Go Girl
by Summer Walker (featuring Latto & Doja Cat)

Album: Finally Over It (2025)
Charted: 60
Play Video

Songfacts®:

  • "Go Girl" is a reminder that Summer Walker is just as comfortable slipping into a hip-hop soul persona as she is penning slow-burn R&B confessionals. She proved this back in 2022 with the irreverent "Sense Dat God Gave You" alongside Sexyy Red. "Go Girl," a three-way collaboration with Latto and Doja Cat, taps that same playful bravado but with a shinier coat of empowerment lacquered over the top.
  • The song is essentially a celebration of feeling fabulous, looking fabulous, and, crucially, funding that fabulousness yourself. Walker's opening lines set the tone: self-love first, everything else second. From there, the three artists trade verses like a relay team passing a baton made entirely of confidence.
  • Walker focuses on knowing her worth (a lesson learned, one suspects, from many of the men who inspired her Over It trilogy), Latto brings boastful swagger and sexual confidence, and Doja Cat provides self-appraisal about her status and refusal to chase men.
  • The hook - "I'm in my Goyard, you go, girl" - functions as both encouragement and assertion, with the luxury handbag reference underscoring themes of financial autonomy and personal success. Self-care feels even better when you paid for it yourself.
  • "Go Girl" is Summer Walker's first time collaborating with both Latto and Doja Cat. Her two guest artists have worked together on one previous occasion: they both featured on Chloe x Halle's "Do It (Remix)" in 2020 alongside City Girls.
  • The production by Dos Dias, Nineteen85, Terrace Martin, Flippa, Zach & Roger, and Roger Kleinman, samples the 1987 Stetsasonic single "Go Stetsa I."

    "Go Stetsa I" is built around a rolling drum groove, call-and-response chants of the group's name ("Go Stetsa!"), and a live, block-party feel that became a go-to reference point for later hip-hop records. For example, LL Cool J's "Doin' It" samples the crowd shouting "Go Brooklyn!" from "Go Stetsa I," using it as a constant background cheer.

    Summer Walker, Latto, and Doja Cat are borrowing that same lineage of hyped-up chant and Brooklyn party energy and repurposing it as a modern girl-boss, luxury-R&B anthem. What was once a chant for a hip-hop crew becomes, in "Go Girl," a rallying cry for female confidence, luxury, and financial autonomy. It's not "Go Brooklyn!" anymore, it's "Go me!"
  • Flippa is no stranger to the gravitational pull of "Go Stetsa I." Back in 2018, he and Elijah Diaz played H.E.R. a beat built around the same jubilant chant. Inspired, H.E.R. wrote "As I Am," crediting the Stetsasonic-powered groove as the catalyst.
  • "Go Girl" was recorded for Walker's third album Finally Over It, released on November 14, 2025. It sits in the project's first half, where Walker emphasizes choosing herself and establishing boundaries. The song represents the lighter, more playful assertion of self-worth that contrasts with the introspection of tracks like "Heart Of A Woman" and "Robbed You," showcasing Walker's shift from questioning why she gives so much to confidently celebrating what she brings to the table.

Comments

Be the first to comment...

Editor's Picks

Cheerleaders In Music Videos

Cheerleaders In Music VideosSong Writing

It started with a bouncy MTV classic. Nirvana and MCR made them scary, then Gwen, Avril and Madonna put on the pom poms.

Shaun Morgan of Seether

Shaun Morgan of SeetherSongwriter Interviews

Shaun breaks down the Seether songs, including the one about his brother, the one about Ozzy, and the one that may or may not be about his ex-girlfriend Amy Lee.

Real or Spinal Tap

Real or Spinal TapMusic Quiz

They sang about pink torpedoes and rocking you tonight tonight, but some real lyrics are just as ridiculous. See if you can tell which lyrics are real and which are Spinal Tap in this lyrics quiz.

Ian Anderson of Jethro Tull

Ian Anderson of Jethro TullSongwriter Interviews

The flautist frontman talks about touring with Led Zeppelin, his contribution to "Hotel California", and how he may have done the first MTV Unplugged.

Stan Ridgway

Stan RidgwaySongwriter Interviews

Go beyond the Wall of Voodoo with this cinematic songwriter.

Dar Williams

Dar WilliamsSongwriter Interviews

A popular contemporary folk singer, Williams still remembers the sticky note that changed her life in college.