Tom Lehrer, the influential song satirist whose darkly comic lyrics gained a cult following decades after he stopped making music, has died at the age of 97.
Lehrer died at his home in Cambridge, Massachusetts, his longtime friend David Herder told the Associated Press. No cause of death was provided.
The New York City-born, Harvard-educated Lehrer began making music while studying mathematics in college, applying his humor to song to tackle issues ranging from racism to militarism to religion to nuclear war in the Fifties and early Sixties.
Among Lehrer’s best-known songs include “Poisoning Pigeons in the Park,” “It Makes a Fellow Proud to Be a Soldier,” “The Vatican Rag,” “The Masochism Tango,” and “The Old Dope Peddler,” the latter of which was sampled by 2 Chainz decades later.
While Lehrer only recorded about three-dozen songs during his musical lifetime — he refocused on teaching mathematics in the Seventies — his work had an enormous impact on future generations, inspiring songwriters like Randy Newman, Steely Dan’s Donald Fagen and Walter Becker, and “Weird Al” Yankovic, who heard Lehrer’s songs frequently on Dr. Demento’s radio show.
“My last living musical hero is still my hero but unfortunately no longer living. RIP to the great, great Mr. Tom Lehrer,” Yankovic wrote on social media Sunday.
Harry Potter actor Daniel Radcliffe was also an admirer of Lehrer — “the cleverest and funniest man of the 20th century, and kind of my hero,” Radcliffe said — and once delivered the satirist’s complex “The Elements” on British late-night television; Radcliffe’s impromptu performance of the elemental table was in part responsible for the actor later landing the role of “Weird Al” in Yankovic’s quasi-biopic.
“I used to sing that song in college at coffeehouses,” Yankovic said of “The Elements” and Radcliffe’s performance. “Singing that song is an extremely nerdy thing to do. It’s off-the-charts nerdy. And I thought, ‘OK, this guy gets it. This guy’s a kindred spirit. He can embody me onscreen.’”
In 2020, Lehrer placed his entire catalog in the public domain, ensuring future generations could freely discover and use his music. “All copyrights to lyrics or music written or composed by me have been permanently and irrevocably relinquished, and therefore such songs are now in the public domain. All of my songs that have never been copyrighted, having been available for free for so long, are now also in the public domain. In other words, I have abandoned, surrendered and disclaimed all right, title and interest in and to my work and have injected any and all copyrights into the public domain,” Lehrer wrote on a still-active website containing all his songs and lyriccs.
“In short, I no longer retain any rights to any of my songs. So help yourselves, and don’t send me any money.”