Imagining a backstory for Long Lost, centred on mysterious artists who may have recorded at their Whispering Pines studio in the past, has allowed Lord Huron to wax nostalgic for country music’s golden age. Certainly, the spirits of Marty Robbins and Bobby Bare are abroad on the western balladry of “Meet Me In The City” and “Twenty Long Years”. But the band hits an altogether richer seam on the Fleet Foxeslike “Mine Forever” and the vast sweep of the string-laden title track, rooted in the lost highway myth but sounding more akin to classic Walker Brothers.