PUSHA T TARGETS TRAVIS SCOTT IN CLIPSE TRACK

Pusha T targets Travis Scott in new Clipse single "So Be It" over loyalty issues. The duo also reveals Verdy artwork for upcoming album.

image discusses hip-hop conflict between Pusha T and Travis Scott stemming from a Drake verse controversy. Includes details about Clipse's comeback album "Let God Sort Em Out" releasing July 11, featuring Verdy-designed artwork and merchandise. The piece covers the background of their dispute, quotes from Pusha T's GQ interview, and information about the duo's first album in 16 years.
Cian Moore
image discusses hip-hop conflict between Pusha T and Travis Scott stemming from a Drake verse controversy. Includes details about Clipse's comeback album "Let God Sort Em Out" releasing July 11, featuring Verdy-designed artwork and merchandise. The piece covers the background of their dispute, quotes from Pusha T's GQ interview, and information about the duo's first album in 16 years.
Verdy
image discusses hip-hop conflict between Pusha T and Travis Scott stemming from a Drake verse controversy. Includes details about Clipse's comeback album "Let God Sort Em Out" releasing July 11, featuring Verdy-designed artwork and merchandise. The piece covers the background of their dispute, quotes from Pusha T's GQ interview, and information about the duo's first album in 16 years.
Verdy
image discusses hip-hop conflict between Pusha T and Travis Scott stemming from a Drake verse controversy. Includes details about Clipse's comeback album "Let God Sort Em Out" releasing July 11, featuring Verdy-designed artwork and merchandise. The piece covers the background of their dispute, quotes from Pusha T's GQ interview, and information about the duo's first album in 16 years.
Verdy
image discusses hip-hop conflict between Pusha T and Travis Scott stemming from a Drake verse controversy. Includes details about Clipse's comeback album "Let God Sort Em Out" releasing July 11, featuring Verdy-designed artwork and merchandise. The piece covers the background of their dispute, quotes from Pusha T's GQ interview, and information about the duo's first album in 16 years.
Verdy
image discusses hip-hop conflict between Pusha T and Travis Scott stemming from a Drake verse controversy. Includes details about Clipse's comeback album "Let God Sort Em Out" releasing July 11, featuring Verdy-designed artwork and merchandise. The piece covers the background of their dispute, quotes from Pusha T's GQ interview, and information about the duo's first album in 16 years.
Verdy
image discusses hip-hop conflict between Pusha T and Travis Scott stemming from a Drake verse controversy. Includes details about Clipse's comeback album "Let God Sort Em Out" releasing July 11, featuring Verdy-designed artwork and merchandise. The piece covers the background of their dispute, quotes from Pusha T's GQ interview, and information about the duo's first album in 16 years.
Verdy
image discusses hip-hop conflict between Pusha T and Travis Scott stemming from a Drake verse controversy. Includes details about Clipse's comeback album "Let God Sort Em Out" releasing July 11, featuring Verdy-designed artwork and merchandise. The piece covers the background of their dispute, quotes from Pusha T's GQ interview, and information about the duo's first album in 16 years.
Verdy
image discusses hip-hop conflict between Pusha T and Travis Scott stemming from a Drake verse controversy. Includes details about Clipse's comeback album "Let God Sort Em Out" releasing July 11, featuring Verdy-designed artwork and merchandise. The piece covers the background of their dispute, quotes from Pusha T's GQ interview, and information about the duo's first album in 16 years.
Verdy
image discusses hip-hop conflict between Pusha T and Travis Scott stemming from a Drake verse controversy. Includes details about Clipse's comeback album "Let God Sort Em Out" releasing July 11, featuring Verdy-designed artwork and merchandise. The piece covers the background of their dispute, quotes from Pusha T's GQ interview, and information about the duo's first album in 16 years.
Verdy
image discusses hip-hop conflict between Pusha T and Travis Scott stemming from a Drake verse controversy. Includes details about Clipse's comeback album "Let God Sort Em Out" releasing July 11, featuring Verdy-designed artwork and merchandise. The piece covers the background of their dispute, quotes from Pusha T's GQ interview, and information about the duo's first album in 16 years.
Verdy
image discusses hip-hop conflict between Pusha T and Travis Scott stemming from a Drake verse controversy. Includes details about Clipse's comeback album "Let God Sort Em Out" releasing July 11, featuring Verdy-designed artwork and merchandise. The piece covers the background of their dispute, quotes from Pusha T's GQ interview, and information about the duo's first album in 16 years.
Verdy
image discusses hip-hop conflict between Pusha T and Travis Scott stemming from a Drake verse controversy. Includes details about Clipse's comeback album "Let God Sort Em Out" releasing July 11, featuring Verdy-designed artwork and merchandise. The piece covers the background of their dispute, quotes from Pusha T's GQ interview, and information about the duo's first album in 16 years.
Verdy
image discusses hip-hop conflict between Pusha T and Travis Scott stemming from a Drake verse controversy. Includes details about Clipse's comeback album "Let God Sort Em Out" releasing July 11, featuring Verdy-designed artwork and merchandise. The piece covers the background of their dispute, quotes from Pusha T's GQ interview, and information about the duo's first album in 16 years.
Verdy
image discusses hip-hop conflict between Pusha T and Travis Scott stemming from a Drake verse controversy. Includes details about Clipse's comeback album "Let God Sort Em Out" releasing July 11, featuring Verdy-designed artwork and merchandise. The piece covers the background of their dispute, quotes from Pusha T's GQ interview, and information about the duo's first album in 16 years.
Verdy

Summary

  • Clipse releases "So Be It" featuring Pusha T's direct lyrics aimed at Travis Scott over perceived disloyalty
  • The conflict stems from Drake's inclusion on Scott's "Meltdown" after Scott initially played a version without the verse
  • Clipse unveils Verdy-designed alternate artwork and merchandise for their July 11 album Let God Sort Em Out

The Virginia hip-hop duo Clipse has returned with "So Be It", a track that places Travis Scott directly in Pusha T's crosshairs. The song, built around Pharrell's production, features both Pusha T and his brother Malice, though it's the former's verses that command attention.

Scott finds himself the target of pointed bars from Pusha T, who references both personal and professional aspects of the Houston rapper's life. The lyrics mention Scott's 2023 album Utopia while making apparent references to his relationship with Kylie Jenner, with whom Scott has two children. "You cried in front of me, you died in front of me/Calabasas took your b*tch and your pride in front of me/Heard UTOPIA had moved right up the street/And her lip gloss was poppin', she ain't need you to eat", Pusha T delivers.

The roots of this conflict trace back to a studio session at Louis Vuitton headquarters, where both Clipse and Scott worked alongside Pharrell. During this meeting, Scott presented his album Utopia for review. The version of "Meltdown" played that day notably excluded Drake's verse, which would later appear on the final release containing lyrics directed at Pusha T.

Speaking to GQ, Pusha T outlined his perspective on the situation. He described feeling betrayed when Drake's verse targeting him surfaced on the completed track, particularly after Scott had previewed a different version. This sequence of events led Pusha T to question Scott's loyalty and business practices.

The Clipse member extended his criticism beyond this specific incident, pointing to what he sees as a pattern of opportunistic behavior. He referenced Scott's reaction to Kendrick Lamar's "Like That", the track that intensified the Drake-Kendrick feud, noting how Scott encouraged its performance during his Rolling Loud set. "He don't have no picks, no loyalty to nobody. He'll jump around whatever he feels is hot or cling onto whatever he feels is hot", Pusha T stated.

The criticism culminated in particularly harsh language, with Pusha T describing Scott's approach to industry relationships in explicit terms during his GQ interview.

Beyond the Scott-focused content, "So Be It" represents part of Clipse's broader return to music. The track arrives alongside news of their upcoming album Let God Sort Em Out, scheduled for July 11. This marks the duo's first full-length project in sixteen years.

The album rollout includes collaborations with Japanese artist Verdy, who has created alternate cover artwork for the release. The partnership extends to merchandise, featuring T-shirts, vinyl records, CDs, and cassettes designed in Verdy's distinctive style. Graphics incorporating Vick, another element of the Clipse aesthetic, appear throughout the collection.

The merchandise and alternate artwork reflect the duo's approach to their comeback, combining their established Virginia Beach identity with contemporary design elements. Fans can access these items through the official Clipse webstore.

Let God Sort Em Out arrives as hip-hop continues to process various conflicts and alliances between major artists. The Pusha T-Travis Scott tension adds another layer to ongoing discussions about loyalty and business relationships in the genre.

The "So Be It" music video accompanies the single release, providing visual context for the track's themes and the duo's return to active recording.

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Maya Torelli

Maya Torelli

Straddling the worlds of art and communication, this creative professional established People in 2009, a content agency specializing in the fusion of words and visuals. Over the years, her work has spanned a variety of projects, including magazines and documentary films. Beyond her commercial endeavors, she dedicates herself to exploring the nature of imagery, with a particular focus on its interplay with other media forms, especially music. Her passion for music not only fuels her writing but also deeply influences her work as a filmmaker, shaping both her documentaries and video installations. With a voracious appetite for knowledge across philosophy, sociology, anthropology, and various scientific disciplines, she weaves these diverse interests into a unique, interdisciplinary approach to content creation, perspective-taking, and writing.