Scarlet
In proving herself as a rapper, Doja Cat offers up an uneven album that is accomplished but gets bogged down in reactive and repetitive songs.
Scarlet, is for all intents and purposes a new world that Doja Cat has woven. While she’s always had a knack for vocal gymnastics with her signature rasp, this new darker chapter is full of bravado, vulgarity, soul samples and thumping 808 drums.
Doja Cat doesn't want you to like her. But with a Number One hit and a memorable fourth album, the attention is unlikely to wane
As with hit 2021 album ‘Planet Her’, this record operates in its own strange world
Doja’s return to rap on 'Scarlet' clears up any doubt over her versatility, putting wavering fans in their place.
Just shy of a decade ago, Amala Ratna Zandile Dlamini, otherwise known as Doja Cat, crept onto the TikTok scene with ‘So High’, which led to subsequent
Doja Cat’s fourth album, ‘Scarlet,’ is the work of a talented MC in search of the right tonal balance. Read our review.
Doja Cat's newest release "Scarlet" is out now. Read Sam Franzini's review of the new album for Northern Transmissions.
There’s a pugilistic force to the rapper’s lyricism as she takes on her diehard fans’ sense of entitlement, but even amid some experimental production, she starts to repeat herself