On July 11, 2025, a long-dreamt matchup becomes reality: Stove God Cooks will appear on Let God Sort Em Out, the first Clipse album in 15 years. While not officially stated, when a fan tweeted, “I need a @PUSHA_T and @Stovegodcooks collab so bad,” Stove replied with just two numbers: “7/11,” making it easy for fans to connect the dots.

Coke Rap Royalty: Stove God Cooks Joins Clipse on ‘Let God Sort Em Out’

It’s more than just a high-profile feature—it’s the linking of two generations of elite coke rappers, each representing different eras, but speaking the same language of luxury, loss, and dope-boy mythology.

Stove God Cooks isn’t just a clever name on a hot verse—he’s been quietly building a legacy. His 2020 debut Reasonable Drought, produced entirely by Roc Marciano, is widely considered one of the best coke rap records of the modern era. With layered metaphors, absurdist humor, and preacher-like delivery, Stove carved a lane that balances the surreal and the surgical.

He’s not a volume artist—he’s a rarity. And that scarcity has only added to his legend.

Despite critical acclaim, Stove hasn’t dropped a follow-up album, due to alleged label restrictions with Babygrande Records. Instead of stalling, he’s gone on a feature run worthy of its own plaque—leaving unforgettable verses on albums by Westside Gunn, Conway, Benny, Curren$y, and Rome Streetz. In every case, he walks in with one goal: steal the song.

That brings us to Let God Sort Em Out—a cinematic, Pharrell-produced reunion album from Clipse, recorded at Louis Vuitton HQ in Paris. It’s a moment steeped in prestige, legacy, and reinvention. The fact that Pusha T chose Stove God to appear alongside rumored guests like Nas and John Legend speaks volumes.

On July 11, two generations of coke rap excellence meet on common ground—and we’re pumped.