Lost On You
Tigers Jaw
Lost On You is the seventh studio album by Scranton, Pennsylvania indie‑rock band Tigers Jaw, released March 26, 2026 on Hopeless Records and produced by longtime collaborator Will Yip. Arriving five years after I Won’t Care How You Remember Me—their longest gap between records—it refines their familiar blend of emo‑tinted indie rock, melodic hooks, and dual vocals from Ben Walsh and Brianna Collins into something warmer, more layered, and quietly expansive. Critics consistently describe the record as both “refreshing and familiar,” arguing that it captures the ache of time, memory, and growing older in some of the band’s most mature and emotionally distilled writing to date.
Across its 11 tracks—opening with the fragile piano‑led “It’s ok” and closing with the cathartic title track—Lost On You traces the passage of time and the unsettling coexistence of different versions of the self, circling themes of nostalgia, anxiety, heartbreak, and cautious hope. Songs like “Primary Colors,” “Anxious Blade,” and “Light Leaks Through” pair rich, layered guitars, swinging yet hard‑hitting drums, and intertwining vocal lines with lyrics about emotional overwhelm, recursive thought patterns, and the realization that “the version of the person that you miss does not exist.” The record loops back on itself structurally: the closing “Lost on You” reprises key lines from opener “It’s ok” (“I am blood in the gums of a sensitive mouth / I am looking for peace in a world full of doubt”), turning the album into a cyclical journey where uncertainty persists but a fragile sense of acceptance emerges.
Lost On You
Tigers Jaw
Lost On You is the seventh studio album by Scranton, Pennsylvania indie‑rock band Tigers Jaw, released March 26, 2026 on Hopeless Records and produced by longtime collaborator Will Yip. Arriving five years after I Won’t Care How You Remember Me—their longest gap between records—it refines their familiar blend of emo‑tinted indie rock, melodic hooks, and dual vocals from Ben Walsh and Brianna Collins into something warmer, more layered, and quietly expansive. Critics consistently describe the record as both “refreshing and familiar,” arguing that it captures the ache of time, memory, and growing older in some of the band’s most mature and emotionally distilled writing to date.
Across its 11 tracks—opening with the fragile piano‑led “It’s ok” and closing with the cathartic title track—Lost On You traces the passage of time and the unsettling coexistence of different versions of the self, circling themes of nostalgia, anxiety, heartbreak, and cautious hope. Songs like “Primary Colors,” “Anxious Blade,” and “Light Leaks Through” pair rich, layered guitars, swinging yet hard‑hitting drums, and intertwining vocal lines with lyrics about emotional overwhelm, recursive thought patterns, and the realization that “the version of the person that you miss does not exist.” The record loops back on itself structurally: the closing “Lost on You” reprises key lines from opener “It’s ok” (“I am blood in the gums of a sensitive mouth / I am looking for peace in a world full of doubt”), turning the album into a cyclical journey where uncertainty persists but a fragile sense of acceptance emerges.
