The song and video are available now
New York’s hottest stars, 41 and A Boogie Wit Da Hoodie, turn up the energy in the explosive new music video for their summer single “Naked,” out now via Rite Or Wrong KVH Entertainment/Republic Records.
The visual matches the track’s heat, capturing the young kings of NYC partying across multiple venues—from a gritty warehouse rooftop to a neon-lit strip club. Surrounded by beautiful women, flashing lights, and nonstop vibes, it’s the ultimate night out, 41-style. The video feels like a fast-paced dream of city nights and summer highs, with every frame pulsing with youthful charisma and a raw edge that defines New York’s next-gen sound.
“Naked” marks the very first collaboration between these two East Coast powerhouses, uniting Brooklyn and the Bronx. As thunder cracks and a slow-drip beat creeps in, “Naked” oozes with late-night allure. Over thick bass and house-tinged production, Kyle Richh, Jenn Carter, and TaTa go bar for bar with hypnotic precision, trading slick one-liners like secret confessions on the dancefloor. A Boogie floats in with an irresistible hook that lingers like perfume in the air—“Please don’t call me your favorite, she don’t wanna be saved.” It’s moody, magnetic, and made for summer nights that blur into morning.
The group recently headlined Hot 97’s Summer Jam at the Prudential Center in Newark, New Jersey, joining a stacked bill alongside A Boogie Wit Da Hoodie, Gunna, GloRilla, and more.
At the top of the year, 41 addressed the game with “Presidential.” Fans immediately embraced the track, leading to over ten million streams and counting. The trio is hard at work on their mega-anticipated full-length debut album, expected soon.
The platinum-certified hip-hop collective features TaTa, Jenn Carter, and Kyle Richh. The trio bulldozed a way out of the New York underground and to the forefront of the culture on their terms, representing the union of three distinct and dynamic rappers whose star power is only heightened when they come together on a track. They have quietly generated just shy of one billion streams fueled by the success of the platinum-certified “Bent,” “Stomp Stomp,” and more.