Pusha T, Clipse Had to Pay an Insane Money to Exit Def Jam Deal

Pusha T and No Malice had to pay an insane seven figures to get out of their Def Jam deal because they didn’t want to censor Kendrick Lamar‘s verse on a song.

Push, Clipse Had to Pay Seven Figures to Exit Def Jam Deal

In a new interview with Billboard published on Tuesday (June 3), Pusha T’s manager, Steven Victor, revealed that Pusha T and Clipse, had to pay a “s**t-ton of money” to exit their deal with Def Jam all because they didn’t want to censor Kendrick Lamar’s verse on “Whips & Chains,” which will appear on their upcoming album, Let God Sort Em Out.

Victor confirmed Pusha’s previous remarks in a GQ interview that Def Jam was concerned about K-Dot’s verse on the song and that they weren’t going to remove it.

“Yeah, I don’t know what their concern is. But they were like, ‘There’s a line here; we think it’s controversial; [Kendrick] needs to change it, or we’re not putting it out,'” he explained to Billboard. “We’re not going to ask him [Kendrick] to change the verse. You guys are wrong. Stop looking at this this way. None of this makes any sense.”

“It got to the point where the conversation became, ‘You can’t keep stopping this guy from being able to put out his art.’ He’s a rapper. Every time he puts out an album or a song, you can’t listen to it to make sure that he’s not dissing somebody before you put it out,” he continued. “He has to think about what he’s saying before he’s saying it in the hopes that you might not think that he’s saying the wrong thing? Who could live their life like that?”

Victor did offer a solution of possibly releasing the song somewhere else so Def Jam and Universal Music Group won’t receive any complications from it and they’ll license the song back to them. But Def Jam rejected Victor’s idea.
“Their response was, ‘How about you just find somewhere else to put out Clipse? Just pay something to us and put it out somewhere else,” he stated.

Subsequently, Push and Clipse had to pay a seven-figure sum to get out of their Def Jam contract and find a new home for their album.

So they said, ‘Find another deal, and let’s figure out a business,” Victor explained. “They didn’t drop us. They were like, ‘Pay us this money’ — which was an exorbitant amount of money, a s**t-ton of money — ‘and we’ll let you out the deal.’ That’s what happened. We paid them the money, an insane amount of money. It wasn’t, like, $200,000. It was a lot of money for an artist to come up with. They bought themselves out of the deal.”

Read More: Pusha T Raps About Laughing at Ye’s Interviews on New Clipse Song

Read Pusha T and Steven Victor’s Tweets About Clipse Exiting Def Jam Below

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