The band entered Trafalgar Studios in early 1987, soon after returning home from a two-month, 70-date tour of Europe and the United States, physically exhausted but creatively energised. Keyboardist Frank Brunetti recalled: "Even though we weren't making much money out of it we could see that people were taking an interest, not just in Australia but in the States and Europe. There was demand from people to make another record." Bassist Mark Lock announced he would quit the band because he did not want to tour any more, but agreed to join them for the recording sessions while they searched for a replacement. Myers said there was a determination to give the album more space and more light and shade than its predecessor. "A lot of the tracks on
Free Dirt were very dense, everyone's playing flat out all the time. On
Lost I wanted to shift that emphasis." As part of that process, the band used singer Astrid Munday for backing vocals and former
Cold Chisel keyboardist
Don Walker on piano for the song "Free Dirt," which had been left off the debut album. Myers said: "I really liked the song itself and I wanted to give it another go." The band had hired Munday after hearing her vocals on
Paul Kelly's "
Before Too Long". The band asked for Walker's contribution when they saw him walking through Trafalgar Studios to collect some tapes. Myers said: "I thought what this song needs is some really beautiful piano and I was thinking "
Flame Trees" and I went, 'hmmmm' ... Don had a listen to the song and he was very gracious ... he just went 'yeah, okay' and went into the studio and played the piano, did two takes and it was fantastic, just beautiful. It was exactly what I wanted." The album's opening song, the title track, had been written by guitarist Brett Myers for his former Brisbane-based band, The End, and was the last to be recorded for the
Lost sessions. Myers said the suggestion to record the song had come from
Citadel Records owner John Needham, who had seen the band perform it at early Died Pretty gigs. The first single released from the sessions, "Winterland"/"Wig-Out" (acoustic version) was released on Citadel Records in October 1987. The single reached No.1 on the independent chart and was accompanied by a video clip filmed in a disused rubble-strewn underground car park in
Woolloomooloo, with new bassist Steve Clark miming to the bass line recorded by Lock. Needham was by then negotiating with Festival Records for a distribution deal for the album to maximise its chances for success and it was not until June the following year that
Lost was finally released, along with a second single, "Towers of Strength"/"From a Buick 6." Both single and album debuted at No.1 on the independent charts. The album cover featured a photo of a French woman, Sophie, taken by Robyn Stacey, the girlfriend of keyboardist John Hoey, who replaced Brunetti. Stacey's work also appeared on the covers of
Every Brilliant Eye,
Trace and
Sold. =="Everybody Moves"==