I know it’s very bad form to quote one’s own reviews, but there is something the New York Times said about me [in 1958], that I have always treasured: “Mr. Lehrer’s muse [is] not fettered by such inhibiting factors as taste.”—Tom Lehrer
Tom Lehrer is 88 today. From the late 1940s until the early 1960s, he was an in-demand nightclub performer whose droll and sometimes dark songs (“Pollution,” “We’ll All Go Together When We Go”) were sung cheerfully by an bespectacled man at a piano. He retired from performing live in the early 1960s, then wrote and sang satirical songs for television (“That Was the Week That Was”), then retired from performance altogether to become a math professor at UC Santa Cruz.
In 1971, PBS debuted a children’s television show called “The Electric Company,” and there a new generation (mine) learned about the alphabet and some of its many entanglements from droll cartoons illustrating concepts like the “silent E” accompanied by clever songs sung by a cheerful voice and piano. I did not know who Tom Lehrer was when I was 4, but I did know this song by heart (below the fold):
Read More
41.386282
-74.347017
Thank you for sharing this via one of these wonderful services: