Philosophy

The Elements: Tom Lehrer Recites Chemical Elements to the Tune of Gilbert & Sullivan | Open Culture

The Elements: Tom Lehrer Recites Chemical Elements to the Tune of Gilbert & Sullivan | Open Culture

The Elements: Tom Lehrer Recites Chemical Elements to the Tune of Gilbert & Sullivan

Tom Lehrer earned a BA and MA in mathematics from Harvard during the late 1940s, then taught math courses at MIT, Harvard, Wellesley, and UC-Santa Cruz. Math was his vocation. But, all along, Lehrer nurtured an interest in music. And, by the mid 1950s, he became best known for his satirical songs that touched on sometimes political, sometimes academic themes.
Today we’re presenting one of his classics: “The Elements.” Recorded in 1959, the song features Lehrer reciting the names of the 102 chemical elements known at the time (we now have 118), and it’s all sung to the tune of Major-General’s Song from The Pirates of Penzance by Gilbert and Sullivan. Decades later, this piece of “Tomfoolery” stays with us, popping up here and there in popular culture. Above, we present Lehrer’s original tune set to some animation created in 2007. And below Daniel Radcliffe, of Harry Potter fame, performs Lehrer’s song on the BBC’s Graham Norton Show in 2010.