Red Leopard of St. Paul Lowertown noise with claws

Lowertown mirror, stripped to the music

Red Leopard of St. Paul

Hair metal born in brick warehouses, neon fog, and the part of Saint Paul that still keeps secrets.

Nine Lives on the Strip is the debut: twelve tracks of swagger, ballast, falsetto, leather, and just enough modern production pressure to make the old machinery sound alive again. This microsite keeps only the band, the album, the art, and the future single.

12
album tracks before the bonus wound opens
1
developing follow-up single called Melanie
Lowertown
not a backdrop, but the actual character
Red Leopard of St. Paul standing onstage in a smoky Lowertown club with a guitar and chrome microphone
Nine Lives on the Strip debut album art
scarlet fur, amber light, warehouse mythology

Manifesto

A band built from costume and conviction

What if the greatest hair-metal band of 1987 formed in Saint Paul in 2026, loved the form enough to do it seriously, and knew exactly where to hide the sub-bass? That is the entire proposition. The leopard is the gimmick. The songwriting is the proof. The city is the witness.

Why it works

The choruses are built for ten thousand people or one person in traffic. The ballads slow down enough to hurt. The heaviest cuts let the claws show. Three songs flirt with the present tense: social media, AI, authenticity, and the weird cost of still meaning what you say. The rest is exactly what the genre deserves: velocity, romance, volume, and a solo long enough to restore your posture.

Album

Nine Lives on the Strip

Debut album. Twelve tracks that answer a question nobody asked but everybody needed. St. Paul runs through the whole record: the riverfront, the artist warehouses, the Wabasha clubs, the grit, the glow, and the idea that you probably have fewer good lives left than you think, so you might as well turn the volume up now.

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  1. 01 Nine Lives on the Stripalbum opener and declaration of intent 3:45
  2. 02 Catitudethe swagger track 3:32
  3. 03 Neon Prowl80s rock meeting modern pressure 4:10
  4. 04 Seventh Lifethe first true power ballad 5:15
  5. 05 Fur and Firethe kinetic peak 3:28
  6. 06 Wabasha After Darkthe heaviest thing on the record 3:55
  7. 07 Claws Out (Digital Jungle)social media, authenticity, modern static 4:22
  8. 08 Lowertown Howlthe city-as-chorus anthem 3:40
  9. 09 Last Call Lullabythe emotional climax 5:45
  10. 10 Whisker Whiplashthe speed run 3:18
  11. 11 Programmed to PurrAI, desire, and synthetic reality 4:35
  12. 12 Still Got Clawsthe closing promise 4:05
  13. Melaniebonus cut and future fracture line 5:20

Artwork

Scarlet fur, amber haze

The visual direction stays committed to the bit without becoming a joke: Kerrang!-scale stage energy, a chrome mic, black leather, a Lowertown warehouse skeleton, and enough warmth in the lighting to make the fantasy feel inhabited instead of ironic.

Setting

Lowertown is in the record

The songs keep returning to Saint Paul as a place with memory. Wabasha. Riverfront brick. Artist loft afterglow. Alley neon. Clubs that look half-converted and fully holy. This site leaves the civic showcase behind and keeps only the band mythology it generated.

Next release

Melanie

After a full debut built on bravado and controlled vulnerability, Melanie is the song Red Leopard never planned to write. It is the power-rock love letter: Cathedral Hill at night, Cabernet on the counter, three cats, Montana roots, and the oldest trick in the playbook, the final-chorus key change, used because it still works.