Strange Sleigh of the Ghostly Cross-Over
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In this reflective episode, Peter explores how music accompanies a life, like a faithful guide that helps us locate our own 'whereness' in the world. Framed as three epochs of listening, he traces early careful listening in a Greek household, the soundtrack of his working years alongside youth culture, and the ease and grace that arrive with familiar pieces that feel like old friends.
Along the way he invokes Orpheus and Eurydice, shares a living-room canon that ranges from Herbie Hancock and Aretha Franklin to Björk, Eric B. and Rakim, and Mozart, and offers a simple idea that lingers: to live a life is to compose a song and play it.
The mystery is not solved so much as honored, a reminder that music can teach, console, and carry us forward. As Churchill once said, perhaps this is not the end, but the end of the beginning.
Thank you to David Zenoff.
Share your thoughts or questions with Peter at peterc.carpou@gmail.com