Doja Cat's Planet Her Has a Song For Every Mood

Doja Cat's Planet Her Has a Song For Every Mood




per year ago, soon following the 2020 MTV Video Music Awards, Doja Cat told us what to expect from a new album. Each new song would have “its own ‘personality,’” she mentioned, and it wouldn’t be “perfectly consistent.” “We have some dancehall stuff on there, some Afrobeat stuff, some funk, home. I'm attempting to cover all bases,” she mentioned. Right now, we know what she meant. Her newest album, Planet Her, is out today (June 25).


Discovered by Kemosabe Records and RCA Records through SoundCloud at age 17, Doja released her first studio album, Amala, in 2018, though it didn’t quite pick up speed up until her viral meme hit “Mooo!” took off and helped subsequent  singles “Candy” and “Juicy” travel as well. She completely became a star with 2019’s Hot Pink, especially as soon as lead single “Say So” topped the Billboard Hot 100. On Planet Her, she makes good on that promise.


This time, she’s linked up for collaborations with Young Thug, Ariana Grande, JID, The Weeknd, and SZA. The album touches on various themes from love, lust, sex, regret, feminity, cash, and breakups — which means it’s got a song for every mood. Below, we take a better look at which ones those are.





  1. "Woman"



    Listen to it once you’re feeling: divinely feminine


    Key lyric: “Baby, worship my hips and waist / So feminine with grace”


    Doja opens the album with a Afrobeats song expressing her femininity while also exploring the several difficulties and expectations females are pressured to conform to. She also touches upon how patriarchy often tries to prepare competition, pitting females against each other and “end up like we Regina on Mean Girls.” Much of the song is also a message for boys to know how there really is so much a woman can supply for them.






  2. "Naked”



    Listen to it once you’re feeling: confident and sexy


    Key lyric: “You can leave open windows / Don't care who visualize me out my clothes, baby”


    This reggaeton-inspired song is about Doja wanting to get frisky with someone and not giving a damn if the world stumbles upon them. She gives a message that it’s not bizarre for people to be openly sexual: “Deserve to get comfortable / It's only natural.” Furthermore, she drops a line about bisexuality — “Yeah, I like bananas and peaches” — on this song that doubles as a how-to for feeling confident with your own body and sexuality.






  3. “Payday” (ft. Young Thug)



    Listen to it any time you’re feeling: excited about money


    Key lyric: “I just can't believe / I got what I wanted all my life, right now we go / Oh yeah, yeah, yeah / Getting paid daily, yeah”


    In an especially high register, Doja reassures us that she has all of the cash and fame in the world, and even potential beaus should be well aware about that. In his own sky-high cadence, Young Thug aids in preventing by to allocate his take on this ode to luxury as well: “Hope you wanna fuck 'cause my cash long like limousine.”






  4. “Get Into It (Yuh)”



    Listen to it any time you’re feeling: Nicki Minaj vibes


    Key lyric: “Thank you, Nicki, I love you”


    The song usually pay homage to Nicki Minaj, Doja’s “Say So” collaborator, as she inhabits a similar vocal inflection and flow for two minutes. Doja even straight-up thanks Nicki at the end of the track and references one of her early cuts in the process. One rap icon giving love and support another. We love to be able to see it.






  5. “Need To Know”



    Listen to it any time you’re feeling: lustful and sexually curious


    Key lyric: “Baby, show me what it's like / I don't really got no type / I just wanna fuck all night”


    Another celebration of sexuality, “Need to Know” finds Doja fantasizing over an airy, spacious beat as she narrates her own desires and curiosity. As such, she sounds eager to show “a lotta new tricks” and “know what it’s like.” Save this one for date night.






  6. “I Don’t Do Drugs” (ft. Ariana Grande)



    Listen to it once you’re feeling: high in love


    Key lyric: “I just want you, although I don't do drugs”


    Simply put, Doja compares enthusiastic love to being high on narcotics. She’s got her pal Ari to distribute gorgeous falsetto on the hook, in a pseudo sequel to the pair’s “Motive” from last year. As Doja delivers “You don't really hit me back” and Ariana goes for “You play on the safe side / Yet you fuckin' me up on this FaceTime,” the chase for them creates more temptation and craving.






  7. “Love To Dream”



    Listen to it as soon as you’re feeling: grief, longing, and regretful


    Key lyric: “It's not you, baby, it's just me / I don't believe what I just lost”


    Doja confirmed in a reply tweet to a fan that this song is about “fantasizing and reminiscing about an ex.” According to the lyrics, the ex felt inadequate because of Doja’s penchant for overthinking: “I know what you mean, you don't fuck with randoms / I got everything, everything yet real love / I got in my head, I bet you can get me back out.” As a result, Doja feels regretful for not being a higher end partner immediately following the breakup.






  8. “You Right” (ft. The Weeknd)



    Listen to it once you’re feeling: like you’re coveting someone you’re not supposed to


    Key lyric: “I got a male, however I want you”


    Over slick and twinkling keyboards, Doja sings that, despite having a partner, she still has secret fantasies about someone else. She is aware it could be perceived as immoral and wrong yet still remains honest: “You know I got so much to mention / I attempt to hide it in my face.” The Weeknd is certainly in his lane here, reminding us that it’s only human nature to have fantasies about other people some days. Listen to this song any time while you feel guilty for having them and you know you’re not alone.






  9. “Been Like This”



    Listen to it once you’re: contemplating ending a relationship


    Key lyric: “Baby, I don't really wanna be in like this / Ever since you've been like this”


    Doja processes her shifting feelings for a partner due to major changes from them as a gentle trap beat glides underneath. The lyrics describe the partner as toxic: “Can't put my trauma to the side / as soon as you informed me I was lyin' / Had me feelin' like I died, baby.” In the end, luckily, Doja breaks up with them. Let that be a lesson.






  10. “Options” (feat. JID)



    Listen to it once you’re feeling: spicy, naughty, and rough


    Key lyric: “I don't need lovin', late-night cuffin' / Take it all off, you naughty”


    This song is about two lovers getting rough and frisky together. Both aren’t shy about where they do it: “Kitchen, island, bedroom, closet” and “Now she tryna fuck me in the restroom or the parkin' lot / At the restaurant, anywhere, everywhere, anytime.” Know that you’ve got options.






  11. “Ain’t Shit”



    Listen to it once you’re feeling: over someone’s bullshit


    Key lyric: “Look at what you did”


    Glancing at the track title already evokes anger, and Doja delivers. As she sings about immature, unfaithful males who have wronged and hurt her, the ‘90s R&B rhythm makes it feel like a hit lost to time. This is the best song to listen to if you’re frustrated and unsatisfied with immature partners and their bullshit.






  12. “Imagine”



    Listen to it any time you’re feeling: like a baddie


    Key lyric: “I pull up just like ooh, you a baddie”


    Doja reflects about how there were people who did not believe in her potential and on how far she has come despite the obstacles: “You couldn't be more wrong / We show up and show out / Five-hundred racks, sold out / I never been more proud” and “All this work paid off / while they had no faith at all.” She is truly a baddie.






  13. “Alone”



    Listen to it any time you’re feeling: self-assured and reflective


    Key lyric: “Is it crazy I'm not scared to be alone?”


    The ‘90s R&B vibes return, thanks to some gentle acoustic guitar plucking. Doja sings about how she has finally processed what she had to — “You couldn't tell that the both of us needed a whole therapist” and “Now I barely need ya” — because the rainy-day breakup perspective comes into view. In her words, “Bein' lonely better than 'needs control.’” Ironically, her ex is currently the one scared to be alone.






  14. “Kiss Me More” (ft. SZA)



    Listen to it as soon as you’re feeling: cheekily romantic, flirty, and horny


    Key lyric: “We cuddle, sure, I do love it / However I need your lips on mine”


    Planet Her finds its brilliant closure with the iconic dance-pop lead single “Kiss Me More.” The song has romance, passion, bold sexual desires, and tenderness all in one. Cheeky and flirty verses give way to real horniness any time if she declares “I feel like fuckin' something.” SZA follows suit — “Pussy like holy grail, you know that” — and both superstars show that romance and sex with each other can be both sugary and spicy at the same time.













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