Clipse released their fourth album, Let God Sort Em Out, to acclaim from critics and fans alike. Part of the reason for the Virginia rap duo’s continued success is not only the chemistry shared by ...
“Clipse selling 90K first week units 16 years after their last album is an incredible feat,” one X user wrote. “90k first week sales for Clipse? Huge W. Their biggest first week since Lord Willin’ in ...
On this day in 2006, Virginia Beach’s own Clipse released the sophomore LP Hell Hath No Fury. Coming a whole four years after their celebrated, chart-topping debut Lord Willin’, Hell Hath No Fury did ...
Malice and Pusha T are the same duo they were nearly a quarter century ago when they released their first album as Clipse, 2002’s Lord Willin’. They rap with conviction, mean each word they spit on ...
Once upon the time, the Thornton brothers Gene and Terrence were the kings of cocaine rap. They were the rap duo Clipse, working under the names Malice and Pusha T, respectively. On their first album ...
As the day of Clipse’s long-awaited reunion album, Let God Sort Em Out, approached, the celebrated rap duo composed of brothers Terrance “Pusha T” and Gene “Malice” Thornton was the talk of hip-hop ...
In the pantheon of prestige rap, it never gets fancier than a Clipse reunion. While Pusha T and Malice predated the whole “play this street rapper at New York Fashion Week” motif, their stylishly ...
Clipse is back on the charts in a big way. The Virginia duo’s new album Let God Sort Em Out debuts at No. 4 on the Billboard 200, earning 118,000 equivalent album units in its first week. The release ...