GIRLSET's "Little Miss" Makes Room for R&B Edges and a New Identity
GIRLSET is back with a makeover that actually feels like a reset. With “Little Miss,” the quartet’s new single under JYP Entertainment and Republic Records, the group leans hard into a glossy Y2K universe that swaps VCHA’s bright, schoolyard energy for something bolder and moodier. The track arrives as their second release since rebranding from VCHA to GIRLSET earlier this year, after the lineup settled around Lexi, Camila, Kendall, and Savanna.
Sonically, “Little Miss” pushes them further into a hybrid R&B/pop lane. The beat is built on rubbery bass, skittering percussion, and those fizzy, early-’00s synths that defined an era’s trends. There’s also more space in the arrangement, which gives the members room to flex, using stacked harmonies, call-and-response hooks, and ad-libs that curl around the chorus. Where the VCHA era leaned on youthful chant-alongs, GIRLSET sounds intent on proving they can really sing, dropping subtle runs and little melodic riffs that underline the track’s confidence.
Visually, the Hannah Lux Davis-directed video sells the pivot. The girls prowl through the city in Y2K-esque styling while choreography flips between sharp hits and loose, swingy grooves. “Commas,” released in August, essentially hinted at this evolution, though it’s “Little Miss” that seals it. And the heart of the project—authenticity and unapologetic energy—is still there, but filtered through a cooler, more self-possessed lens.
At this point, it’s safe to say that GIRLSET no longer feels like a promising rookie spin-off of VCHA; with this sound, they’re staking out their own Bratz-coded corner that has plenty of potential to evolve into something different.
Watch the music video for “Little Miss” below.
