NAACP Image Awards: 7 Doechii Songs That Celebrate the Power of Black Womanhood
Doechii doesn’t just make songs, but she builds worlds.
Her music feels like a mirror, a diary, and a stage all at once. Every verse carries humor, edge, softness, rage, joy, and pride without asking permission to exist in one lane.
At a time when she’s being recognized by the NAACP Image Awards with four nominations, including Entertainer of the Year, it feels right to look at the records where she most clearly celebrates herself and not as an idea, but as a Black woman living loudly, freely, and fully.
Here are seven Doechii records that show how she turns identity into art.
“Yucky Blucky Fruitcake”
This is the record that introduced Doechii as a storyteller who refuses to shrink herself. She walks through her insecurities, ambition, and hunger for more — then flips it into confidence without apology.
The song feels like a diary entry that accidentally became a hit. It shows how loving yourself isn’t about pretending — it’s about telling the truth and standing in it anyway.
"Crazy"
On “Crazy,” Doechii leans into how society labels women when they’re emotional, expressive, or unfiltered — and flips that label into power.
She doesn’t try to soften herself to be digestible. Instead, she shows how being “too much” is often just being honest. It’s a love letter to women who refuse to be quiet to make others comfortable.
"Girls"
This record feels like a celebration of sisterhood without needing permission. It’s playful, confident, and rooted in joy, not performance.
She centers women as community, not competition. The song moves like laughter in a room full of people who understand you without explanation.
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"Persuasive"
“Persuasive” shows Doechii stepping fully into her body and confidence. It’s sensual without being small. Bold without being stiff.
She treats desire like power, not something to hide. It’s a reminder that owning your sexuality can also be an act of self-love.
"Stressed"
On “Stressed,” she lets vulnerability sit in the front seat. She talks about pressure, expectations, and emotional weight without dressing it up.
It’s honest in a way that feels familiar — like a voice memo sent to a friend at 2 a.m. Loving yourself here looks like admitting when things are heavy.
"Bitch I'm Nice"
This song is pure confidence, but not the empty kind. It’s earned. It’s rooted in knowing who you are and what you bring.
Doechii isn’t asking to be seen — she’s telling you. It’s the sound of a woman who knows her worth and refuses to negotiate it.
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"girl, get up"
And what's the agenda when the IT girl Black?
Oh, okay!
“Girl, Get Up” feels like a pep talk wrapped in rhythm. It’s motivational without being corny — the kind of song you play when you’re tired, doubting yourself, or trying to remember who you are.Doechii sounds like both the friend and the mirror, reminding you that rest is real, struggle is human, but so is getting back up. Loving yourself here looks like choosing to keep going — gently, honestly, and on your own terms.
Watch the NAACP Image Awards on BET and CBS on Feb. 28, 2026.