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Tom Lehrer, mathematician and musical satirist, has died at the age of 97

News reports say that Tom Lehrer, a math prodigy, who was a musical satirist in the 1950s and 60s with his barbed opinions of American political and social life, died at age 97.

David Herder, a long-time friend of Lehrer, told The New York Times that Lehrer died on Saturday at his Cambridge, Massachusetts home. The cause of death has not been specified.

The career of a revered social critic and musician, Jim Lehrer, began as a mere happy accident. He composed ditties for his classmates at Harvard University. He had a seven-year heyday and produced 37 songs, according to his own account, before returning to teach at Harvard and other colleges.

BuzzFeed reported in 2014 that Sir Cameron Mackintosh of Broadway, who produced "Tom Foolery," an revue of Lehrer's songs, said "There has never been anyone else like him." "Of famous songwriters he is probably the only one who... never wanted to become a professional. The work he produced is the best of any great writer.

Lehrer, who was liberally inclined, poked holes in culture during the 1950s as the U.S. settled into a post-war complacency. He did so while maintaining a witty, urbane air.

His mathematical interests were evident in some of his songs, such as "New Math", which was about subtracting 173 out of 342; and "Lobachevsky," about a 19th century Russian mathematician. However, his more meaty songs were considered by many to be irreverent and shocking. Time magazine grouped him with pioneering comics Lenny Bruce, and Mort Sahl in 1959 as "sicknicks," who "had a personal and highly distressing hostility towards all of the world."

"National Brotherhood Week", on the other hand, tackled hypocrisy ("It is only a week long so don't be afraid / Be nice to those who are inferior to yourself"). "Be Prepared", "I Got It from Agnes", and "We Will all Go Together when we Go" were about the darker side of Boy Scout life.

The notes accompanying one of Lehrer's albums stated: "If after listening to my songs just one person is inspired to do something bad to a friend or strike a loved-one, then it has all been worth while."

ODE TO THE ELEMENTS

Thomas Andrew Lehrer was a New Yorker born in 1928. He grew in New York listening to Gilbert and Sullivan and his first work was "The Elements", a recitation the periodic table to a Gilbert and Sullivan song. At 15, he enrolled in Harvard and wrote "Fight Fiercely Harvard", which included the line, "Won't the victory be sweet?" The song was a spoof on the school's fight song.

While in graduate school he gathered enough material to record a studio album in Boston. He distributed "Songs By Tom Lehrer" on campus, and the album developed a cult-like following across the country.

After serving as a soldier in the U.S. Army between 1955 and 1957, Lehrer started performing live and recording more albums. However, he was losing his enthusiasm for music. In the early 1960s he began to focus more on teaching and working on his unfinished doctorate.

Lehrer was a math teacher at Harvard, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and the University of California Santa Cruz.

He found that math and songwriting were similar. Both require you to fit the pieces together and find a satisfying and appropriate outcome. He said that cultural changes made it impossible to satirize issues like abortion and feminism.

He famously quipped "political humor became obsolete after Henry Kissinger received the Nobel Peace Prize in 1973" when the award was presented to the controversial Secretary of State.

Lehrer, who has never been married, said that the things he used to find funny are now frightening.

In 1982, he said to People magazine: "I feel like a Pompeii resident who is asked for some funny comments about lava."

The impact of Lehrer's work lasted for decades after he retired from performing. He was featured frequently on the Dr. Demento syndicated radio show, and in 2010, "Harry Potter's" Daniel Radcliffe wowed a talk-show audience with "The Elements". In 2012, the rapper 2 Chainz used a sample of Lehrer's song "The Old Dope Peddler". (Writing and Editing by Rosalba o'Brien, Marguerita choy)

(source: Reuters)