P.D.Q. Bach
Schickele developed an elaborate parody around his studies of P.D.Q. Bach, the fictional "youngest and the oddest of the twenty-odd children" of
Johann Sebastian Bach.
Good King Kong Looked Out, the
"Trite" Quintet, the cantata
Iphigenia in Brooklyn, and
Einstein on the Fritz, a parody of Schickele's
Juilliard classmate
Philip Glass. His fictitious "home establishment" is the University of Southern North Dakota at
Hoople, where he reports having tenure as "Very Full Professor" of "musicolology" and "musical pathology". He invented a range of rather unusual instruments. The most complicated of these is the Hardart, a tone-generating device mounted on the frame of an "
automat", a coin-operated food dispenser. This modified automat is used in the
Concerto for Horn and Hardart, a play on the name of
Horn & Hardart who pioneered the American use of the automat in their restaurants. To a large degree, Schickele's music as P.D.Q. Bach has overshadowed his work as a "serious" composer. He frequently collaborated with soprano Michele Eaton and tenor
David Dusing who often appeared with him in concerts. Schickele performed two concerts to commemorate the 50th anniversary of his first concert at
The Town Hall in New York on December 28 and 29, 2015. He reduced his concert appearances due to health issues, but continued to schedule live concert performances through 2018. ==Other musical career==