Latest Release
- 17 MAY 2024
- 27 Songs
- Planet Her (Deluxe) · 2021
- Planet Her (Deluxe) · 2021
- Paint The Town Red - Single · 2023
- Scarlet · 2023
- Streets (Silhouette Remix) - Single · 2021
- Kill Bill (feat. Doja Cat) - Single · 2023
- Amala · 2018
- Hot Pink · 2019
- Scarlet · 2023
- Candy - Single · 2018
Essential Albums
- Pop music is, by design, kaleidoscopic, and Doja Cat’s third album takes full advantage of its fluidity. Planet Her is ushered in on the euphoric Afropop of “Woman” and moves seamlessly into the reggaetón-kissed “Naked”, the hip-hop-meets-hyperpop of “Payday” and the whimsical ad-lib trap of “Get Into It (Yuh)”—and that’s just the first four songs. Later, R&B ballads and club-ready anthems also materialise from the ether, encompassing the spectrum of contemporary capital-P Pop and also the multihued sounds that are simply just popular, even if only in their corners of the internet for now. This is Doja’s strength. She’s long understood how mainstream sensibility interacts with counterculture (or what's left of it anyway, for better and worse), and she’s nimbly able to translate both. Planet Her checks all the right boxes and accentuates her talent for shape-shifting—she sounds just as comfortable rapping next to Young Thug or JID as she does crooning alongside The Weeknd or Ariana Grande—but it’s so pristine, so in tune with the music of the moment that it almost verges on parody. Is this Doja’s own reflection or her reflecting her fans back to themselves? Her brilliance lies in the fact that the answer doesn’t much matter. The best pop music is nothing if not a blurring of the lines between reality and fantasy, its brightest stars so uniquely themselves and yet whatever else they need to be, too.
- 2023
- 2023
- 2023
Artist Playlists
- The singer/rapper serves up hooky, high-concept pop gems.
- Eye-popping visuals from a hip-pop sensation.
- All the songs the “Kiss Me More” star is performing in her first headlining arena tour.
- “I'm able to use my creativity and think about what I want to do.”
- Grab the mic and sing along with some of their biggest hits.
More To Hear
- Playing back conversations with the biggest artists of 2021.
More To See
About Doja Cat
Some call the end of summer the “slow news season”—school’s still out, holidays are in full swing and headlines tend to get weird—and Doja Cat (born Amala Ratna Zandile Dlamini in 1995) knew just what to do about it. In August of 2018, the Los Angeles singer and rapper dropped “Mooo!”, a sultry R&B jam thick with double entendres and sung from the perspective of a cow. It went viral, thanks to an unforgettable, improbably catchy chorus that had people wondering: could she possibly be for real? But Doja, who released her debut EP, Purrr!, in 2014, and her first album, Amala, in 2018, was no novelty act. In the years since, she has proven herself one of pop music’s savviest, most audacious characters. She raps nimbly, switching up her cadence from one syllable to the next, and her pop-culture nods (referencing actresses Tia and Tamera Mowry or sampling blink-182 and Paul Anka) are just as unpredictable as her dizzying flow. Her presentation is both tough and coquettish. As she demonstrated over and over on her 2019 album, Hot Pink, she assumes a fun and fundamentally empowered stance in her singing and rapping about sex. And woe to anyone who might take issue with that: “Sex is meaningful, it is!” she told Apple Music, with her trademark defiant charm. Futuristic, interplanetary adventures fuelled the 2021 album Planet Her, which sees Doja Cat continuing her dominance in expressing the spectrum of feminine experiences. An ardent student of hip-hop, Doja builds her stylistic approach upon the nostalgic elements that coloured rap’s golden eras: her deserved cockiness intertwines with her unique personality, informed by the greats who preceded her. Her desire to be seen as a formidable MC is felt most on 2023’s Scarlet, a provocative project that reflects her desire for freedom and flexibility.
- FROM
- Tarzana, CA, United States
- BORN
- 21 October 1995
- GENRE
- R&B/Soul