The Return of Clipse: A High-Stakes Comeback

After a 16-year hiatus, Clipse—West Virginia duo Pusha T and No Malice—officially returned with their fourth studio album, Let God Sort Em Out, set for release on July 11, 2025 via Roc Nation

Jim Jones Compliments Pusha T, Waiting Patiently for His Response

Produced entirely by Pharrell Williams, the album is packed with hardcore lyricism and star-studded features, including Kendrick Lamar, Nas, and John Legend

Pusha T AIRS OUT Jim Jones For DISSING Nas Legacy │ Jim TRASHES Clipse

The Malice vs. Jim Jones Sidetrack

One of the album’s most shocking moments comes not from Pusha but from No Malice. He targets Jim Jones in a bar that addresses Nas’s presence:

Jim Jones Takes More Shots At Pusha T & No Malice In Joe Budden Call |  HipHopDX

“…he’s chasing a feature out of his element…”
(Pusha’s verse, widely interpreted as referencing Jim Jones)

Jones, the veteran Dipset leader, had publicly dissed Pusha, calling him overrated and not “Top 50 rap material”

Clipse’s new track doesn’t hold back—its razor-sharp lines leave little doubt: No Malice retaliates on behalf of his brother.

Clipse Announces New Album | Hypebeast

Nas at the Center of the Beef

Adding fuel to the fire: Clipse recently previewed a song featuring Nas. During a Paris listening, fans heard Nas deliver a potent verse—something Malice clearly supports.

Rapper No Malice Stopped By The Breakfast Club [NSFW, VIDEO]

No Malice’s mention of “feature out of element” likely nods to Jim’s prior claim that Nas’s relevance has faded

Jim’s recent comments downplaying Nas—“My son can’t tell me one Nas record”—deepened the provocation .

Clipse' duo Pusha T, No Malice reunite for Pharrell Williams' Something in  the Water festival - Entertainment News

Jim Jones Fires Back

True to form, Jim wasted no time responding:

In his video “Summer Collection,” he disses Pusha and No Malice directly, calling their music “garbage” and alluding to No Malice’s lifestyle

On Joe Budden’s podcast, he mocked Malice—“a preacher who works at Walmart”—and questioned Pusha’s credibility

But insiders say Clipse expected this—rap battles are part of the package.

Rapper No Malice Stopped By The Breakfast Club [NSFW, VIDEO]

Why This Matters: Legacy, Respect, and Rap Hierarchies

This feud transcends ego:

Nas’s inclusion on a Clipse track is symbolic, signaling real artistry.

Jim’s beef appears rooted in jealousy over Nas’s feature and Clipse’s sampling of elite collaborators.

Malice’s rebuttal proves that Clipse isn’t just about Pusha’s sharp bars—they’re united.

The Clipse Missed This: Pusha T and No Malice on Reuniting

 

 

As Malice told GQ, Pusha’s been pushed into “demon mode,” and that includes defending his family

Clipse Reunion: Pusha T and Malice on New Album 'Let God Sort Em Out'

Early Album Details & Tour

Let God Sort Em Out launches July 11, 2025 It includes “Ace Trumpets” (released May 30) and “So Be It” (June 17), which also hints at Travis Scott, Kanye, and others—showing broad thematic reach

A 25-date U.S. tour is scheduled from August 3 to September 10

 

Pusha T and No Malice reunite Clipse for first time in over a decade

 

Fan Reaction & Cultural Significance

Reddit and social commentary suggest this feud marks a significant moment:

“One of the hardest rappers of all time”—fans celebrating Malice’s return to form

Clipse discography - Wikipedia

On Nas’s defense, fans push back on Jim:

“Jim Jones a clown. Nas more relevant than him… Jim is invisible.”

The consensus? Clipse isn’t just back—they’re setting a standard for rap credibility.

Clipse | Drake Wiki | Fandom

Malice’s Evolution: From No Malice to Verbal Assassin

No Malice—formerly No Malice—has undergone a personal transformation toward faith and away from street rap. Yet here he is, aggressive and precise, matching Pusha’s intensity in defending their legacy

His participation gives Clipse renewed balance: nostalgia, spirituality, and unapologetic lyricism.

NAS ETHERS JIM JONES! (REACTION) - YouTube

Industry Response

GQ highlighted that Pusha and Malice aim to “elevate the rap game” now seen as stagnant

Pharrell’s backing adds weight—performances at major fashion events confirm Clipse’s cultural relevance

Jim’s combative rebuttals chase headlines but haven’t matched the lyrical craftsmanship displayed by Clipse.

Jim Jones Brutally Disrespects Nas & Praises Himself | Compilation - YouTube

 

Final Take: Clipse Reclaims the Throne

Let God Sort Em Out is more than a reunion—it’s a reckoning.

Malice’s lyrical revenge on Jim Jones underscores Clipse’s unity and commitment to respect in hip‑hop. With Nas involved, they’re making a statement: this is their era again, and the heavyweight Believers are in full force.

Jim Jones Compares Pusha T, No Malice to Slaves on New Diss Track

What’s Next:

Will Jim Jones respond in kind with an album-worthy verse?

How will Nas’s feature be received—artistically and critically?

Can Clipse’s tour convert this buzz into sustained legacy cementation?

 

Let me know if you’d like a track-by-track breakdown, analysis of rap politics, or a history of Clipse’s impact.