Sunday, December 16, 2018

TOP 10 ALBUMS 2018


This year I spent more time and energy making new music than I did listening to music, so I felt like I could only confidently say what I think the best 10 albums are of 2018 (rather than the top 50 like I have in previous years).   But I made a list of around 100 other records that I really dug this year on here as well.

Much love,  
<3
Mike Sim

10 - Tierra Whack - Whack World

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Tierra Whack’s “Whack World” is the best visual album of 2018.  With it's 15 “songs” being crammed in the 15 minutes, it feels more like a collage - where ideas are fractured and strangely juxtaposed.  There’s a lot of humor - often feeling more like a parody of current popular hip-hop and R&B, and is filled with surrealism (at times visually resembling something off of Adult Swim).  Tierra Whack’s debut is a absurdly imaginative album and I’m stoked to see where she goes from here.  


9 - Bill Frisell - Music Is

Image result for music is bill frisell
"Music Is" is Bill Frisell's 2nd solo guitar record and it's been 18 years since his first.  The music on this record is even more spare than is typical for Frisell - sometimes being completely naked and alone & while other times more orchestrated through layers of overdubbing.  It’s a collection of some new tunes as well as other reimagined older repertoire.  In my opinion this is the most beautiful album Frisell has put out.

8-Michael Gordon - Clouded Yellow

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Michael Gordon is one of the three co-founders of Bang on a Can - his music is extremely rhythmic & raw as fuck.  “Clouded Yellow” is a collection of his works that he recorded with the Kronos Quartet.  As the title suggests - the music on this collection blurs & distorts in different ways.  Similar to some of his other works, he plays with the way chamber music can be warped through electronics: such as on “Potassium” in which the Kronos quartet use fuzz box guitar pedals.  Layers often tangle into a web of disorienting rhythmic patters & emotive waves of sound.

7-Earl Sweatshirt - Some Rap Songs

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“Some Rap Songs” is Earl’s best album so far & one of the best things that has come out of Odd Future.  It is for hip-hop what Frank Ocean's "Blond(e)" was for R&B.  Earl took on most of the production (under the moniker RandomBlackDude) and the beats are pretty spaced out - sort of on a similar wave length as the instrumentals by Shabazz Palaces (which Earl references in the opening track) - but a bit more disjointed and drawing more directly from jazz & soul music.  They are complex, but often extremely beautiful (especially the instrumental closing track “Riot!”).  Lyrically this album is his darkest & most personal.  There isn’t any rap album that has ever been made before that sounds like “Some Rap Songs”.

6-Daughters - You Won't Get What You Want

Album art for "You Won't Get What You Want"

“You Won’t Get What You Want” is Providence noise rock band Daughters first record in nearly a decade (their last being their self titled album which was previously thought to be their swan-song).  The tunes on here are far longer (the album time running more than twice as long as their last),  darker, and explore far stranger & more atmospheric sonic territory.  It’s visceral, disturbing, and at times almost nightmaresque / maddening - there are moments that truly sound deranged.  There is a real sense of danger - like everything could fall apart at any moment.  The closer on here is the highlight and is absolutely terrifying.  Daughters return with what is their best album and one of the best noise rock albums I’ve ever heard.

5-John Luther Adams - Everything That Rises


























“Everything That Rises” is John Luther’s 4th’s string quartet (performed by the JACK Quartet) - it uses just-intonation and is a series of ascending musical clouds - with it’s pitches being derived from the harmonics of the subsonic fundamental tone (C).  The intervals grow smaller as it spirals up until it dissolves into the ether and as the music progresses it becomes more and more fragile / brittle sounding.  John Luther Adams is one of the greatest living composers & this piece is one of his most beautiful & holy works.



4-Steve Coleman - Live at the Village Vanguard, Volume 1


This is Steve Coleman's first live release in 15 years - and the primal vibes of the music that Coleman creates are better captured in a live setting.  The last couple releases of his have been perfect highly orchestrated records - where on this record some pieces were composed live on that stage earlier that week in their residency at the Vanguard.  & even the older Coleman tunes are done in a very new in the moment way - bringing them into different places.  This is Coleman & M-Base music at it's best. 

3-Death Grips - Year of the Snitch 


























Death Grips are an experimental hip-hop group out of CA - with each release the group continues to evolve and defy expectations.  On their sixth record here they push further into psychedelic experimental territory - sometimes on almost a Zappaesque level (which is occasionally somewhat reminiscent of Zach Hill's previous solo work).  While not as consistently heavy and dark as some of their previous work - it's much more absurdist and abstract.   Lyrically it's equally trippy & extremely meta.  Even as chaotic as this album is, it still grooves & the hooks are earworms.  Nearly a decade into their career, Death Grips are still the most interesting thing happening in hip hop today.




2-Nik Bärtsch's Ronin - Awase 



Nik Bärtsch, Swiss pianist & composer, has classified his music as ritual groove music.  While initially his music was more like zen-funk - it is now almost drifting into more minimalist-classical territory.  With a more stripped down line up, now consisting of only a quartet - the music on this record is sublimely meditative - with hypnotic grooves that play with your head and continuously trip your sense of time.  This is his strongest release to date and I highly recommend it to anyone who's interested in hearing music that is in a cross-section between jazz and modern-classical music.

1-Idles - Joy as an Act of Resistance 

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Idles are a British band whose debut, "Brutalism" came out last year - and the sound of that record lived up to it’s title.  They are sort of in the punk vein - their music is raw, heavy, but also sheds a lot humor and light.  Their sophomore album is more varied than their debut & a far superior album.  The politics on the album are clearer and more upfront & lyrically the album also goes into topics such as toxic masculinity, immigration, love, sexuality (with Talbot being very open about his bisexuality), as well as the death of his daughter who was a still born (in the emotional, cathartic centerpiece of the album “June” ).   Despite the heavier subject matter, there is a open lightheartedness and a truly joyful nature throughout most the record - with the hooks often being mantraesque, spelling things out (like a cheer of sorts), and chanting.   In the words of John Talbot, singer-songwriter of Idles, "This album is an attempt to be vulnerable to our audience and to encourage vulnerability; a brave naked smile in this shitty new world."


Other Records I Dug from 2018

Electronic: 

-Aphex Twin - Collapse EP
(The Collapse EP is the best Aphex Twin release since his return from hiatus.   In some ways it's a return to an earlier/classic Aphex Twin sound - but in other ways it feels like a journey new territory.)

Autechre - NTS Sessions (This should probably be in the top 10 - but I have not fully digested this 8 hours album yet.  The nearly one hour long closing track on here is one of the most gorgeous things they have ever composed)

Skee mask (techno / dub / breakbeats / ambient - sort of reminiscent of early 90s IDM at times) 

Against All Logic - 2012-2017 (Nicolas Jaar making more fun-oriented & accessible house music)

Yves Tumor - Safe in the Hands of Love

Helena Hauff - Hyper-Intelligent Genetically Enriched Cyborg (noisey techno)

Rabit - Toe in the Bardo Pond 

Demdike Stare - passion (haunted dancehall vibes)

Jon Hopkins - Singularity 

Jlin - Autobiography 

SOPHIE - OIL OF EVERY PEARL'S UN-INSIDES 

Oneohtrix Point Never - Age Of

Eartheater - Irisiri  

Mr. Fingers - Cerebral Hemispheres (jazzy house vibes)

DJ Koze - Knock Knock 

Isabella - Whistle 

Lotic - Power 

iglooghost - Steel Mogu & Clear Tamei 

Laurel Halo - Raw Silk Uncut Wood 

Pariah - Here From Where We Are 

Mouse on Mars - Dimensional People




Foodman - Aru Otoko No Densetsu 

Folk / Singer-Songwriter

Snail Mail - Lush  (one of the best new singer-songerwriters in indie-rock)

John Prine - Tree of Forgiveness
(the closer on here is one of my favorite tracks of the year)

Adrian Lenker - Abysskiss

boygenius - boygenius EP

Jeff Tweedy - WARM 

The Stash Band - Chapter 3 (wild avant-blue-grass)

Sam Moss - Neon

Laminated Animals - Fossil Rock (weirdo lo-fi comedy singer-songwriter with psychedelic orchestration, all recorded with a lap-top microphone)

Windowsill & Ashtray (Windowsill & Ashtray are avant-Comedy duo originating from Hong Kong)

Big Thief - wide winged bird (field recordings manipulated by James Krivchenia)

Soccer Mommy

Mark Kozelek - Mark Kozelek (best release of Mark's this year)

Amen Dunes - Freedom

Lucy Dacus - Historian

Mount Eerie - Now Only

Sun Kil Moon - This is My Dinner (almost feels more like a podcast with these narratives - I can’t imagine Mark getting any more stream of conscious / journelesque & meta…but that’s what I said after his last record…and this one is definitely much further in that direction)

Small Axe - Ultimate Reality

Ruby Luna - Heirloom


Rock: 

Coaches - A Bright Crumb of Steel (indie rock with anthematic guitars, sludgy grooves, gorgeous shoegazey textures, emotive songwriting, & catchy hooks)

Nine Inch Nails - Bad Witch (their best since the Fragile - more experimental & skeletal to the point where it almost sounds unfinished at times)

Big Eater - Unconditional Love (Bachman’s voice is beautiful, raw, and sorta whispery & his songwriting is equally beautiful, vulnerable and naked)

Cloud Nothings - Last Building Burning (their best since their breakthrough “Attack on Memory”)

Yo La Tengo - There’s a Riot Going on (this is not a reimagining of the Sly & the Family stone album of the same name...more ambient and even more vibey than their usual work)

Moonface - This One’s for the Dancer & This One’s for the Dancer’s Bouquet (Moonface’s swan song is filled with minimalist patterns, plenty of marimba, a little bit of smooth sax and some of Spencer’s best lyrics yet)

Sandro Perry - In Another Life (the 24 minute title track on here is one of my favorite songs of the year)

Julia Holter - Aviary

Gurulla Toss - Twisted Crystal

Dear Nora - Skulls Example

Low - Double Negative

Ohmme - Parts

Sea & Cake - Anyday

Mitski- Be the Cowboy

Giraffes? Giraffes! - Memory Lame (fun math-rock)

METAL: 

 Behemoth - I Loved You at Your Darkest (Satanic black metal)

Of the Sun - Time Death (ritualistic tribal earth-metal)

Sleep - The Sciences (Stoner Metal)

Sumac - Love in Shadow

DeafHeaven - Ordinary Corrupt Human Love (nowhere near as good as "Sunbather" - but it's worth it for "Glint" and some other moments on here)

Modern Classical / “Serious Music” / Experimental / Ambient: 

Laurie Anderson & the Kronos Quartet - Landfall (hands down, the dreamiest album of the year)

Jan Jelinek - Zwischen (sound collages which primarily uses the moments between the spoken words as source material - such as pauses for breath and hesitations in which the interviewees utter non-semantic sound particles).

James Krivchenia - No Comment (sound from soldier cams is manipulated to create an emotive, textural, world of sound).

Tigue - Strange Paradise (groovy minimalist post-rocky vibes)

Steve Roach - Molecules of Motion

moviegoer - A Way Alone (beautiful ambient vibes)

Sharon - Wandelaar

Aqueduct Ensemble - Improvisations on an Apricot

Daniel Bachman - The Morning Star

Brad Mehldau - After Bach

Tim Hecker - Konoyo

Steve Reich - Pulse / Quartet

Clairice Jensen - For This From That Will Be Filled (droney minimalist modern classical work)

Philip Glass: The Hours / Distant Figure

Jazz: 

Ambrose Akinmusire - Origami Harvest (a cross section of spoken word, jazz, and modern classical) 

Charles Lloyd & the Marvels & Lucinda Williams - Vanished Gardens 

Brad Mehldau Trio - Seymour Reads the Constitution

John Hollenbeck Large Ensemble

Henry Threadgill & 14 or 15 Kestra: AGG - Dirt & More Dirt

Cecile McLorin Salvant - The Window

Makaya McCaven - Universal Beings

Myra Melford's Snowy Egret - The Other Side of Air

Jason Linder - The Buffering Cocoon

GoGo Pengiun - A Hundrum Star (sort of like D&B being performed by a piano trio)

The Nels Cline 4 - Currents, Constellations

Joshua Redman - Still Dreaming

Andrew Cryille - Lebrobra

Hip-Hop 

Pusha-T - Daytona (Some of the best Kanye beats ever)

Black Thought - Stream of Thought (Volumes 1 & 2)
(if Black Thoughts freestyle from last year didn't convince you he's still one of the best - these 2 EPs will)

Roc Marciano - RR2: The Bitter Dose

Roc Marciano - Behold a Dark Horse

nonane - room 25

Young Fathers - Cocoa Sugar (alternative hip-hop)

Saba - Care for Me

“World” 

Sidi Toure - Toublero (Mali)

Angelique Kidjo - Remain in Light (an afro-beat reimagining of the Talking Heads album)

Ammar 808 - Maghreb United (Tunisia)

Orquesta Akokan - Orquesta Akokan (musica tropical)

R&B / Funk

Georgia Anne Muldrow - Overload 

serpentwithfeet - soil 

Teyana Taylor - K.T.S.E.

St. Paul & the Broken Bones - Young Sick Camelia

Vulfpeck - Hill Climber

Wednesday, December 12, 2018

Music I Made in 2018

God Bless America (Single) 


I also finished recording a visual album titled "<3" which will be out next year.  I released the first single from this album, "Fixing a Clock" over the summer. 

I'm currently in the process of recording an EP about swiping apps which will be out early next year as well

Live Videos from 2018: 



Monday, December 10, 2018

Ouroboros (Live 2018)


Recorded @: 
Webster Court Closing (Newton, MA) - 9/29
Winter Island Park (Salem, MA) - 10/31
The Apohadion Theater (Porltand, ME) - 11/16
Filmed by Adam Blake & Mike Sim 
::::::

Saturday, October 6, 2018

God Bless America


APPLEMUSIC
SPOTIFY
TIDAL
AMAZON
GOOGLEPLAY
SOUNDCLOUD 
BANDCAMP:

Friday, September 28, 2018

Fall Update 2018 - Some Potentially Bad Ideas & Upcoming Performances


I’m releasing some things this year!

(None of them are the thing that I intended on releasing this year, the visual album - which Fixing a Clock was the first single for...But that’ll be coming out next summer instead) 

The first release this year being the EP “Eternity in Hell is a Long Time” which I put out around a month ago.

I've got a lot of other dreams / audio journal things recorded...and maybe at some point I'll release another record of them if I feel like there's another collection of them that sort of fit together the way that those 5 on that EP did.  I also might make a separate soundcloud for just these recordings for folks who want to tune in...




I’m also going to release “God Bless America” (the track I mentioned on that EP which I decided not to put on it).  It's pretty ridiculous and probably more raw and unfiltered than anything I've ever recorded...which is why I initially decided to not release it...but watching the news has brought me to tears every day this week - & I still don't know what to do with myself about everything that's happening other than make music...so I'm currently finishing it up and I'll be putting it out on the interwebz once it's done.  
-here’s a super short preview: 


On a different note, for a while I've been writing on a bunch material that is about online dating / swiping apps.  My current plan is to invite every person I’ve ever met / messaged on swiping apps to a live show my where they will be the entire audience for it, and the video of that show will be the album.  I haven't decided if this is a bit too Cavehesque...but one way or another I'm planning on releasing this material at some point this year since if I wait too much longer swiping apps / dating through the internet will be all different and the material on the record won't make sense anymore...


A L S O  - I’m playing some shows coming up!

Two of which are this weekend!
The first is on Saturday at Webster Court - a house in Newton that is going to be demolished which they have opened up as an art installation / performance space before they do so.  I can't even begin to talk about how special this space is and all the amazing art that is there - but check out this rad video tour Krystle Brown made:

There's also some of the work from the project posted on the facebook event page & the instagram account.  I'll be starting my set at 8:25 and will be playing around 35 minutes.  The set this time around is darker than the one I played for the opening, but mirrors it at times.  I'll be playing some material that I haven't played in years that's been reworked and such. 


Then on Sunday afternoon I’ll be playing an acoustic set at Folked Up in Cambridge - the very first show at this venue hosted by Windowsill & Ashtray who just moved to the area from Hong Kong.  I'll be playing some material off "Eternity in Hell", "Just a Phase" and some other stuff as well.


More shows on the upcoming shows page (which I'll update as more get set up and such)

Much love,
<3
Mike Sim
 

Wednesday, September 12, 2018

Upcoming Shows - Fall 2018


9/15 - Kneebody & Donny McCaslin @ the Sinclair
(I know...this one is still technically Summer...but it's too good not to include) 
(from when he was at the Sinclair last year)

9/20 - IDLES @ Brighton Music Hall



9/26 - Jon Hopkins @ the Sinclair


(show I’m playing at this house in Newton that they're going to demolish that they turned into an art installation / performance space before it gets knocked down)
Image may contain: 2 people, people smiling, outdoor and text



9/30 - Mike Sim Acoustic Set in Harvard Square (w/ Stace Brandt, Windowsill & Ashtray, and Uncle Jon) 
(Flyer by Callum Mackenzie)


10/18 - Big Thief @ The Paradise Rock Club


10/19 & 10/20 - Nine Inch Nails w/ Jesus & Mary Chain
-yo, their new album "Bad Witch" is so good - super Bowie "Blackstar" vibes 

10/26 - SAMHANIC RITUAL @ Trendy Shit Town 
-DM for more info

10/27 - Guerilla Toss @ Elks 


10/31 - I’m playing a Halloween set in Salem 
-DM for more info :) 

11/1 - Behemoth & Wolves in the Throne Room @ House of Blues 




11/5 - Blue Moose and the Unbuttoned Zippers


11/9 & 11/10 - HASSLE FEST 10 
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11/20 - Echo & the Bunnymen @ the Orpheum Theatre 


11/24 - Thom York @ Boch Center
I’ll be away for the Thanksgiving break :(….

11/30 - Cloud Nothings @ the Sinclair 


Sunday, August 26, 2018

ETERNITY IN HELL IS A LONG TIME

this year I started to orchestrate and record some of my thoughts and dreams as a way of documenting
trying to preserve the experiences as unfiltered as possible 
however they might be
some resemble something like songs while others are a bit more stream of consciousness in nature 
here’s a short collection of them

1-2018
2-A Dream About Jackie (Dream 5/16/2017)
3-804
4-29
5-Wellbutrin (Journal 7/16/2018) 

Availible on
Bandcamp: 

& all other major streaming services

with love,
Mike Sim
:::<3::: 



Monday, August 6, 2018

Newport Jazz Festival 2018


This past weekend was the 64th year of the Newport Jazz Festival.  They’ve continued to bring in more cross-over artists (which Christian McBride helped curate, such as with one of the headliners being Parliament Funkadelic) as well as continuing to bring some of the artists who are pushing into new territory in jazz now.  This year they celebrated Charles Lloyd’s 80th birthday by having him play 3 sets (one each day of the festival)  

His first of the three sets with the the trio Sangam was the highlight of the entire festival for me - consisting of Zakir Husain, Charles Lloyd, and Eric Harland.  What is immediately striking about the instrumentation of this trio is the absence of a bass player - which Zakir often takes the role of by controlling the pitches of the tablas.  Charles Lloyd is truly a mystic - and this set was by far the most spiritual and hypnotic of the three sets he played over the weekend.


Still Dreaming was another highlight from Friday - being a project lead by Joshua Redman which pays homage to Old and New Dreams (a band which his father, Dewey Redman, was in) - playing some of the compositions from that group and some original compositions as well.  It’s the most interesting group Joshua Redman has been a part of in over a decade in my opinion - and Brian Blade’s drumming brings this groups music to another level.  


On the flipside: BADBADNOTGOOD were not bad, but not very good either (at least relative to the caliber of artists featured on the main stage).  There were some moments where their grooves carried it, and it was super cool to see them bring such a young audience to the NJF since they’re such a crossover act (such as collaborating with artists such as Kaytranada & Ghostface Killah), but more often than not it sort of sounded like a less inspired version of the Beastie Boys instrumental jams. 


R+R=Now is Robert Glasper’s new ensemble who closed out the festival on Friday.  caught a bit of their set, and was digging it for a hot minute (especially their rendition of “How Much a Dollar Really Costs”) up until Robert Glasper opened his mouth.  Every year I feel so conflicted as I really enjoy the music this dude makes - but can’t stand how big his ego is.  He is by far the best player in his recent ensembles - and I believe this is mostly because he doesn’t want anyone to outshine him in his group.  Between his bragging about how he played on 9 of the tracks on “To Pimp a Butterfly” and his bragging about grammys, and just his overall vibe as a human being, I was too disgusted and had to leave.  

On Saturday Laurie Anderson performed with Christian McBride and Rubin Kodheli.  The set consisted of primarily instrumental string music with a few compositions where she was also doing spoken word.  To my knowledge the set was of entirely new material, which I hope will be released in the not so distant future.  She is the absolute fucking coolest.    

The festival ended with George Clinton & Parliament Funkadelic.  At 77 years old George Clinton is still vibing hard.  At times there must have been at least 20 people on stage - at least 5 being hype-men.  It was by far the highest energy set I’ve ever seen at the jazz festival and a fun way for it to go out - especially as this is George Clinton's last tour. 


More Photos: 
(Rudresh Manthrapa)

(Matthew Shipp) 

(Pat Metheny) 

(Cecile McLorin Salvant with Artimas)

(Charles Lloyd with George Wein) 

(Charles Lloyd)

(Charles Lloyd New Quartet)


:::<3:::


Monday, July 9, 2018

Fixing a Clock


Mixed by Brady Custis 
Written and performed by Mike Sim
Featuring Sound Shaman on doumbek
Choreography by Wisty
Dancers: Amy Jill & Michelle Turner Young
Filmed by Adam Blake
Additional Footage taken by Mike Sim & Wisty

"Fixing a Clock" is the first video from the upcoming visual album "<3" which will be released later this summer.


Sunday, January 14, 2018

Top 10 Philip K Dick Books

Honorable Mentions: 

“The Transmigration of Bishop Timothy Archer” - the final book in the VALIS trilogy and the last that PKD wrote before his death.  The only book that I know of his that is written solely from a female perspective and that does not contain any elements of science fiction.  This book is devastatingly sad but absolutely beautiful.   

“The Devine Invasion” - The second book in the VALIS trilogy (which takes place approximately a century after the first) - This books is probably his most dense in religious allegories and symbolism and is a bit difficult for that reason. 

“Dr Bloodmoney” - A dream-like surrealist post-apocalyptic novel that is easily one of the strangest of his works.  

TOP 10: 
10-Now Wait of Last Year (1966)

In this novel there’s an interplanetary drug that has the affect of perceived time travel - it deals heavily with addiction, suicide, and schizophrenia - but also has a lot of humor.  







9-Time Out of Joint (1959)

The only 1950s PKD book on this list - It's an epistemological thriller and has some super Kafkaesque moments.  










8-VALIS (1981) 

The first in the VALIS trilogy is the most autobiographical novel PIKD wrote which deals with his hallucinations that he believed were actually intelligence being transmitted to him from a space probe called VALIS.  To me this is after PKD started to loose his grip on reality to an extent that affected his writing in a negative way - but it still stands as one of his best novels because of the personal nature of the work.  






7-Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep (1968) 

The most well known PKD book because of the film adaptation (“Blade Runner”) - This dystopian thriller explores the concepts of AI, morality, empathy and the question of what it means to be human. 




6-The Man in the High Castle (1962)

This is the book that put PKD on the map - An alternative history in which Japan and Germany won WWII and rule over the US. 


5-Martin Time Slip (1964) 

Although it has elements of sci-fi like time travel and such - it focuses more on mental illness and schizophrenia and the characters that these pathologies affect.  








4-Flow My Tears the Policeman Said (1974)

 A dystopian mindfuck about a pop singer / TV star who wakes up in a reality in which has never existed - It deals with the idea of solipsism and gets pretty meta in light of how PKD’s twin sister died at birth and the affect that had on him.  


3-The Three Stigmata of Palmer Eldritch (1965)

I don’t think any PKD book has as many twists and turns and shifts of reality / unreality as this one.  It’s one of the first of Dick’s work to hit on religious themes and also has quite a lot of humor.  It’s perhaps the most unfilmable novel he has written, as the imagery in this is not only surreal as fuck - but totally unlike anything I’ve ever read, heard or seen.  













2-A Scanner Darkly (1977)

This is the first PDK book I read and the one that got me hooked.  It’s a semi-autobiografical novel that deals with drug culture and addiction in a way that’s paranoia inducing, mind bending, and completely heart-breaking. 



1-Ubik (1969) 
This is his most acclaimed novel and for good reason.  It’s one of the more difficult of his books because of how fast paced it is, and how warped the reality is - It’s a wild psychedelic existential nightmare - but as much of a mindfuck and as unsettling as it is, it’s truly a lot of fun as well.  No book that I’ve ever read has ever felt as much like a dream, affected me so deeply, and inspired me as much as this has.