Mozart and the Wolf Gang

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File:MozartAndTheWolfGang.jpg
First edition (publ. Hutchinson)
Cover artist (bottom): Henri Félix Emmanuel Philippoteaux, Les Gentilshommes du Duc d'Orléans 1839

Mozart and the Wolf Gang is a 1991 novel by Anthony Burgess about the life and world of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart. Published in the U.K. under this title, in the U.S. it was published as On Mozart: A Paean for Wolfgang, Being a Celestial Colloquy, an Opera Libretto, a Film Script, a Schizophrenic Dialogue, a Bewildered Rumination.[1] Among other things, it attempts to fictionalize Mozart's Symphony No. 40.[2] This is one of numerous Burgess books in which music figures prominently, others being A Vision of Battlements; The Worm and the Ring; The Malayan Trilogy; A Clockwork Orange, especially for its use of Beethoven's Symphony No. 9; Honey for the Bears; Napoleon Symphony: A Novel in Four Movements, which is modeled structurally on Beethoven's Symphony No. 3; The End of the World News; Any Old Iron; The Devil's Mode and Other Stories; The Pianoplayers, about the music hall era; and Byrne: A Novel. Mozart and the Wolf Gang brings to life various composers through fictional representations: Prokofiev, Gershwin, Elgar, Rossini, Mendelssohn, Berlioz, Wagner and Schoenberg feature in various dialogues.[3]

References

  1. Coe, Jonathan (3 October 1991). "Libretto for a magic flautist". The Guardian. p. 26. Retrieved 10 November 2021.
  2. Riemer, Andrew (22 February 1992). "Clive's Brill Burn Through Thatcher's Hell". The Sydney Morning Herald. p. 43. Retrieved 10 November 2021.
  3. Whitcomb, Ian (15 December 1991). "Burgess on Mozart fizzes up the brain". Austin American-Statesman. p. 90. Retrieved 10 November 2021.