous. This thing plays like an Avengers-level summit of rap’s most compelling voices. Kendrick Lamar drops in on “Chains & Whips” with the kind of verse that will have YouTube scholars annotating for months. Tyler, The Creator spars with the brothers on “P.O.V.” like he’s fighting for generational ***. Nas, The-Dream, Stove God Cooks, Ab-Liva, and multiple appearances from Pharrell round out a lineup that feels as carefully curated as it is unpredictable. And then there’s John Legend and Voices of Fire opening the record with “The Birds Don’t Sing”—a choir-backed gut punch that feels less like a feature and more like a sermon.
Tracklist
- The Birds Don’t Sing (Ft. John Legend & Voices of Fire)
- Chains & Whips (Ft. Kendrick Lamar)
- P.O.V. (Ft. Tyler, The Creator)
- So Be It Pt. II
- Ace Trumpets
- All Things Considered (Ft. Pharrell Williams & The-Dream)
- M.T.B.T.T.F.
- E.B.I.T.D.A.
- F.I.C.O. (Ft. Stove God Cooks)
- Inglorious Bastards (Ft. Ab-Liva)
- So Far Ahead (Ft. Pharrell Williams)
- Let God Sort Em Out/Chandeliers (Ft. Nas)
- By The Grace Of God (Ft. Pharrell Williams)
Early singles like “Ace Trumpets” and the searing “So Be It” have already stirred a hornet’s nest—especially with lines targeting Travis Scott that lit comment sections on fire. It’s classic Clipse: icy, unfiltered, and laced with double meanings that demand a second listen.
“Let God Sort Em Out” feels like more than a comeback. It’s a reaffirmation. Of legacy. Of brotherhood. Of bars. In an era bloated with microwave rap, Clipse are serving a slow-cooked sermon—one that cuts through the noise with surgical precision.