Thông Tin Bài Hát

Between Stone and Clover (A)
Irish Folk,Joy,Anticipation,Nostalgia,Uplifting,Peaceful,Triumphant,Romantic,Male Voice,Male singer,Baritone,Dramatic Vocal,Slow,Medium,Accelerating
Tạo Tương Tự
Verse 1
Morning breathes on the emerald lea, mist like a drifting shawl
Old stone fences stitch the hills where the small lambs call
Hands that shaped these cairns long gone, their laughter in the loam
Every ridge and every furrow remembers coming home
Chorus
Between stone and clover, I hear the old songs ring
Wind in the hawthorn, the fiddler starts to sing
Keepers of the pathways, keepers of the road
Between stone and clover lies the story of our load
Verse 2
Children run through nettle lanes, boots kicked up with cheer
A milk pail by the gate, kettle singing, someone near
Grey moss cracks where lovers carved the names they could not keep
The river hums a lullaby to rocks that guard the sheep
Chorus
Between stone and clover, I hear the old songs ring
Wind in the hawthorn, the fiddler starts to sing
Keepers of the pathways, keepers of the road
Between stone and clover lies the story of our load
Bridge
When rain writes silver down the lanes and the day goes soft and low
The walls hold close the secrets that the young folk never know
By moonlight, every boundary stone becomes a lantern bright
Lighting up the faces of the hearts that learned to fight and write
Verse 3
I carry home these memories, small as seeds in hand
Plant them by the hedgerow where my father once did stand
We trade our weary footsteps for the gold of hearth and flame
And every stacked old boulder whispers back my name
Chorus (slow, swelling)
Between stone and clover, I hear the old songs ring
Wind in the hawthorn, the fiddler starts to sing
Keepers of the pathways, keepers of the road
Between stone and clover lies the story of our load
Outro
So lay me by the fence-line where the green and granite meet
Let the gulls and geese above me mark the pulse beneath my feet
Between stone and clover, where the quiet rivers run
I’ll sleep beside the fields I loved beneath the Irish sun