At midlife, the seasons fly by so quickly, they scarcely seem to register. This week on “Sweetness and Light,” we defy the gravitational pull of back-to-school advertisements and premature Halloween displays to indulge in some nostalgic recollections of the carefree and seemingly endless summers of youth.
Join me for alternately boisterous and languid works by Eugène Bozza, Sergei Prokofiev, Déodat de Severac, and William Walton.
It’s music reflective of riding bikes, tramping through woods and meadows, building forts, laughing with friends, and getting up to no good. When you’re a kid, there’s always plenty of adventure to be had, with the guaranteed security of a homecooked meal and a roof over your head. At least if you’re as fortunate as I was.
I don’t know, perhaps this kind of off-the-leash freedom and hedonistic enjoyment is a thing of the past, in a society where dreams are strangled by subdivisions and superwarehouses, surveillance cameras and militarized police, helicopter parents and cell phones, psychopaths and existential dread. But even with a hemmed-in, over-scheduled existence crammed with organized activities and soul-crushing electronics, I think the illusion of time stretching on forever must surely still be one of the enchantments of youth?
I don’t want to think about it. In a world wreathed by barbed wire, I will hang onto my illusion that childhood is the last frontier. Listen for me rafting down the Delaware, crowing like Peter Pan, on “Sweetness and Light,” this Saturday morning at 11:00 EDT/8:00 EDT, exclusively on KWAX, the radio station on the University of Oregon!
Stream it wherever you are at the link:

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