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Clipse Vinyl: The Definitive Collector’s Guide to All 4 LPs (2025)

Clipse on wax is a 23-year time capsule. From Lord Willin’ in 2002 to Let God Sort Em Out in 2025, the Thornton brothers — Pusha T and No Malice — built one of the most uncompromised catalogs in hip-hop, and you can finally own the whole arc on vinyl. This is the definitive Clipse vinyl collector’s guide: every studio album, every reissue tier, every 2025 variant of Let God Sort Em Out decoded, plus an opinionated spend-tier strategy for where to start and what to chase.

If you came here from the Roc Nation Store, Turntable Lab, or Get On Down trying to figure out which Clipse vinyl to buy first, this is your map. We’ll cover all four LPs (Lord Willin’ 2002, Hell Hath No Fury 2006, Til the Casket Drops 2009, and Let God Sort Em Out 2025), the KAWS visual collaboration, the Pharrell-in-Paris recording arc, the Kendrick and Nas verse origins, and the single smartest bundle to start a collection.

Why Clipse Vinyl Hits Different in 2025

clipse vinyl collection Lord Willin Hell Hath No Fury Let God Sort Em Out gatefold sleeves

For sixteen years, Clipse fans had to live with an incomplete shelf. The duo went on hiatus after 2009’s Til the Casket Drops, and the original-era Star Trak pressings — under Arista, Jive, and Columbia across three different label regimes — went out of print in stages. Owning all three on wax meant secondary-market hunting, mostly through Discogs, with prices climbing as Pusha T’s solo run kept Clipse mythology alive.

Then July 11, 2025 happened. Let God Sort Em Out dropped via Roc Nation with a vinyl variant grid most artists don’t get: a Gold Sunflare gatefold direct from Roc Nation Store, a US-only Pink LP with a signed insert, a Crystal Clear limited edition, an Indie Exclusive Deluxe through Turntable Lab, a Complex Shop exclusive, plus the standard black, CD, and cassette. Discogs catalogs 28 versions of the release across all formats. The reunion didn’t just give Clipse a new record — it gave the catalog a center of gravity that pulled the back catalog into print alongside it.

Pharrell put the cultural stakes in plain language during the Complex Cover documentary: “We’re not competing against nobody except our 16-year-old selves.” Owning the four Clipse LPs side by side in 2025 is owning the receipt for that competition. If you want the full backstory on the reunion, our Clipse New Album: Let God Sort Em Out — Complete Guide walks the album-context layer; for the duo’s full origin story, see Clipse Band: The Virginia Duo That Turned Cocaine Into Scripture. The throughline matters because the records reward it.

Let God Sort Em Out (2025): Every Variant Decoded

Let God Sort Em Out vinyl Gold Sunflare Pink Crystal Clear variants Roc Nation

The 2025 Let God Sort Em Out vinyl rollout was engineered like a streetwear drop, and it’s where most new collectors are starting. Here’s the variant grid, in order of collectibility.

Gold (Sunflare) Gatefold — Roc Nation Store

Direct-to-consumer through store.rocnation.com at $29.99. The gatefold packaging holds a metallic gold LP that catches light like an actual sunflare across the surface. Roc Nation capped this variant at four per customer at launch — a soft signal of expected demand that turned out to be wildly understated. The Gold sold out faster than most artist-direct pressings of 2025, and it has a clean resale floor on Discogs already. If you can only own one variant of Let God Sort Em Out, this is the canonical version: the gatefold is the proper home for the KAWS-era art, and the gold pairs with the album’s predominantly black-and-gold color story.

Pink (Signed Insert) — US-Only Limited

This is the collector’s variant. Pink translucent LP, US-only pressing, with a signed insert from Pusha and No Malice. The autograph component plus the visual contrast against the album’s black-and-gold packaging makes it the most chased of the four major color variants. If you came here trying to figure out which Clipse vinyl will hold value, this is the one — limited US run, signature provenance, visually distinct from every other variant in the rollout.

Crystal Clear — Limited Edition

A clear translucent vinyl pressing, sold as a limited edition. Pressing numbers haven’t been publicly disclosed, but Crystal Clear variants in the Clipse rollout have moved fast at every retailer that stocked them. For the collector who wants something distinct from the Gold and Pink without going the indie-exclusive route, Crystal Clear is the third pillar.

Indie Exclusive Deluxe — Turntable Lab

This is a separate pressing tier from the Roc Nation Store direct-to-consumer Gold. Indie exclusives go to independent record stores — Turntable Lab is one of the most respected in the US — and they’re a distinct collector category. The Indie Exclusive Deluxe variant has packaging and pressing details specific to the indie-store rollout. If you’re the type of collector who values the indie-record-store ecosystem over the artist-direct route, this is the one.

Complex Shop Exclusive

Complex routes a separate exclusive pressing through complex.com/shop/products/let-god-sort-em-out-lp. Most SERP roundups skip this exists; it’s worth knowing about if you’re variant-completing.

Standard Black LP, CD, and Cassette

The standard black LP is the everyday listener’s choice — same audio, no variant premium. Cassette and CD pressings round out the rollout for completionists. Discogs catalogs 28 versions of the master release across all formats, including international pressings.

What gives Let God Sort Em Out its distinct sonic identity is something every SERP result skips: this is the only Clipse album made on another continent. Pusha confirmed in the Complex Cover documentary that the bulk of LGSEO was tracked in Paris, where Pharrell had relocated. Every prior Clipse album was recorded in Virginia. The album’s leaner sonic palette — colder, more spatial, with Pharrell pushing what he called a “stencil” structure where every verse had to lock to a song frame, not sprawl as mixtape collage — comes from that geographic and philosophical shift. Pusha described finishing a verse on the album as “like you just solved a Rubik’s cube.” You can hear the constraint on every track. That’s what the gatefold is for: this isn’t a casual listen.

The Features That Made LGSEO a Statement Piece

Eight features, every one of them justified. Let God Sort Em Out is built on a deliberately tight rolodex — Clipse doesn’t carry passengers — and the verse origins explain why the record carries the weight it does.

Kendrick Lamar on “Chains & Whips.” Pusha told Complex that Kendrick heard the beat and song frame and personally asked to be on it. Pusha’s quote: “He blow-torched it. Smoked it.” Most SERP results name Kendrick as a feature; the origin matters. Kendrick volunteering for a Clipse track in 2025 is the kind of moment that establishes hierarchy in real time.

Nas on “Let God Sort Em Out / Chandeliers.” Pusha called Nas’s verse “bucket list shit.” Nas closes the title track — the closing-act feature on the title track of a comeback album is a placement choice that telegraphs everything Clipse think about Nas’s place in the lineage. He delivered the verse without notes.

Tyler, The Creator on “P.O.V.” Tyler’s been Pharrell-adjacent for over a decade and the verse plays to the family resemblance. The track is one of the more melodic moments on an otherwise austere album.

John Legend & Voices of Fire on “The Birds Don’t Sing.” Track one. The tribute to Gene Thornton Sr., Pusha and No Malice’s late father. Pharrell on first hearing Pusha’s verse: “I sent it to him and I literally couldn’t take it.” The placement is intentional — the album opens with a moment of family grief before pivoting into the harder material. If you ever wondered whether Pusha and Malice are actually brothers, our Are Pusha T and Malice Brothers piece walks the family context.

Pharrell on “All Things Considered,” “E.B.I.T.D.A.,” “So Far Ahead,” and “By the Grace of God.” Pharrell appearing four times on a Clipse album is unusual — he’s almost always behind the boards — and signals how invested he was in the comeback. He’s not feature-padding; he’s earning each verse credit.

Stove God Cooks on “F.I.C.O.” Stove God is one of the most credible coke-rap inheritors of the post-Clipse lineage, and the placement reads like a torch-passing nod.

Ab-Liva on “Inglorious Bastards.” Ab-Liva is Re-Up Gang — the extended Clipse collective from the mid-2000s — and his presence is a Virginia handshake. The album rewards listeners who know the Re-Up tapes.

One detail no SERP roundup catches: the DJ Clue ad-libs across the album aren’t an after-the-fact addition. Per the Complex Cover doc, Pharrell mimicked Clue first while recording, and the team then brought Clue in to do them for real. That’s why the record sounds like a 2000s mixtape without being one — the texture is reverse-engineered. Pick up our Clipse Members guide if you want the full duo breakdown, and if you’re new to Let God Sort Em Out in apparel form, our Clipse Let God Sort Em Out tee celebrates this reunion as fan-art.

Hell Hath No Fury (2006) on Vinyl: The Reissue Story

Hell Hath No Fury white LP vinyl Clipse 2006 Star Trak Jive reissue

If you only own one Clipse album on vinyl, plenty of heads will argue this is the one. Hell Hath No Fury (Star Trak/Jive, November 2006) is the duo’s artistic peak by any reasonable measure — eleven tracks of compressed, Neptunes-produced coke-rap fatalism, written under the shadow of a label war that almost killed the album outright. The full saga of how this record survived Jive’s interference, and what Pusha and Malice were facing when they wrote it, is in our Clipse Hell Hath No Fury deep-dive.

On wax, there are now four legitimate ways to own it, and they’re not equivalent. Here’s the reality.

Original 2006 Star Trak/Jive Pressing

The OG. Black vinyl, original artwork, period-correct labels. These exist on the secondary market — Discogs and eBay are the main hunting grounds — and prices have crept up steadily since the reunion. Condition matters a lot here: a clean VG+ original press is the most desirable Clipse vinyl that doesn’t have a 2025 sticker on it. If you’re an originals-only purist, this is the target. Budget $80–$200+ depending on sleeve condition.

Get On Down Hell Hath No Fury (White LP) — $29.98

Get On Down has been the great rescuer of the Star Trak catalog. Their White LP reissue of Hell Hath No Fury is the single best value entry point to the album on wax — a clean white-vinyl pressing, current at $29.98, available through getondown.com. The mastering is solid. For most listeners who actually want to hear the album on vinyl rather than chase originals, this is the recommendation.

Get On Down Hell Hath No Fury (Colored 2xLP)

The same album in a colored double-LP configuration. Better for spreading tracks across more sides, which improves audio fidelity by cutting at higher levels. If you can find this in stock, it’s a strong sound-first pick.

letgodsortemout.com Hell Hath No Fury (Gold 2LP)

The official Clipse store stocks a Gold 2LP edition of Hell Hath No Fury. The Gold variant ties visually to the 2025 album’s color story and reads as the artist-canon version of the reissue. If you’re catalog-completing with the 2025 Gold Sunflare LGSEO, the official Gold HHNF is the matching bookend.

Practical recommendation: if budget is tight, the Get On Down White LP at $29.98 is hard to beat. If you’re building a display collection, the letgodsortemout.com Gold 2LP pairs with the 2025 Gold Sunflare. If you’re an originals-only collector, the secondary-market 2006 Star Trak press is the trophy.

Lord Willin’ (2002) on Vinyl: The Debut, Then the Reissues

Lord Willin vinyl Clipse 2002 Star Trak Arista debut album reissue

Lord Willin’ (Star Trak/Arista, August 2002) is the doorway record. “Grindin’,” “When the Last Time,” “Virginia,” “Cot Damn” — the Neptunes-produced singles that made Clipse a household name and put the Star Trak imprint on the map. The cover art (the brothers chauffeuring Jesus through the ghetto) is foundational visual hip-hop iconography on its own terms, and any serious vinyl collection of 2000s rap has this album on the shelf.

Three vinyl realities to know.

Original 2002 Star Trak/Arista Pressing

The era-correct version. Original labels, original sleeve, the 2002 mastering. These come up on Discogs regularly and prices are reasonable compared to Hell Hath No Fury originals — partly because Arista pressed more copies in 2002, partly because the album never went out of print as completely as the Jive-era records. A clean VG+ original is usually in the $40–$80 range.

Get On Down Lord Willin’ (Colored 2xLP)

Get On Down’s Colored 2xLP reissue is the modern listener’s version — current pressing, colored vinyl, sound-first cut across four sides. This is the version most people walking into a record store in 2025 will encounter, and it’s a strong pickup.

letgodsortemout.com Lord Willin’ Silver 2LP — $29.98

The official Clipse store carries a Silver 2LP edition at $29.98. Same artist-canon framing as the Gold HHNF: this is the version Clipse themselves are putting out into the world in 2025, and it visually aligns with the rest of the post-reunion catalog. If you’re building a unified shelf, the Silver Lord Willin’ is the call.

Til the Casket Drops (2009): The Ghost Album of the Catalog

Til the Casket Drops vinyl 2009 Clipse Star Trak Columbia rare original press

This is the one nobody wants to talk about, and it’s also the rarest. Til the Casket Drops (Star Trak/Columbia, December 2009) was Clipse’s third and final LP before the long hiatus. It’s the most polarizing record in the catalog — leaner Neptunes production on some tracks, glossier album-rap on others, and a release rolled out under a third label regime that put marketing energy in odd places.

For vinyl collectors, the practical situation is simple: the 2009 Star Trak/Columbia original press is currently the toughest Clipse LP to land at a sane price, because there is no major reissue. While Lord Willin’ and Hell Hath No Fury have multiple 2020s reissues stabilizing supply, Casket has been left in the secondary market. The Columbia-era artwork and labels are distinctive, the pressing run was modest, and clean copies climb steadily as Clipse heads complete their shelves.

Hunting strategy: Discogs marketplace with a saved search, eBay watchers on multiple listings, and a willingness to wait. Amoeba Music sometimes carries a copy at the LA storefront, and Rough Trade in the UK rotates one in occasionally. Don’t sleep on listings without “Star Trak” in the title — they slip through search filters. Budget realistically: $50–$150+ depending on condition and patience.

If a major label or Get On Down ever picks up Til the Casket Drops for reissue, the secondary-market prices will correct downward sharply. That’s not a knock — it’s a known dynamic in vinyl reissues. For now, the ghost album stays a ghost.

The Triple Clipse Bundle: The Smartest Way to Start

Triple Clipse vinyl bundle Get On Down colored 5xLP starter pack

Here is the single best-kept secret in the Clipse vinyl ecosystem, and it’s invisible in the SERP because every top result is single-album-focused. Get On Down sells the Triple Clipse Colored 5xLP Bundle — currently $71.99, down from $84.95 — which packages together:

  • Lord Willin’ (Colored 2xLP)
  • Hell Hath No Fury (White LP)
  • Hell Hath No Fury (Colored 2xLP)

Five records, three pressings, one purchase. Per record, this is the highest dollar-value transaction in the entire Clipse catalog. New collector strategy: buy the bundle, pair it with a standard black Let God Sort Em Out LP ($25-ish), and you own three of four Clipse studio albums on wax for under $110 total. The only gap is Til the Casket Drops, which you can hunt on the secondary market over time.

The bundle exists because Get On Down has the licensing relationship with the Star Trak/Jive catalog through Bertelsmann/BMG, and they’ve leaned into reissue depth in a way that no other vinyl reseller has matched for Clipse. Whether the price holds at $71.99 long-term is anyone’s guess — these promotional bundles rotate — so if you’re on the fence, it’s a now-or-later decision.

The Collector Strategy: What to Buy First, Second, Third

Forget the listicle approach. Here’s how an actual Clipse vinyl collection gets built, by spend tier.

$30 Budget — Pick One Anchor

Get the standard black Let God Sort Em Out LP. It’s the current record, it’s the album people are talking about, and it’s the cheapest variant of the 2025 release at retail. If you’d rather start with the back catalog, the Get On Down White LP Hell Hath No Fury at $29.98 is the equivalent move. Either works as a single-album entry point.

$60 Budget — Two Albums Strategically

Either: (a) standard black Let God Sort Em Out + Get On Down Hell Hath No Fury White LP, or (b) the Roc Nation Gold Sunflare LGSEO ($29.99) + the Get On Down White LP HHNF. Option B gets you the canonical 2025 variant plus the strongest historical album. You’re now holding the reunion plus the artistic peak.

$100 Budget — Three Albums, Three Eras

The Triple Clipse Colored 5xLP Bundle from Get On Down ($71.99) covers Lord Willin’ and two pressings of Hell Hath No Fury. Add a standard black Let God Sort Em Out LP (~$25) and you have three of four studio albums on wax. This is the best dollar-density move in the entire Clipse catalog. The only thing missing is Casket.

$300+ Budget — Collector Flex

The Triple Clipse Bundle ($71.99), the Roc Nation Gold Sunflare LGSEO ($29.99), the letgodsortemout.com Lord Willin’ Silver 2LP ($29.98), the letgodsortemout.com Hell Hath No Fury Gold 2LP, and a secondary-market Til the Casket Drops original ($60-$120). That’s the full catalog with multiple pressings of the reissued material. Add the Pink Signed Insert LGSEO if you can find one in stock for the autograph component — it’s the wild card on resale.

Originals-Only Collector

Different game. Secondary market only. Target a clean 2002 Star Trak/Arista Lord Willin’, a 2006 Star Trak/Jive Hell Hath No Fury, a 2009 Star Trak/Columbia Til the Casket Drops, plus the 2025 Pink Signed Insert LGSEO for the only signed original-pressing variant Clipse have ever released. Realistic budget: $300-$600 over six to twelve months of patient hunting on Discogs.

One unifying principle: don’t rush the 2009. Casket shows up; you just need a saved search and patience. Once you’ve stacked the wax, the Clipse Let God Sort Em Out tee rounds out the collection.

Beyond the Records: KAWS Hoodies, Snow Bandanas, and Tour Merch

Clipse 2025 merch ecosystem KAWS hoodies bandana vinyl Let God Sort Em Out

One of the smartest moves Clipse made for the 2025 rollout was treating apparel as a parallel canvas to the music. KAWS — Brian Donnelly, one of the most commercially significant visual artists of his generation, with collaborations spanning Dior, Uniqlo, and Nike — provided the visual-identity backbone for the LGSEO era. The flagship piece is the KAWS x Clipse “Let God Sort Em Out” Shield Hoodie at $100, available through letgodsortemout.com. That’s the official Clipse storefront, and it’s also where the Hell Hath No Fury Gold 2LP and Lord Willin’ Silver 2LP live.

Beyond the KAWS collab, the official store carries an “In Clipse We Trust” hoodie, a “This Is Culturally Inappropriate” zip hoodie (both in the $85–$100 range), and a Snow Bandana that has become an unofficial signal among the diehards at shows. The visual story across the apparel ecosystem is consistent — black and gold base palette, KAWS-inflected linework, religious-iconography typography — and it ties the merch to the vinyl variant grid intentionally. Buying a Gold Sunflare LGSEO and a black-and-gold KAWS Shield Hoodie isn’t two purchases; it’s one aesthetic decision applied twice.

For fan-art alternatives outside the official store, our Clipse Let God Sort Em Out fan-art tee celebrates the reunion in a different register — same album, independent designer take, black tee, sizes XS-3XL. Think of it the way you’d think of an indie-store exclusive vinyl variant: it sits alongside the official rollout, not in place of it. If you’re documenting the 2025 reunion across your closet the way you’re documenting it on your record shelf, both registers matter. For more on Malice’s faith-driven hiatus and what brought him back to the booth, see our Clipse Malice complete story.

Clipse Let God Sort Em Out T-Shirt

Wear the Reunion

Show love for the Clipse 2025 reunion with our Let God Sort Em Out fan-art tee. Pusha T and No Malice on the same record again — first time in 16 years. Black tee, sizes XS-3XL.

Frequently Asked Questions About Clipse Vinyl

When did Clipse release Let God Sort Em Out on vinyl?

Let God Sort Em Out dropped on July 11, 2025, via Roc Nation. Multiple vinyl variants were released simultaneously: the standard black LP, a Roc Nation Store–exclusive Gold (Sunflare) gatefold, a Pink (Signed Insert) limited US pressing, a Crystal Clear Limited Edition, and an Indie Exclusive Deluxe via Turntable Lab. Discogs catalogs 28 versions of the master release across all formats.

How many Clipse studio albums are on vinyl?

Four. Lord Willin’ (2002, Star Trak/Arista), Hell Hath No Fury (2006, Star Trak/Jive), Til the Casket Drops (2009, Star Trak/Columbia), and Let God Sort Em Out (2025, Roc Nation). All four have current vinyl pressings available, though Til the Casket Drops is the rarest and is mostly a secondary-market hunt.

What is the rarest Clipse vinyl?

For original-era pressings, Til the Casket Drops (2009) is the toughest to find at sane prices. For 2025, the Pink Signed Insert variant of Let God Sort Em Out is the most collectible because of the autograph component plus the limited US-only run. The Roc Nation Gold (Sunflare) sold out fast and was capped at four per customer at launch.

What is the KAWS x Clipse collaboration?

KAWS — the artist Brian Donnelly — provided visual-identity collaboration for the Let God Sort Em Out era. The flagship collab piece is the KAWS x Clipse “Let God Sort Em Out” Shield Hoodie at $100, available through letgodsortemout.com. The collaboration extends the album’s visual language across the apparel ecosystem.

Where can I buy Clipse vinyl in 2025?

Multiple legitimate channels: letgodsortemout.com (official Clipse store, the only place for the KAWS hoodie collab and the official Lord Willin’ Silver 2LP and Hell Hath No Fury Gold 2LP), Roc Nation Store (the Let God Sort Em Out Gold Sunflare), Get On Down (vinyl reissue specialists for the Star Trak/Jive era — Lord Willin’ Colored 2xLP, Hell Hath No Fury White LP, Hell Hath No Fury Colored 2xLP, and the Triple Clipse 5xLP Bundle), Turntable Lab (Indie Exclusive Deluxe), Amoeba and Rough Trade (independent record stores), and Discogs for original-era and secondary-market hunts.

What’s the cheapest way to start a Clipse vinyl collection?

The Triple Clipse Colored 5xLP Bundle on Get On Down — currently $71.99 (down from $84.95) — bundles Lord Willin’ (Colored 2xLP), Hell Hath No Fury (Colored 2xLP), and Hell Hath No Fury (White LP). It’s the highest dollar-per-record value in the catalog and the single best entry point for a new collector. Pair it with the standard black Let God Sort Em Out LP and you have the full studio catalog on wax (minus Casket) for under $110.

Did Pharrell produce all of Let God Sort Em Out?

Pharrell Williams produced the bulk of LGSEO, with multiple co-credits across the official tracklist. Per the Complex Cover documentary (July 2025), Pharrell described the album’s production as a deliberate return to Neptunes-era stencil-tight song structure, where every verse had to lock to a song frame rather than sprawl as a mixtape collage. The album features named co-features, but the production architecture is Pharrell-driven.

What’s special about the Pink Clipse vinyl?

The Pink LP variant of Let God Sort Em Out includes a Signed Insert and was a US-only limited pressing through Roc Nation. Of the four major LGSEO color variants, the Pink is the one collectors target for autograph value plus the visual contrast with the album’s predominantly black-and-gold KAWS-era color story.

Was Hell Hath No Fury reissued on vinyl?

Yes, multiple times. Get On Down has issued both a White LP version ($29.98) and a Colored 2xLP edition. The official letgodsortemout.com store also stocks a Hell Hath No Fury Gold 2LP. Original 2006 Star Trak/Jive pressings exist on the secondary market via Discogs and eBay but command a significant premium.

What is the Indie Exclusive Deluxe Let God Sort Em Out vinyl?

A Turntable Lab indie-record-store-exclusive deluxe pressing of Let God Sort Em Out — distinct from the Roc Nation Gold (Sunflare) direct-to-consumer variant. Turntable Lab is one of the most respected independent record retailers in the US, and indie exclusives are a separate pressing tier from artist-direct or major-label-store releases.

Final Word: Clipse Vinyl, the 23-Year Shelf

The whole point of building a Clipse vinyl collection in 2025 is that, for the first time, the shelf is actually buildable. Twenty-three years between Lord Willin’ and Let God Sort Em Out. Two brothers from Virginia who walked away after 2009 and came back with one of the most uncompromised reunion records in rap history. KAWS handling the visuals, Pharrell handling the boards, Kendrick and Nas calling their own placements. The records hold the story; the variants give you ways to display it.

Start where your budget says start — the standard black LGSEO, the Triple Clipse Bundle, the Roc Nation Gold Sunflare, the Get On Down White HHNF. Add the originals over time. The Casket hunt is a year-long thing, and that’s fine. Hip-hop catalogs are built slowly when they’re built right.

Stay creative — The Custom Creative Team

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