Lost

Album: Different Night Same Rodeo (2025)
Charted: 86
Play Video

Songfacts®:

  • "Lost" is a collaboration between Bailey Zimmerman and The Kid Laroi that explores feelings of emptiness and confusion after a breakup. It's a country-pop hybrid, with Zimmerman's gritty, sky-wide vocals colliding with Laroi's sleek, pop-schooled delivery.
  • The theme is simple enough: when love ends, so too does your sense of direction. Both singers mourn the version of themselves that walked out the door with their exes. Zimmerman leans into imagery of familiar spaces turned foreign - rooms that still look the same but feel stripped bare - while Laroi spirals through the collateral damage: friendships frayed, family ties tangled, and the gnawing question of how exactly one starts over.
  • If you know Zimmerman's catalog, "Lost" feels like a spiritual cousin to his other breakup-heavy tracks: the cliff-edge angst of "Rock And A Hard Place," the rueful hindsight of "Fall In Love," the emotional tightrope of "Fix'n to Break," and the gut-punch ache of "Comin' In Cold." He's practically built a career out of turning failed love affairs into anthems.
  • The collaboration was born in Nashville after Laroi played a private gig in town. "He's like, 'I want to have dinner with Bailey,'" Zimmerman recalled to Billboard.

    Despite his nerves, Zimmerman discovered that Laroi was not only approachable but eerily like-minded: "It was like the Spiderman thing where I was pointing at myself."

    The two hit Morgan Wallen's bar, then Loser's, and at some stage Zimmerman played Laroi "Lost." Laroi pushed back his flight the next morning so he could hear "Lost" again over breakfast. By the end of the meal, he'd signed on.
  • The track landed on Zimmerman's sophomore album, Different Night Same Rodeo, alongside other marquee collaborations with Luke Combs, Diplo, and MacKenzie Carpenter. "My main goal when it comes to collaboration is just making sure there's a real relationship and [that] it's fun to do it," Zimmerman told Apple Music. "How am I going to do something with somebody that I don't know?"
  • Zimmerman and Laroi wrote the song with the country star's regular producer Austin Shawn, Nashville songwriters Rodney Clawson and Michael Lotten, singer-songwriter Ryan Hurd and Laroi's go-to songwriter partner Billy Walsh.
  • A band of seasoned session pros bring depth to "Lost": Dave Cohen on keys, Scotty Sanders sliding across the pedal steel, Rob McNelley and Tim Galloway trading guitars, Jimmie Lee Sloas anchoring the bass, and Jerry Roe pounding the heartbeat of the track.
  • The video, filmed in Nevada, plays almost like a visual metaphor for their breakup blues: Zimmerman bouncing through the desert in a monster truck, all raw horsepower and grit, while Laroi lounges in a limousine, detached but equally adrift. It's two sides of heartbreak - loud and reckless versus sleek and restrained - yet both stranded in the same endless desert.

Comments

Be the first to comment...

Editor's Picks

Michael Bolton

Michael BoltonSongwriter Interviews

Into the vaults for this talk with Bolton from the '80s when he was a focused on writing songs for other artists.

Dave Edmunds

Dave EdmundsSongwriter Interviews

A renowned guitarist and rock revivalist, Dave took "I Hear You Knocking" to the top of the UK charts and was the first to record Elvis Costello's "Girls Talk."

Concert Disasters

Concert DisastersFact or Fiction

Ozzy biting a dove? Alice Cooper causing mayhem with a chicken? Creed so bad they were sued? See if you can spot the real concert mishaps.

Bible Lyrics

Bible LyricsMusic Quiz

Rockers, rappers and pop stars have been known to quote the Bible in their songs. See if you match the artist to the biblical lyric.

Jon Anderson

Jon AndersonSongwriter Interviews

Jon Anderson breaks down the Yes classic "Seen All Good People" and talks about his 1000 Hands album, which features Chick Corea, Rick Derringer, Ian Anderson, and many other luminaries.

David Bowie Leads the Society for Prevention of Cruelty to Long-Haired Men

David Bowie Leads the Society for Prevention of Cruelty to Long-Haired MenSong Writing

Bowie's "activist" days of 1964 led to Ziggy Stardust.