“The Girl I Lost in the Storm”: LISTHAUG’s Reflection on a Love That Changed But Never Faded
- Editorial Board

- Jul 2
- 1 min read
Updated: Jul 2
A haunting new single that drifts through broken memories and cold rain

Oslo's based singer-songwriter LISTHAUG’s The Girl I Lost in the Storm is the kind of song you stumble across late at night, headphones on, lights off, replaying every word like a half-remembered dream. It came together out of nowhere, catching even LISTHAUG off guard.
That urgency bleeds into the song’s DNA, there’s no overthinking here, just raw confessions and the echoes of things unsaid. The track floats on a beautifully played guitar instrumental that feels drenched in rain.
His vocals cut through like distant thunder, weary, searching, and cracked at the edges. You feel the heartbreak, but more than that, you feel the ache of someone who knows they’ll stand alone in that storm again just to catch one more glimpse of it.

Underneath it all is a quiet tension, the same force pulling him forward to his next chapter. LISTHAUG’s next release, King of the Junkyard, drops on July 4th, a date chosen on purpose. This time he’s taking on something bigger: power, decay, and the mess we live in now. If The Girl I Lost in the Storm is the sorrow, King of the Junkyard might be the song that shifts the focus outwards creating a new narrative for LISTHAUG’s lyrics.
LISTHAUG doesn’t hide behind big budgets or huge marketing plans.
The music, the emotions and the feelings comes first. The honesty hits harder than any perfect promo shot ever could.
Stream The Girl I Lost in the Storm now listen on Spotify and follow LISTHAUG on Instagram to see where the storm leads next.


