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A modified version of the public domain image Transference of Thoughts (1885) which shows a number of drawings made during a thought experiment.
A modified version of the public domain image Transference of Thoughts (1885) which shows a number of drawings made during a thought experiment.

1. You'd Have Thought

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We used to tell him he ought to go.
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You'd Have Thought
3:37

You'd Have Thought

Lyrics

You'd have thought
By Now
These eyes
Would have seen it all
You'd have thought

You'd have thought
By now
They might have known
How
How to do this right
You'd have thought

We used to tell him
He ought to go
You ought to go
You ought to go
Go with the flow
You ought to go

You'd have thought
That they could be on time
They could be prepared
They could show
A little care
You'd have thought

You'd have thought
That they could see
That this little thing
Is important
To me

We used to tell him
He ought to go
You ought to go
You ought to go
Go with the flow
You ought to go

But who are we
To tell this old, old man
How he ought to be?
Yeah, who are we?

We used to tell him
He ought to go
You ought to go
You ought to go
Go with the flow
Go with the flow

We used to tell him
He ought to go
You ought to go
You ought to go
Go with the flow
Yeah, you'd have thought
You'd have thought

CREDITS

ALBUM ART

The album art was modified from Transference of Thoughts (1885) taken from the Public Domain Review on 23rd February 2026.

The image is "An illustration from Science - An Illustrated Journal, a nineteenth-century weekly published in New York by The Science Company. The picture is an experiment carried out according to the ideas of the French physiologist Charles Richet (1850–1935) who believed in thought transmission. Richet did research on such subjects as digestion and breathing, as well as homeothermic animals, whilst later becoming interested in hypnosis and spiritualism. He believed there could be physical explanations to paranormal phenomena. The image featured here shows the drawings made during the experiment, one person making a drawing, after which another person tries to copy it without seeing the originally drawn picture. As you can see, there were mixed results."

Source: Michels, John, Michels, John, & American Association for the Advancement of Science. (1880). Science (Vol. 6, Issue 126, p. 8). [s.n.]. https://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/page/42221906

SOFTWARE

PLUGINS

THANKS

Thanks to: Stu, LJK, and Anyone who has ever made a linux audio plugin

Released: 2026-05-10

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