FLO drops 'Therapy At The Club'
- FLO announced its second album, *Therapy At The Club*, for July 24 and released the title track on May 6 as the project’s lead single. - The new song runs 2 minutes 47 seconds, and the trio framed the album as “dark, euphoric R&B and pop” about healing. - It follows 2024’s *Access All Areas* and signals FLO pushing from revival act toward a bigger, more defined album era.
FLO didn’t just drop a new song this week. The British R&B trio used “Therapy At The Club” to open up a whole new album era — same name, release date set for July 24, and a pretty clear statement about where they want to go next. The track arrived on May 6, alongside an album trailer and pre-order rollout. So the real news isn’t just “new FLO single.” It’s that FLO have moved from teasing a vibe to naming the full project and its emotional pitch. (udiscovermusic.com) ### Is this a single or an album announcement? It’s both, basically. “Therapy At The Club” is the title track and the first released song tied directly to FLO’s sophomore album, also called *Therapy At The Club*. That album is slated for July 24, which makes this less like a loose one-off and more like the op(udiscovermusic.com)ing — this is the start of FLO’s next big chapter. (udiscovermusic.com) ### What does the song actually sound like? The track is short — 2:47 — and built to move fast. But the interesting part is the framing around it. FLO are leaning into club energy without treating the club as just a party backdrop. The album language around the release talks about “dark, euphoric R&B and pop”(udiscovermusic.com)hit emotionally as well as physically. That tension is the hook here. (youtube.com) ### Why call it “Therapy At The Club”? Because FLO are trying to make the club mean more than nightlife. In the release messaging, the trio describe the club as a place for release, honesty, healing, confidence, heartbreak, and desire — not just a dance floor. That gives the project a stronger concept than a standard “sad bangers” s(youtube.com)he album wants to sit in that space where going out is part escapism, part emotional processing. (billboard.com) ### Why does that matter for FLO? Because FLO’s whole rise has been tied to reviving a polished girl-group R&B sound, and the risk with that kind of breakout is getting boxed into nostalgia. A concept-heavy second album helps them avoid that. Instead of just serving more harmonies an(billboard.com)ying power. That’s what sophomore albums are for. (billboard.com) ### How does this connect to their last album? It follows *Access All Areas*, which came out in 2024. So this isn’t a long disappearance and comeback. It’s a fairly quick turn into the next cycle, which suggests FLO want to keep momentum rather than pause and reset. The new project r(billboard.com)motional release. (ourculturemag.com) ### Is there anything else in the rollout worth noticing? Yes — FLO had already been seeding this song in live settings, including Tiny Desk-related performances that circulated online before the official release. That matters because the title wasn’t a surprise to core fans. (ourculturemag.com)akes this week the real launch point. (youtube.com) ### So what’s the bottom line? FLO’s move this week was bigger than a playlist update. They named the album, set the date, and used one song to explain the whole emotional logic of the era. If *Therapy At The Club* lands, it won’t just confirm that FLO can make sleek R&B records — it’ll show they can build a full album world around them. (udiscovermusic.com)