Doja Cat appears to be teasing a new album

1 week ago 14



Doja Cat has seemingly begun teasing her new album – find out more below.

On Monday night (November 11), the pop-rap star took to X (formerly Twitter) to share a list of song titles before quickly deleting the post, prompting speculation that the list was the tracklist for her follow-up to 2023’s ‘Scarlet‘.

The list consisted of 13 tracks, including five starred songs that Doja said were her favourite. Those five songs are currently titled ‘Cards’, ‘Acts Of Service’, ‘Make It Up’, ‘Did I Lie’ and ‘Crack’.

She also noted that the songs were not listed in order. The list was captured by fans before being deleted – you can see it below.

Songs are in no particular order. Starred my favorites.

— DOJA CAT (@DojaCat) November 12, 2024

Here is the full tracklist she teased pic.twitter.com/gqJAVNvRed

— GCD 🖤 (@GAGCITYDOLLS) November 12, 2024

Doja has been hinting at a new album since late October – when she wiped her X account and posted a singular word: “album”.

album

— DOJA CAT (@DojaCat) October 25, 2024

Doja’s last album, ‘Scarlet’, scored a three-star review from NME: “It all adds up to an overlong, slightly repetitive but ultimately compelling album of two halves… Still, by this stage, there’s no doubt that Doja has made her point – that she doesn’t owe us anything but to be herself.”

In other Doja Cat news, crypto hackers recently took over her X account and attempted to ignite a beef with Iggy Azalea. The attempt at igniting beef was quickly smothered by Azalea, who posted: “Don’t buy this y’all. She’s hacked. Save your money, the market’s down as it is…”

Doja Cat performs liveDoja Cat performs onstage at the 2024 Global Citizen Festival: CREDIT: John Nacion/Billboard via Getty Images

In June, Doja also kicked off her European and UK tour, performing at the OVO Hydro in Glasgow. The gig scored a four-star review from Janessa Williams, who wrote for NME: “What you get from her is a seamless show trimmed of all the fat, one that aims to celebrate the lane of her own artistic satisfaction, unbothered by those who do not see her skill. When it’s working this well, why shouldn’t she do things her way?”

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