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- Summary: The first full-length studio release from rap duo Clipse since 2009's Til the Casket Drops features guest appearances by Ab-Liva, Kendrick Lamar, John Legend, Nas, Stove God Cooks, The-Dream, Voices of Fire, and Pharrell Williams.
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- Record Label: Roc Nation
- Genre(s): Rap
- More Details and Credits »
Score distribution:
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Positive: 9 out of 11
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Mixed: 2 out of 11
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Negative: 0 out of 11
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Jul 10, 2025Let God Sort Em Out offers far more than nostalgia: familiar but fresh, it’s one of the albums of the year.
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Jul 10, 2025Clipse raps about life like the recording process is a religious experience. Let God Sort Em Out is yet another example of the pair’s reverence for the rap game and its possibilities.
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Jul 11, 2025The album’s potential top-shelf contenders form a tight three-way tie between ‘Mike Tyson Blow to the Face’, ‘Chains & Whips’ with Kendrick Lamar, and ‘F.I.C.O.’ alongside Stove God Cooks. Clever use of a cappella negative space and boom-bap-style drums (‘M.T.B.T.T.F.’), lyrical density (‘Chains & Whips’) and boots-on-the-ground storytelling (‘F.I.C.O.’) make this trilogy stand as not only as some of Clipse’s strongest material, but also as some of Pharrell’s finest production in years.
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Jul 9, 2025This is an album that underscores several of them [important truths]: Whatever the year, Pusha and Malice are richer than you, smarter than you, and much better at making rap music than you’ll ever be.
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The WireAug 7, 2025Let God Sort Em Out, their first LP in 16 years, might be their richest to date. [Sep 2025, p.50]
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Jul 15, 2025Here, the duo still sounds like the mortal threat they represented in younger days, but integrates refinement, spirituality, and reflection on hard-learned lessons under that lens, communicating from a place of wisdom without losing any of their time-tested fury.
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Jul 14, 2025The album wears its sterile shine like armor—which, given how rare this level of slickness is for hip-hop albums made by MCs older than the presidential age requirement, might even be admirable—but it doesn’t move forward or backward. It just poses and expects us to applaud.