Tigers Jaw Chart the Solitude of Their Inner Landscapes with Visual for New Single “Breezer”

The single arrives ahead of the pop-punk outfit’s seventh album Lost on You, which drops March 27 via Hopeless.
First Look

Tigers Jaw Chart the Solitude of Their Inner Landscapes with Visual for New Single “Breezer”

The single arrives ahead of the pop-punk outfit’s seventh album Lost on You, which drops March 27 via Hopeless.

Words: Mike LeSuer

Photo: Nicole Busch

March 04, 2026

2026 marks two decades since Tigers Jaw unleashed their initial lo-fi transmission, and although plenty has changed within the band since then, they’ve maintained an impressively consistent formula as far back as 2008’s studio debut even as band members have come and gone. This month will see the release of the outfit’s seventh album, Lost on You, and the singles thus far feature some of the band’s toughest riffs (enhanced by noted riff-enhancer Will Yip) while maintaining the earworm melodies that contribute to the “pop” half of the pop-punk equation.

Today the band is sharing another new track called “Breezer,” which, despite its name, is just as heavy in the guitar department as its predecessors—no matter how much co-vocalist Brianna Collins’ pacified lead vocals soften things. “I tend to romanticize past versions of myself in moments of uncertainty, while also finding comfort in life’s unpredictability,” she shares of the notably yearning track. “‘Breezer’ is about the ebb and flow of insecurity, doubt, and escapism, and my gradual acceptance of the cyclical nature of these feelings.”

Enhancing the band’s vision for the song is the music video created by Rebecca Lader and Kelsey Ayres, which sets the track’s themes to a visual palette most familiar to the ornate interiors of a Sofia Coppola film. “From the beginning, we imagined ‘Breezer’ as an inward journey,” the co-director duo explains of the clip starring Collins, “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.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.”

Check out the video below, and pre-order Lost on You ahead of its March 27 release via Hopeless Records here.