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Patrick Sampson ‘Lost in Montana’ Review: Faith Quest

By Marcus AdetolaJanuary 8, 2026
Patrick Simpson 'Lost in Montana' Review: Faith Quest

Singer-songwriter-guitarist Patrick Sampson returns with “Lost in Montana,” released 8th January 2026, the result of a decade on the road and a successful Kickstarter that funded studio time with Grammy-winning producer Robert Cutarella.

The intro arrives rapturous, that hundred-year-old fiddle and acoustic guitars creating something both euphoric and nostalgic before the first line drops.

This chronicles what it feels like to be lost somewhere between truth and sin, asking if anyone’s coming to find you. 

Sampson’s vocals expose rather than conceal, his delivery unguarded as he admits, “Will you take my bones and leave the rest behind?” 

The question works whether you’re talking to God, a person, or yourself.

The longing sits heaviest in the writing itself, Biblical references surface naturally, Joseph’s dreams, name changes worthy of divine attention, but the real weight is in “All my life it’s always been easy for me to run away / My mind is out the door my heart is telling me to stay.” 

That’s self-sabotage everyone recognises, the runner who won’t commit to anything worth keeping.

The arrangement swells patiently, each element arriving like a hand on the shoulder, until the chorus lifts with the kind of collective conviction gospel does best. 

“If I die, I’ll do it living” arrives like a declaration, the kind that only makes sense when you’re negotiating with something bigger than yourself. 

“Well, I keep getting further away from young” lands in the bridge like the moment you realise you can’t go back to who you were. 

“Lost in Montana” puts you somewhere between elation and ache, the geography literal and metaphorical at once. 

It’s about wandering off and wondering if you’ll be found, whether that search party is coming or if you’re meant to find your own way back.

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