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Lost & Profound were a Canadian folk rock band in the early 1990s. Originally from Calgary, Alberta, where they began under the name The Psychedelic Folk Virgins, the band consisted of vocalist Lisa Boudreau and guitarist Terry Tompkins, with a varying roster of supporting musicians that included Anton Evans on bass, Vic D'Arsie on keyboards, and Curtis Driedger, Allen Baekeland and David Quinton-Steinberg on drums. After moving to Toronto, the band released the independent cassette The Bottled Romance of Nowhere before changing their name to Lost & Profound and contributing the songs "All Consuming Mistress" to the 1991 compilation album Moose: The Compilation and "How Many Times" to its 1992 sequel Moose Lodge. Boudreau and Tompkins, signed as Lost & Profound to PolyGram Records in 1992, released their self-titled debut produced by Richard Bennett scoring a Top 20 hit with the single "Brand New Set of Lies". Other singles from the album included "Curb the Angels" and "Winter Raging". They garnered a Juno Award nomination for Most Promising Group at the 1993 Juno Awards, but lost to Skydiggers. The band followed up with Memory Thief released on PolyGram Records in 1994, which spawned the singles "Miracles Happen" and "Invitation". Memory Thief was also produced by Richard Bennett and featured musicians Jamie Stewart (bass), Kenny Greenberg (guitar), and Michael Organ (drums). Boudreau and Tompkins recorded a faithful recreation of Some Velvet Morning, the 1967 psyche