
More rock-driven than ever and embracing chaos by choice, singer, songwriter, and activist Bossi delivers her bold new album, “Tell All the Other Girls.” The 13-track collection is a raw outcry of rage and resistance, standing as a fierce defiance against the oppression of women while powerfully embodying her artistic vision.
At its core, “Tell All the Other Girls” is a body of work that moves between poetry and visceral rock. Bossi offers a raw exploration of the female experience across centuries, from the myths that reduced Eve and Cassandra to the contemporary wounds of domestication, symbolic violence, and toxic masculinity.
Produced by Justin Glasco (Paris Paloma, Imagine Dragons, The Lone Bellow), the record opens with a youth-fueled anthem of rebellion, “Kiss Me Goodbye,” and closes with a deep meditation on love as resistance, “In the Quiet.” Between those two extremes, Bossi bares her thoughts in an album that has grown defiantly, fueled by injustice yet carried with the patience of someone who understands the magnitude of her mission.

Among its standout tracks, the single “Run Baby Run” arrives with a striking music video filled with metaphorical imagery. In it, Bossi appears bound in a straitjacket on a blindingly white stage, later breaking free to dance with sharp, jagged movements alongside three performers who stare directly into the camera, while shadows lurk like sudden flashes.
The video’s polished aesthetic is no accident. Behind the scenes, art director and set designer Domenica Agostino Leibowitz and cinematographer/director Mark Leibowitz (Netflix, HBO, Euphoria) worked with a team of skilled creators to translate the song’s urgent message into powerful visuals.
Speaking about the inspiration behind the song, Bossi explained, “‘Run Baby Run’ came to me like a personal siren call—urgent, loud, and impossible to ignore. In the aftermath of Roe v. Wade being overturned and the escalating attacks on women’s rights across the U.S., I felt a visceral need to respond. I knew this video had to be bold, messy, unflinching.”
Beyond music, Bossi has turned activism into a cornerstone of her career. Through her community-driven vision, she founded House of Bossi, an artistic hub in Bel Air dedicated to amplifying voices and creating opportunities for emerging talent, shaped in part by her own life experience as a two-time cancer survivor.
Adding to her multifaceted path, she has collaborated with the United Nations on mental health campaigns and shared stages with high-profile names such as Jewel, Russell Brand, and Ozomatli.
Bossi’s ambitions know no bounds, and she embraces hard work without hesitation. Most recently, she unveiled a bold merchandise line, headlined by the iconic “You’re Not the Boss of This” T-shirt, a statement piece she champions as a powerful symbol of reproductive justice and feminist resistance.

With the spotlight now firmly on “Tell All the Other Girls” and its standout single “Run Baby Run,” Bossi makes it clear she refuses to live in the grey. Her purpose cuts through everything she creates like a burning blade, driven by one unwavering truth: fighting for women’s rights is her ultimate and lifelong mission.
