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A salute to Tom Lehrer

Once the rockets are up, who cares where they come down? / That’s not my department,’ says Wernher von Braun.

The songs of Tom Lehrer presented me, in my early teens, with my first exposure to the art of modern satire. He was some kind of genius, a Randy Newman with sharper teeth, achieving popularity in the 1950s and ’60s and then giving it all up to pursue his career as a teacher of mathematics at Harvard, MIT and elsewhere. In 2020 he announced that all his work was henceforward free from copyright considerations; anybody could do whatever they wanted with it.

He died the other day, aged 97, at his home in Cambridge, Massachusetts. I’ve read some good obituaries, particularly one in the Guardian by Francis Beckett, whose play Tom Lehrer Is Teaching Math and Doesn’t Want to Talk to You will be performed at the OSO Arts Centre in Barnes, south-west London, in November. But none of those I’ve seen mentioned the couplet at the top of this piece. It comes from his song “Wernher von Braun”, about the German scientist who helped create the V2 for Hitler before working on ballistic missiles for the US Army and rockets for NASA. These lines have stayed with me all my life, helping in a small but not insignificant way to form a view of the world.

11 Comments Post a comment
  1. twm909's avatar
    twm909 #

    Those words were in THE NEW YORK TIMES obituary. I’m not sure if you’ll be able to read this link but here it is.

    https://www.nytimes.com/2025/07/27/arts/music/tom-lehrer-dead.html?unlocked_article_code=1.Zk8.iooy.i0S3WO5R2KRR&smid=url-share

    July 30, 2025
  2. lpwinner's avatar
    lpwinner #

    RW. I’m pleased and surprised by your salute to Lehrer, one of my very favourite singer-songwriters, if one can describe him as such. No contemporary could manage that deceptive combination of lethal wordplay set to jolly music. Cole Porter, maybe. But where in Barnes is the OSO Arts Centre?

    mw

    July 30, 2025
  3. johna9e03a23578's avatar
    johna9e03a23578 #

    I can’t think of many things which still make me laugh out loud after 60 years familiarity, but some of Lehrer’s songs achieve this. My favourite? – probably Vatican Rag, a satire of the rituals of the Roman Catholic church done in ragtime style. And I still cherish having seen him live in London in 1965.

    July 30, 2025
  4. twm909's avatar
    twm909 #

    The OSO Arts Centre has a Wiki page, from which you can link to its own website. Here’s the “Lehrer page”:-

    https://osoarts.ticketsolve.com/ticketbooth/shows/1173665593

    July 30, 2025
  5. WKB's avatar
    WKB #

    He dug Randy.

    July 30, 2025
  6. sweetspractically9417409d58's avatar
    sweetspractically9417409d58 #

    Great piece Richard. Suggested follow up reading

    “Blowback” by Christopher Simpson.

    July 30, 2025
  7. Peter Brown's avatar
    Peter Brown #

    You are not alone in picking out those lines, Richard. Among the hundreds of Facebook tributes, that couplet is by far the most often mentioned. I believe that von Braun was alive when the piece was written. Lehrer was an immense part of so many people’s lives.

    July 30, 2025
  8. dhvinyl's avatar

    My two Lehrer LP’s, a UK 10” and an American 12” are still, nearly 70 years on, proudly sandwiched between Leadbelly and Barbara Lewis on the shelf, and even at 80+ some of the lyrics won’t leave my head, primarily “when he found what he had done, he pulled his eyes out one by one; the tragic end to a loyal son who loved his mother” (no accuracy guaranteed!!)

    July 30, 2025
  9. jazzfan's avatar
    jazzfan #

    I liked the song about the boy scouts: “Don’t solicit for your sister it’s not nice/ unless you get a percentage of her price.”

    July 30, 2025
  10. Trevor Buck's avatar
    Trevor Buck #

    The Old Dope Peddler

    He gives all the kids free samples

    Because he knows full well

    That today’s young innocent faces

    Will be tomorrow’s clientele

    July 30, 2025
  11. Roy Levy's avatar
    Roy Levy #

    A nice tribute to a unique talent. I first got to know TL’s work as a regular visitor to Bunjie’s folk club, off the Charing Cross Road in the 70’s. The Saturday night resident singer, Nigel, would regularly play Masochism Tango and Poisoning Pigeons in the Park.

    July 30, 2025

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