Tom Lehrer, the American satirical songwriter whose brief but potent musical career ended by the mid‑1960s, has died aged 97. With dark humour and surprising prescience, he skewered post‑war politics, nuclear fear, environmental damage and hypocritical moralism in songs like Pollution, Wernher von Braun and National Brotherhood Week, often delivered with genteel melody and razor‑sharp wit.

Though only about fifty songs emerged, his lyrical cleverness and musical flair made a lasting mark. Lehrer later turned to academia, preferring the classroom at UC Santa Cruz over the stage, and in 2020 placed all his music in the public domain. He passed away in Cambridge, Massachusetts, on July 26, 2025.
Tom Lehrer, famed for his witty, darkly satirical songs of the 1950s and 60s, has died at 97. A Harvard‑trained mathematician, he later taught at UC Santa Cruz and withdrew from public life. His sharp critiques of politics, race and nuclear fears remain influential. In 2020, he gifted his music to the public domain.
Tom Lehrer obituary, musical satire, intellectual legacy