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Tom Lehrer   (born April 9,1928)
American songwriter, satirist, pianist, mathematician, and singer

As a graduate student at Harvard University he began to write comic songs to entertain his friends, and those songs later became the The Physical Revue. Influenced mainly by the musical theater, his style consisted of parodying the then-current forms of popular song. For example, his appreciation of list songs (à la Danny Kaye's "Tchaikovsky") caused him to popularize the periodic table of the chemical elements sung to the tune of Gilbert and Sullivan's "Major General's Song". Inspired by the success of his performances of his songs, he paid for some studio time to record an album, Songs by Tom Lehrer, which he sold by mail order. Unpromoted, the album, which included the macabre ("I Hold Your Hand In Mine"), the lewd ("Be Prepared"), the unusual ("The Elements"), and the mathematical ("Lobachevsky"), became a success via word of mouth. With a cult hit, he embarked on a series of concert tours and released a second album, which came in two versions: More Songs by Tom Lehrer was studio-recorded, and An Evening Wasted With Tom Lehrer was recorded live in concert. By the early 1960s Lehrer had retired from touring (which he intensely disliked) and was employed as the resident songwriter for That Was The Week That Was, a short-lived US satirical TV show. An increased proportion of his output became overtly political, or at least topical, on subjects such as pollution ("Pollution"), Vatican II ("The Vatican Rag"), race relations ("National Brotherhood Week"), and nuclear proliferation ("Who's Next?"). He also wrote a song which satirized the apparent mercenary morals of Wernher von Braun. A selection of these songs was released in the album That Was The Year That Was. Allan Sherman also wrote songs and song parodies for That Was the Week That Was, which were of a similar calibre, though less ironic and pointed, and somewhat less likely to age well. Mark Russell's PBS shows in the 1990s were much like Lehrer's work in the 1960s. There is an urban legend that Lehrer gave up satire when Henry Kissinger won the Nobel Peace Prize in 1973. Although he did say that the awarding of the prize to Kissinger made political satire obsolete, he has denied that he stopped doing satire as a form of protest and pointed out that he had stopped doing satire several years earlier. After that, he concentrated on teaching both mathematics and musical theater but writing the occasional educational song for the children's TV show "The Electric Company". In the early 1980s Tomfoolery, a revival of his songs on the London stage, was a surprise hit. In 2000, a CD box set, The Remains of Tom Lehrer, was released. Reviews selected by Lehrer for his liner notes: "Plays the piano acceptably" - Oakland Tribune "More desperate than amusing" - New York Herald Tribune "Mr. Lehrer's muse does not suffer from such inhibiting factors as taste." - New York Times


a sátira política ficou obsoleta quando atribuiram o Nobel da Paz a Henry Kissinger
a vida é como um esgoto. O que dela se retira depende daquilo que nela se introduziu