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P.O.V. (song)

2025 song by Clipse featuring Tyler, the Creator From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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"P.O.V." is a song by American hip-hop duo Clipse, released on July 11, 2025 from their fourth studio album Let God Sort Em Out (2025). It features American rapper Tyler, the Creator and was produced by Pharrell Williams.

Quick Facts from the album Let God Sort Em Out, Released ...
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Composition

The production consists of drums[1] and synths.[2] Lyrically, Pusha T criticizes rappers who do not treat hip-hop music seriously and Malice references his spiritual journey.[3] The rappers also use puns in relation to expensive cars.[4]

Critical reception

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The song received generally positive reviews. Simon Vozick-Levinson of Rolling Stone called it "a showcase for their finest luxury-car wordplay".[4] Clash's Niall Smith considered it a standout from Let God Sort Em Out that "has golden-age Clipse written all over it; kinetic, cutthroat drums creeping beneath the floorboards of the trio's rhymes."[1] Marko Djurdjić wrote "'P.O.V.' features numerous flips and turns, with sinister synths, spacey ambience, and silence all helping to define the respective verses. Tyler, the Creator even manages to hold his own, albeit barely, with some of his most inventive lines to date ('My n***a Push keep dirty white moving like mosh pits')."[2] Kyann-Sian Williams of NME stated that "Tyler, the Creator injects his wild, signature mischief on 'P.O.V.'" and praised the song for its "catchy staccato chorus", calling it one of the album's "sparks of the old magic".[5] Pitchfork's Alphonse Pierre commented "Repping the Neptunes classicists is Tyler, the Creator trying to match Push and Malice's shit talk on 'P.O.V.' (Clipse wipe the floor with him.)"[3] Variety's Peter A. Berry described the song's production as "spotless, but somewhat unimaginative", commenting "'P.O.V.' could have been produced anytime between 'Fear of God' and 'My Name Is My Name.'"[6] Alexander Cole of HotNewHipHop wrote "Quite simply, Tyler is talking his sh*t on this song. The same can be said of Pusha T and Malice, who are firing on all cylinders with this track. Meanwhile, the production is sinister, expensive, and everything you would want it to be."[7]

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Charts

More information Chart (2025), Peak position ...

References

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