Pusha T and Malice of Clipse talk ‘Let God Sort Em Out,’ faith, and longevity in this exclusive interview at the 2025 ONE ...
The Grammy nominations are nearly upon us, and in honor of that, as Uproxx’s resident rap expert, it seems that it makes the ...
The Thornton brothers talk family, stigma and Grammy aspirations in a wide-ranging chat with PEOPLE Brenton Blanchet is an Associate Editor on PEOPLE's TV team. He has been working at PEOPLE since ...
No one really thought Clipse would get back together. The duo, composed of brothers Pusha T and Malice, is well known for setting a new precedent for rap throughout the aughts. If you wipe the dust ...
Legendary hip-hop duo Clipse — comprised of brothers Pusha T and No Malice — hit the stage at the ESPY Awards (referred to here as ESYPS, per user branding) at the Dolby Theatre in Los Angeles. Their ...
Having first reunited for their former producer Pharrell’s Something In The Water festival earlier this year, the iconic Virginia Beach rap duo Clipse (aka Pusha T and No Malice) have now announced ...
The Clipse, the duo of Malice and Pusha T, are currently basking in the warm reception to their latest studio album, Let God Sort Them Out, which should end up on some AOTY lists later this year. The ...
Beloved rap duo Clipse, consisting of brothers Pusha T and Malice, are putting the finishing touches on their first album in nearly 16 years, LET GOD SORT EM OUT, which will be released July 11. A new ...
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 ...
The Neptunes (Pharrell and Chad Hugo) are a major part of the Clipse (Pusha T and No Malice) story: The production duo has been at the helm of all four Clipse albums, including their latest, 2009’s ...
Clipse's Pusha T and Malice have been making records since some of today's chart-toppers were in diapers — but as longtime collaborator Pharrell Williams puts it, "you don't stop being great." By ...
Pusha’s quotables often feel like cold-blooded warnings — brief, brutal, and brilliant — while Malice offers a grounded duality, often pairing menace with moral consequence. Together, they embody a ...