Featuring Rozzi’s smoky, full-bodied vocals, with songs that move seamlessly from upbeat pop, funk and R&B to low-key acoustic ballads, and a special contribution from iconic guitarist Nile Rodgers, Berry is ultimately an expansive record about growth, learning to trust your instincts, and, ultimately (“because I like a happy ending,” Rozzi laughs), embracing new love and change. 

“I wrote ‘fflow’ in the depths of quarantine when, outside the world felt dark and scary but inside, I was falling in love and feeling like a giddy teenager,” shares Rozzi. 

“Like all my songs, fflow is very personal. Months after it was written, when I realized the word ‘flow’ spelled ‘wolf’ backwards, I decided to add the extra ‘f’ so it matched my boyfriend and muse’s last name Wolff.”

While Berry celebrates new love and bids farewell to old relationships, ultimately Rozzi’s latest album represents a pact with herself.

“I think I’ve had a really hard time listening to my own voice in the past,” she says. “But the events that led up to making this record put me in a position where I feel like I finally made a change and can trust my own instincts in a different way. And I don’t think I could do that until now.”