On July 11, “Let God Sort Em Out” will be available.
Pharrell and The Clipse are working tirelessly to release their upcoming album, Let God Sort Em Out. This week, the trio gave a sneak peek at Kendrick Lamar’s much awaited verse on “Chains & Whips.”
There has been footage of the Virginia legends rapping in front of a throng while hanging on a rooftop in Paris. Hip-hop being dead “again,” K. Dot handing Rakim all of his money, the West Coast being at the top, his treatment experiences, and other subjects were all covered in his verse. “I don’t f**k with the kumbaya sh*t/ I’m not the candidate to vibe with/ All that talent must be God-sent/ I sent yo a** back to the comics,” he rapped.
People questioned why Def Jam and Universal Music Group were so opposed to clearing the song because there wasn’t anything specifically that sounded directed at Drake. Rob Markman, a seasoned journalist who was among the first to hear the song, described the verse as the Compton rapper’s “State Of The Union” rather than a diss. Nevertheless, Push told GQ that his label and their parent label were worried about how two of Drizzy’s enemies would appear together in the midst of the pending slander lawsuit. Here’s a sneak peek at the verse.
Travis Scott is one artist about whom Pusha T hasn’t minced words. He took aim at the Houston star in the Clipse’s most recent track, “So Be It.” Calabasas took your pride and your bi**h in front of me, and you died and wept in front of me. I heard that Utopia had moved directly up the block, and she didn’t need your food because her lip gloss was so shiny. The “net gon” refer to it as they perceive it. However, I have the footage, so I can share and A.E. it. I can’t unsee it, but they wouldn’t believe me. “Good luck, I’m not TMZing it,” he rapped.
He told GQ that the reason he had problems with the Utopia artist was because he was playing the defensive while his fellow rappers were at odds with each other. Push is known to love Pharrell, but when Scott interrupted their Paris recording session to play his July 2023 LP Utopia without playing Drake’s line on “Meltdown,” the Daytona rapper took offense because he and Skateboard P were both shot.
“He has no loyalties to anyone and no picks,” Push said. “He will cling to or jump around anything that he perceives to be hot.” However, you can play those games with those individuals. You don’t include us in your mix. Don’t move your mix to that location. Listen to “Meltdown” below.