
Senseless Budd

Never Ending Train Never Ending Train
Recorded in Olympia during John's Goodwill Tour when he lived in Portland. The Intro and Ending were unedited. It was the very end of the cassette which was recorded on a Fostex X-15. The only version I have ever heard of this song.

Not Just Another Box.mp3 Not Just Another Box.mp3
Written for the Lightnin Resophonic Research Cooperative Contest. I took a song John Cook posted years ago by the name of Wabi Sabi, chopped it up and Frankensteined it into this hear toon!

JAH-n-LOVE JAH-n-LOVE
A song for the Dreamsville Relationship project having to do with the Love of Sailing. It makes me want to be out among the San Jaun Islands.

Was ist Das? Was ist Das?
Another spontaneous song sprung from the amazing mind of John Cook. A submission for the Dreamsville Silly Song Project: Nein! Nein! Nein! (09-09-09)

Mutant Folk Mutant Folk
Mutant Folk submission for the Dreamsville Out West (Mutant Country) virtual album.

Down, Down, Down, Down Down, Down, Down, Down
A Lo-Tek (4 track cassette) spontaneous based song. It is a contrbution to the Dreamsville 'Out West: Mutant Country' project.

Country Summer Mystery Country Summer Mystery
New spontaneous song recorded for the Dreamsville Summer project. 2 acoustic guitars, Jahn's voice, and no effects added (except some mystery reverb that somehow snuck in at the end).

Sad Song Sad Song
From Senseless Budd's '85 legendary Winter Solstice Jam. Submitted to The Casimir Engine's Unplugged Project for Bill Nelson's Dreamsville.Merges w/ Cardboard Square.

Cardboard Square Cardboard Square
From the Senseless Budd 20th Anniversary Winter Solstice Jam.

Little Bitty Cardboard Heart Box Little Bitty Cardboard Heart Box
A new version of Cardboard Box in the Alley (my favorite Sensless Budd song). If Laurie Anderson was a man and (s)he played acoustic folk, (s)he might sound like this! (Recorded for the Dreamsville Valentine Project)

Opening Budds Opening Budds
This song is from Senseless Budd's 20th Anniversary Winter Solstice Jam. It was run through just one single microphone and recorded onto one channel of a Teac reel-to-reel. Hence no mixing was done other than the overall level.