Get Into It (Yuh)
Doja Cat
"Get Into It (Yuh)" is kinetic in the most precise sense — every element is in motion, and the song seems physically unable to stay still. The percussion is the architecture: layered, polyrhythmic, almost hyperactive in the way it subdivides beats and redirects energy before the ear can settle. Beneath the rhythmic density, the bass moves with a slinky, almost predatory confidence that gives the track its spine. Doja's performance is among her most technically exuberant — she rides the rhythm like a surfer reading a wave, shifting cadence mid-phrase, compressing syllables into percussive clusters, and then suddenly opening into melodic stretches that feel like exhaling. Vocally, there's an athletic precision here that's easy to mistake for effortlessness. The song is fundamentally a flex — not in the conventional sense of listing possessions, but as a demonstration of range and control. Planet Her positioned Doja at the intersection of rap and pop's outer edges, and this track is the most purely rap-mode moment on the album, closest in spirit to the mixtape energy that built her early reputation. You put this on when you need a jolt — pre-workout, pre-going-out, any moment that requires the body to commit before the mind catches up.
fast
2020s
bright, dense, kinetic
American hip-hop / pop
Hip-Hop, Pop. dance rap. euphoric, playful. Launches immediately into kinetic exuberance and sustains it without pause — pure athletic energy from first beat to last.. energy 10. fast. danceability 9. valence 9. vocals: athletic female, rhythmically fluid, syllable-compressing, effortlessly precise. production: layered polyrhythmic percussion, slinky bass, dense rhythmic architecture. texture: bright, dense, kinetic. acousticness 1. era: 2020s. American hip-hop / pop. Pre-workout or pre-going-out — any moment that requires the body to commit before the mind catches up.