Performance · Other credits
William S. Burroughs
St. Louis, United States • 1914-02-05 – 1997-08-02
William S. Burroughs is credited on 601 releases across 108 albums tracked on Gatefold, active 1965–2025 — the collector-built map of who actually made the music.
601
Pressings credited
108
Albums
7
Decades active
172
In collections
Biography
William Seward Burroughs II (; February 5, 1914 – August 2, 1997) was an American writer and visual artist. He is widely considered a primary figure of the Beat Generation and a major postmodern author who influenced both underground and popular culture and literature. Much of Burroughs's work is highly experimental and features unreliable narrators. Also noted as semi-autobiographical, his work often drew from his experiences with drug addiction, and featured his various places of residence as settings in much of his work. With Brion Gysin, Burroughs popularized the cut-up, an aleatory literary technique. His writing also engaged frequent mystical, occult, or otherwise magical themes, constant preoccupations in both his fiction and real life. Born into a wealthy family in St. Louis, Missouri, Burroughs attended Harvard University, where he studied English, then anthropology as a postgraduate, and went on to medical school in Vienna. In 1942, he enlisted in the U.S. Army to serve during World War II. After being turned down by both the Office of Strategic Services and the Navy, he veered into substance abuse, beginning with morphine and developing a heroin addiction that would affect him for the rest of his life. In 1943, he befriended Allen Ginsberg and Jack Kerouac while living in New York City. This liaison would become the foundation of the Beat Generation, later a defining influence on the 1960s counterculture. Burroughs found success with his confessional first novel, Junkie (1953), published under the pen name William Lee. He had largely completed the novel before he accidentally shot and killed his second wife, Joan Vollmer, in 1951 in Mexico City; he was convicted of manslaughter in absentia and received a two-year suspended sentence. His third novel, Naked Lunch (1959), became the subject of one of the last major literary censorship cases in the United States after its US publisher, Grove Press, was sued for violating a Massachusetts obscenity statute. He
Bio from Wikipedia
Credited work
601 releases · 108 albums · active 1965–2025
- Performance · 634
- Other credits · 394
- Engineering · 10
Studios: The Lobby · RPM Studios · Strawberry Studios, France · A&R Studios
Discography
Records they worked on — most-collected first.

Fear Of The Dawn
2022

In Time: The Best Of R.E.M. 1988-2003
2003

The Black Rider
1993

Mister Heartbreak
1984

The X-Files - Songs In The Key Of X
1996

NYC Ghosts & Flowers
2000

Simple Science
2010

Home Of The Brave
1986

Spare Ass Annie And Other Tales
1993

Dead City Radio
1990

Break Through In Grey Room
1986

The Elvis Of Letters
1985

Call Me Burroughs
1965

Queer (Original Score)
2024

Devils In My Details
2008

The Butterfly Effect
1999

Hallucination Engine
1994

The "Priest" They Called Him
1993

The White Arcades
1988

The Acid Lands
2020

The Road To The Western Lands
1998

Box
1993

Technodon
1993

Millions Of Images
1990
Frequent collaborators
Around the web
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