An inward journey gets the short-film treatment on the latest from Tigers Jaw. The band have shared “BREEZER,” a sweeping single from their new album ‘Lost on You,’ out now via Hopeless Records. It arrives alongside a cinematic video directed by Rebecca Lader and Kelsey Ayres that spotlights Brianna Collins as both lead vocalist and featured star, wandering in solitude through palatial, otherworldly scenes.
The directors approached it as more than a clip. “From the beginning, we imagined ‘BREEZER’ as an inward journey, a world shaped by comfort, solitude, and self-connection rather than isolation,” Lader and Ayres explain. “The film becomes Brianna’s inner landscape: a lived-in, ceremonial space where memory and ritual feel sacred and emotionally honest.” Inspired by Romanticism, mythology, and the still intimacy of Sofia Coppola, Alex Prager, and David Lynch, they let every choice of pacing, framing, and light follow emotion rather than tempo.
The song works the same emotional terrain. “I tend to romanticize past versions of myself in moments of uncertainty, while also finding comfort in life’s unpredictability,” Collins explains. “‘BREEZER’ is about the ebb and flow of insecurity, doubt, and escapism, and my gradual acceptance of the cyclical nature of these feelings.”
“BREEZER” is the band’s fourth single ahead of ‘Lost on You,’ following “Primary Colors,” “Ghost,” and “Head is Like a Sinking Stone,” which earned praise from Kerrang!, The Line of Best Fit, BBC Radio 1 Rock Show, Rolling Stone, Alternative Press, Stereogum, Brooklyn Vegan, and The Needle Drop. Collins recently appeared on Jeremy Bolm’s The First Ever Podcast, while bandmate Ben Walsh guested on Indie Basketball, each discussing the record. The band will also appear at Outbreak Fest in Manchester in June.
‘Lost on You’ was produced and engineered by longtime collaborator Will Yip (Turnstile, Movements) at his famed Studio 4 in Philadelphia, and continues what listeners have always loved about Tigers Jaw: the pounding rhythm section, melodic leads that shift from instrument to instrument, and Walsh and Collins’ overlapping vocals. While decidedly of the present, it stays embedded in their history, with moments that would feel at home at the defunct Scranton venue Test Pattern just as much as in the huge halls of Philadelphia’s Union Transfer, which they now sell out. The scene’s present moment owes a lot to Tigers Jaw, and the group keeps moving forward.
‘Lost on You’ Tracklist:
- It’s ok
- Primary Colors
- Head is Like a Sinking Stone
- Anxious Blade
- Baptized on a Redwood Drive
- BREEZER
- Ghost
- Staring at Empty Faces
- Light Leaks Through
- Roses + Thorns
- Lost on You


