Clipse continue to build excitement around their highly anticipated fourth album Let God Sort Em Out with a fresh snippet.
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On Tuesday (May 7), Pusha T posted a video of himself preparing for the 2025 Met Gala, soundtracked by a minute-long preview of an unreleased track, seemingly titled “So Far Ahead.” The one-minute clip features Pharrell Williams doing what he does best — lacing the beat and delivering a hypnotic hook — while Pusha flexes with bars about “the art of war.”
While there’s still no official release date, Let God Sort Em Out is already in the vault. Pusha confirmed the project is done during a convo with Ari Melber at Miami Art Week last December: “We always take long, people be mad. [But] it’s okay ’cause it’s done. I’m telling y’all, it’s done. I promise you. It’s in my phone.”
Pharrell has taken full control of production for Let God Sort Em Out, echoing the formula behind Clipse’s critically acclaimed first two albums, Lord Willin’ and Hell Hath No Fury. According to the Thornton brothers, Pharrell’s been championing this comeback for a minute.
“He’s definitely been pushing for it and we always knew in the back of our heads it was always a possibility,” Malice revealed. “So, when things just started to take shape, and the timing was right, I think it just came [together] just as it should.”
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In recent years, Clipse have reunited for select performances and collaborations. Their most notable reunion came in 2022 at the Something in the Water festival in Washington, D.C., marking their first onstage appearance together in over a decade. They’ve also teamed up on tracks like Kanye West’s “Use This Gospel,” NIGO’s “Punch Bowl,” and “I Pray For You” from Pusha’s 2022 album It’s Almost Dry.
Earlier this year, the duo debuted their first official single from the album, “Birds Don’t Sing” featuring John Legend, during Louis Vuitton’s Spring/Summer fashion show in Paris. Speaking again with Ari Melber, Pusha T described the album as a showcase of Clipse’s evolution: “I think the album shows the supreme maturation of a rap duo. I think this is where you get the difference between taste and filler. This music is curated. This is a high taste-level piece of work. You can only have that level of taste when you have the fundamentals down to a science. I think it’s been definitely missing. Then there’s the competitive aspect.”