The GRAMMYs

2026

Let God Sort Em Out

Let God Sort Em Out

Dec 1st, 2025

Album Of The Year

Album Of The Year

Nomination

Let God Sort Em Out (Clipse, Pusha T, Malice) is nominated for The GRAMMYs 2026 Album Of The Year

Let God Sort Em Out (Clipse, Pusha T, Malice) is nominated for The GRAMMYs 2026 Album Of The Year

Let God Sort Em Out (Clipse, Pusha T, Malice) is nominated for The GRAMMYs 2026 Album Of The Year

Clipse's Let God Sort Em Out reunited brothers Pusha T and Malice for their first full-length project in 16 years, produced entirely by Pharrell Williams.

Commercial success

  • The album debuted at No. 4 on the Billboard 200 chart.

  • It sold 118K equivalent units in its first week of release.

  • It debuted at No. 1 on Billboard’s Independent Albums chart.

Cultural impact

  • Clipse performed "Ace Trumpets" on A COLORS SHOW.

  • The duo made their NPR Tiny Desk Concert debut, performing a mix of deep cuts, new songs, and classics.

  • Clipse announced the "Let God Sort Em Out Tour," their first US tour in 15 years.

Critical response

  • The New York Times described Let God Sort Em Out as "a clear continuation of the work they did in the 2000s that made them favorites of street-rap realists and internet-fueled curio seekers." Read full review

  • Consequence stated that the album carries the MCs "far beyond the finite walls of the 'coke rap' subgenre, balancing 'the contrasting weights of prayer and pain'." Read full review

  • "A well-executed album occasionally weighed down by its grandiosity," is how Variety described it, noting "unfailingly sharp rapping, but dented by heavy-handed self-mythology and intermittently sterile Pharrell Williams beats." Read full review

Clipse's Let God Sort Em Out reunited brothers Pusha T and Malice for their first full-length project in 16 years, produced entirely by Pharrell Williams.

Commercial success

  • The album debuted at No. 4 on the Billboard 200 chart.

  • It sold 118K equivalent units in its first week of release.

  • It debuted at No. 1 on Billboard’s Independent Albums chart.

Cultural impact

  • Clipse performed "Ace Trumpets" on A COLORS SHOW.

  • The duo made their NPR Tiny Desk Concert debut, performing a mix of deep cuts, new songs, and classics.

  • Clipse announced the "Let God Sort Em Out Tour," their first US tour in 15 years.

Critical response

  • The New York Times described Let God Sort Em Out as "a clear continuation of the work they did in the 2000s that made them favorites of street-rap realists and internet-fueled curio seekers." Read full review

  • Consequence stated that the album carries the MCs "far beyond the finite walls of the 'coke rap' subgenre, balancing 'the contrasting weights of prayer and pain'." Read full review

  • "A well-executed album occasionally weighed down by its grandiosity," is how Variety described it, noting "unfailingly sharp rapping, but dented by heavy-handed self-mythology and intermittently sterile Pharrell Williams beats." Read full review

Clipse's Let God Sort Em Out reunited brothers Pusha T and Malice for their first full-length project in 16 years, produced entirely by Pharrell Williams.

Commercial success

  • The album debuted at No. 4 on the Billboard 200 chart.

  • It sold 118K equivalent units in its first week of release.

  • It debuted at No. 1 on Billboard’s Independent Albums chart.

Cultural impact

  • Clipse performed "Ace Trumpets" on A COLORS SHOW.

  • The duo made their NPR Tiny Desk Concert debut, performing a mix of deep cuts, new songs, and classics.

  • Clipse announced the "Let God Sort Em Out Tour," their first US tour in 15 years.

Critical response

  • The New York Times described Let God Sort Em Out as "a clear continuation of the work they did in the 2000s that made them favorites of street-rap realists and internet-fueled curio seekers." Read full review

  • Consequence stated that the album carries the MCs "far beyond the finite walls of the 'coke rap' subgenre, balancing 'the contrasting weights of prayer and pain'." Read full review

  • "A well-executed album occasionally weighed down by its grandiosity," is how Variety described it, noting "unfailingly sharp rapping, but dented by heavy-handed self-mythology and intermittently sterile Pharrell Williams beats." Read full review