“Remember
the days of the old schoolyard
When we had imaginings
And we had all kinds of things.”— British singer-songwriter and musician Yusuf/Cat Stevens, “(Remember the Days of the) Old Schoolyard,” from his Izitso LP (1977)
In
the Seventies, I bought and listened incessantly to every Cat Stevens
song I could, until the Izitso LP. I couldn’t imagine that by the end of
the year, he’d convert to Islam, starting enormous changes in his life—and that
this would turn out to be the last song collection of his that I’d own.
At
the time of its release 49 years ago this week, “Old Schoolyard” represented
something of a comeback for Stevens after the commercially disappointing Numbers
collection. This song reached #33 on the Billboard Top 100, the last time to
date he’s achieved that distinction.
Maybe
to the extent that it was successful, it was because “Old Schoolyard” tapped
into baby boomers’ wistfulness and nostalgia. That’s certainly why it, along
with another tune from the LP, “Child for a Day,” made such an impression on me
at this time, when I was looking forward to senior year of high school,
wondering what college would bring—and thinking back to what really wasn’t so
long ago, to my own elementary school days.
Now
in my retirement years, it all feels so much longer and far away. With another
June here and another age cohort saying goodbye to this environment, do the
younger generations go through something of the same thought process—or, in this
digital age, are they too caught up in the present moment to consider how they
and the world have changed?
On
his “From My Desk at Home” blog, Steven Pereira—a couple of years older than
me—offers an especially thoughtful meditation on childhood as a life
stage for both Stevens and himself.
When we had imaginings
And we had all kinds of things.”— British singer-songwriter and musician Yusuf/Cat Stevens, “(Remember the Days of the) Old Schoolyard,” from his Izitso LP (1977)
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