Tigers Jaw today shared ‘Breezer’, the sweeping latest single previewing the band’s anticipated new LP ‘Lost on You,’ due out on March 27th (Hopeless Records). Out now alongside a cinematic video–directed by Rebecca Lader and Kelsey Ayres, and premiering via FLOOD Magazine – ‘Breezer’ spotlights the band’s Brianna Collins as both the lead vocalist and featured star as she wanders in solitude through palatial and otherworldly scenes.
“From the beginning, we imagined ‘Breezer’ as an inward journey–a world shaped by comfort, solitude, and self-connection rather than isolation. The film becomes Brianna’s inner landscape: a lived-in, ceremonial space where memory and ritual feel sacred and emotionally honest, and where her internal state shapes the visual world around her,” explain co-directors Lader and Ayres.
“Inspired by Romanticism, mythology, and the still intimacy of Sofia Coppola, Alex Prager, and David Lynch, we approached it more as a short film than a music video. Every choice–pacing, framing, light–follows emotion rather than tempo, responding to the song’s quiet shifts. Moments are allowed to linger, unfolding like memory instead of performance.”
Of the song, Collins explains: “I tend to romanticize past versions of myself in moments of uncertainty, while also finding comfort in life’s unpredictability. ‘Breezer’ is about the ebb and flow of insecurity, doubt, and escapism, and my gradual acceptance of the cyclical nature of these feelings.”
‘Lost on You’ –produced/engineered by their longtime collaborator Will Yip (Turnstile, Movements) at his famed Studio 4 in Philadelphia–is a continuation of what we’ve always loved about Tigers Jaw. There’s the powerful and pounding rhythm section, the great melodic leads that shift from instrument to instrument, and, as always, the interchanging and overlapping vocals. And while this record is decidedly from the present, it is deeply embedded in their history. There are many moments that would feel just as at home sung along to at the defunct Scranton venue Test Pattern as they would in the huge halls of Philadelphia’s Union Transfer, a venue probably ten-times as large that they are now able to sell out. This is not surprising. The scene’s present moment owes a lot to Tigers Jaw; their contributions have helped pave the way for this entire world, and still the group continues on.
Upcoming tour dates:
March 26th – Rough Trade Below – New York, NY
March 27th – Amityville Music Hall – Amityville, NY
March 28th – Arrow at Archer Music Hall – Allentown, PA
March 29th – No Fun – Troy, NY
April 1st – SPACE Gallery – Portland, ME
April 2nd – Ocean Mist – Wakefield, RI
April 3rd – Space Ballroom – Hamden, CT
April 4th – Racket – New York, NY
April 5th – Crossroads – Garwood, NJ
April 7th – The Broadberry – Richmond, VA
April 8th – Cat’s Cradle – Carrboro, NC
April 9th – Masquerade Hell Stage – Atlanta, GA
April 10th – The Banyan Live – West Palm Beach, FL
April 11th – The Orpheum – Tampa, FL
April 12th – The Albatross – Jacksonville, FL
April 13th – The Music Farm – Charleston, SC
April 15th – Jefferson Theater – Charlottesville, VA
April 16th – Union Transfer – Philadelphia, PA
April 17th – Baltimore Soundstage – Baltimore, MD
May 27th – Magic Stick – Detroit, MI
May 28th – Grog Shop – Cleveland, OH
May 29h – The Burl – Lexington, KY
May 31st – George’s Majestic Lounge – Fayetteville, AR
June 2nd – Rubber Gloves Patio – Denton, TX
June 3rd – Mohawk – Austin, TX
June 5th – The Nile Theater – Mesa, AZ
June 6th – The Observatory North Park – San Diego, CA
June 7th – The Regent Theater – Los Angeles, CA
June 8th – The Observatory – Santa Ana, CA
June 9th – Great American Music Hall – San Francisco, CA
June 11th – The Crocodile – Seattle, WA
June 12th – Rickshaw Theatre – Vancouver, BC
June 13th – Aladdin Theater – Portland, OR
June 15th – Metro Music Hall – Salt Lake City, UT
June 16th – Bluebird Theater – Denver, CO
June 18th – Wooly’s – Des Moines, IA
June 19th – Delmar Hall – St. Louis, MO
June 20th – The Argo – Whitefish Bay, WI
June 21st – Thalia Hall – Chicago, IL

