Stars

New Song: Stars
This was inspired by a line from Shakespeare that goes
“At first I did adore a twinkling star
But now I worship a celestial sun”

Once I loved a star so distant in the sky
Delicate and far away, so far away that I
Could never reach her
I lost my heart to some celestial creature

Once I loved a bird so high up in the air
Never was a word between us ever really shared
But I could hear her
I lost my heart just trying to get near her

Once I loved a star, a bird, an ocean and a flower
The wonders of the universe so far beyond my power
They stole my heart and kept it safe
until the day when she would give it back to me
Well I wasn’t ready then but now I am and now I know
That reaching out in love is how our hearts begin to grow
And somewhere in the waiting and the wondering
Love will come to you

Once I loved the sea so bountiful and deep
Vast and wild and free I could not ever truly keep
Her or her treasure
I lost my heart in depths I could not measure

Once I loved a flower blooming in a field
I gazed at her for hours but her secrets remained sealed
I could know know her
I lost my heart endeavouring to grow her

Chorus

Once I loved a girl so beautiful and fair
Her voice was like a bird and she had flowers in her hair
Her eyes were starlight
She swept me off my feet like waves at twilight

Now I love a star, a bird, an ocean and a flower
The wonders of the universe so far beyond my power
She stole my heart and kept it safe
until the day when she will give it back to me
Well I wasn’t ready then but now I am and now I know
That reaching out in love is how our hearts begin to grow
And one day when the stars align and constellations roar
And the ocean breakers lay their treasures gently on the shore
And the flowers bloom and bird song rises sweeter than before
Love will come to you

(c) 2025 Rich Clarkson

Photo by NASA Hubble Space Telescope on Unsplash

Chronicles

I’ve been reading Bob Dylan’s autobiography ‘Chronicles’ and as I was reading it I found 5 Argentinian Pesos in it which I’ve been using as a bookmark and which felt very fitting for a Dylan book. I wrote this song inspired by a mix of the book and the 5 Peso note!

There’s a hurricane howling off on the horizon
Building like a brass band’s roar
The change in the weather’s no longer surprising
Cos nothing stays the same any more
and I’m sitting here waiting and watching and writing
and wondering when it’s time to go
The lights are flickering and faltering and fading
like fireflies after the show

There’s a train that’s thundering off in the distance
Heading for who knows where
I had my chances and I know that I missed them
They could have taken me there
Now I’m stuck in the dirt and the dust of the desert
and I’m drowning in my dreams
But something inside is still there saying
“it isn’t all that it seems”

So I pick up my pack and I grab my guitar
And I set out towards the sun
Don’t know where I’m heading but I know that it’s far
Away from where I’ve begun
With five pesos I pull from my pocket that I found
in the back of a borrowed book
I buy my ticket, can I also buy forgiveness
for all those mistakes that I took

So I’m out on the road now, this is my life
I’m nothing but a travelling man
I don’t have a home or a gun or a knife
Just a guitar and an unravelling plan
I’m a no-one, a nothing, I never was here,
and here’s where I’ll forever be
I’ve slipped through the cracks of the railroad tracks
and I find that I’m finally free, finally I’m free

(c) Rich Clarkson 2025

Photo by Grant Durr on Unsplash

Bone Flutes and Cow Horns

This song was inspired by reading a book about the origins of sound and music (Sounds Wild and Broken, by David Haskell) and by reading a dystopian fiction novel which included a line about how nobody makes guitar strings any more (Briefly Very Beautiful, by Roz Dineen). The line “What makes us all human is music” came to me and the rest of the song built from there!

What music will there be when there’s nobody to sing their songs
What tunes will still be heard when the instruments don’t play along
And what stories will be passed on
When the balladeers are long gone?
What will be left when we are not here?

Bone flutes and cow horns and panpipes and rhythms of
Shell shakers, clapsticks and bead covered gourds and the
Joining of voices, what makes us all human is music
Sports crowds and orchestras, buskers and people in
Pubs singing folk songs and carols at Christmas,
The joining of voices, what makes us all human is music

What will the world sound like when the human noise has died away
What will the soundscape be when our instruments no longer play
And what beauty will be missing
When there’s nobody to listen
What will be left when we are not here?

Bone flutes and cow horns …

The tunes that we whistle, the songs that we sing
All filling the air like the birds on the wing
Twisting and turning, enveloping everything
In all of our differences, music reminds us
That there is still so much more that binds us
For thousands and thousands and thousands of years
Just like our ancestors we are still here playing

Bone flutes and cow horns …

© Rich Clarkson 2025

Picture from https://www.nms.si/en/collections/highlights/343-Neanderthal-flute

Acrobat

I’m not quite sure where this song came from, other than I mentioned a trombone piece called “The Acrobat” in a sermon recently and the music has been on the music stand in my study, clearly seeping into my subconscious!

Without her coat and hat
She tumbles from her flat
Like some strange acrobat
And after that
She sets off down the street
On someone else’s feet
Her tightrope walk complete
So bittersweet

And even though her world is upside down
And she’s falling with the puppeteers and clowns
And though the crowds cheering her on
can see there’s something wrong
They think it’s somehow all part of the show
Little do they know

She’s up on her trapeze
And looking down she sees
The rubble and debris
That used to be
The life she thought she knew
So comfortable and true
But now she swings right through
To something new

She’s coming in to land
As time flows like the sand
Slipping through her hand
She understands
That all there is to know
Is nothing but a show
And when the curtains close
It’s time to go
© Rich Clarkson 2025

Photo by Robin Battison on Unsplash

Protest Song

I’ve been listening to a lot of Bob Dylan recently, since watching the film ‘A Complete Unknown’, and inspired by his protest songs have had a go at writing my own!

Where are the poets, the prophets the priests and the kings
Lending their voices to those who can no longer sing
Do they have the courage to meet this hour
Exchanging their platforms of privilege and power
For a better, more beautiful world where we all can be free

How do the men making millions off misery sleep
When their bedsheets are washed with the tears of the many who weep?
The merchants of war who would rather we bleed
Than exchange their selfishness, power, and greed
For a better more beautiful world where we all can be free

Why are the women still wailing and when will they see
Their long promised justice roll in like the waves on the sea?
In the face of oppression still they persist
Replacing a world filled with prejudice
With a better more beautiful world where we all can be free

Who are the people who profit while the planet burns?
Spreading pollution and lies without any concerns
Blaming our problems on refugees
While the billionaire conmen steal whatever they please
From the better more beautiful world where we all can be free

Where are the poets, the prophets, the priests and the kings
The ones who believe in the promise of what tomorrow may bring
The hopers and dreamers working to see
A brighter tomorrow where together we’ll be
The poets and prophets and priests and kings and queens
Of a better more beautiful world where we all can be free

(c) Rich Clarkson 2025

Photo by Nikoloz Gachechiladze on Unsplash

Better Place

Going through a little ‘protest song’ writing phase – here’s a fun one inspired by Frank Turner

I just want to write a song to make the world a better place
Something you can sing along to with a smile upon your face
When the world is going wrong and everything is a disgrace
I just want to sing a song to make the world a better place
Do do do do do do do (x4)

I don’t really wanna write another angry song for you
Climate change and genocide and hate can leave you feeling blue
Everything is all the time I find it overwhelming too
So I don’t really wanna sing another angry song for you
Do do do…

All I want to do is try and write a song and have some fun
I can’t change the world and nor can you but if we work as one
Spreading kindness and compassion we will see what can be done
All I want to do is try and sing a song and have some fun
Do do do…

I just want to write a song to make the world a better place
Something you can sing along to with a smile upon your face
Maybe sneak a little bit of protest in it just in case
Together we can sing a song then make the world a better place
Do do do…

(c) Rich Clarkson 2025

Photo by Caio Silva on Unsplash

Old Trafford in the Rain (Wisden Writing Competition entry)

I entered this into the Wisden Cricket Writing Competition which at this stage feels like the only way I’m going to get my name into those hallowed pages!

Old Trafford In The Rain

There’s something very right about the scene.
A fond familiarity that’s borne
of annual pilgrimage.

My first memory of visiting Old Trafford is drowned out by the noise of the old train line and the disappointment of an early Kevin Pietersen wicket at the hands of Umar Gul. We switched allegiances to Trent Bridge for a few years after that, then to Edgbaston for convenience sake, but eventually we were drawn back to the North West and a newly rotated ground which sat under the same heavy Lancastrian skies.

The grass, so green,
still somehow shines in spite of clouds whose mournful
tears are powerless to wash away
the hope, the faith, we’ll get to see some play.

As the train pulls into the station the news ripples down the carriage. Phones emerge and the mood turns from anticipation to confusion to anger. They’ve pulled out of the match. Covid in the team camp. The game’s off. After the turmoil of the past year and a half, this was supposed to be a return to normality, familiarity, but the pandemic wasn’t done dashing our hopes just yet. A gloomy coffee in a Manchester station café as the reality sinks in. We won’t see any cricket today.

A pair of wagtails dance across the lea
their piebald pattern drawing watchful eyes
as they make their inspection, then they flee
their counterparts – same colours, different size.

We sat half way up the vast temporary stand as Eoin Morgan thrashed the Afghanistan bowlers into the crowd a record number of times, driving his team towards that famous Sunday afternoon at Lords. As entertaining as it was, I didn’t notice the birds that day, and I found myself missing the slower rhythms of Test Cricket. We sat in almost the same seats a few years later as Zac Crawley took on the Australians in much the same way. The Wagtails kept a watchful distance this time, as the colour of the ball made little difference to the pace of the game.

The umpires strut across the field, we wait
for news of their decision and our fate.

I arrive early, and take my seat clad in full waterproofs. The rain is still falling but the outfield is awash with activity. The pigeons eat their fill on the summer-worn pitches. Dad messages to say his train is delayed. So is the match, I reply, then I sit, and I wait, and I watch. The old desert monks of the 4th century had a word for this – Prosoche, the art of attention. They’d have enjoyed Test Cricket. The clock ticks slowly on, and as we sit quietly together my mind is filled with recollections of past glories and frustrations here. Eventually, well into the afternoon, the umpire calls play, and this match joins the others in my memory of this sacred place.

Old Trafford in the rain. My dad and me.
There’s truly nowhere else I’d rather be

(Rich Clarkson, October 2024)

Laudato Si

A Poem for Pope Francis, 1936-2025

Laudato Si, praise be to you O Lord,
For Brother Francis who, with grace and poise,
spoke up for the oppressed, unseen, ignored,
forgotten, giving them a faithful voice.
Laudato Si, praise be to you O Lord,
For Brother Francis who, with strength of mind,
stood up for your creation and restored
its honour in the eyes of humankind.
Laudato Si, praise be to you O Lord,
For Brother Francis who, with dignity,
laid down his privilege to serve the poor,
pointing towards a world where all are free.
A faithful servant, may he rest in peace:
For Brother Francis, Lord, Laudato Si.

Rich Clarkson, Easter Monday 2025

After Wordsworth

This was written for the Daffodil Days weekend at St Peter’s, Kinver

I wait, as patient as the laden clouds
that drift on by towards the distant hills.
They journey high above the furrowed brow
of fresh ploughed field, bearing their burden still.
I wait, as patient as the quiet grass
that, clinging tightly to the hardening earth,
longs for the star-chilled wintertime to pass
and all the warming sun may bring to birth.
I wait, as patient as the ancient stones
now settled gently in this once strange land.
though filled with rage a thousand storms have blown
they – weathered, prayer-soaked, resolute – still stand.
I wait, patience rewarded with the thrill
of seeing Spring bring forth a host of golden daffodils.

Photo by Aaron Burden on Unsplash

King of the Acorns

The title of this song, “King of the Acorns”, sat on my notes app on my phone for about 2 years before I finally turned it into a song – I hope it was worth the wait!

Scratch beneath the surface of the earth
It’s his domain that’s he’s claimed
And he returns to it again and again and again
His hidden treasure hoard, safely stored
In woods and in parks
and as the dark winter hardens
The gardens he leaves his mark

He’s the king of the acorns, the king of the trees
The king of the soil and the soul of the seeds
He’s the king of the autumn, king of the spring
King of whatever the winter may bring
He’s the king of the garden, king of the park
King of the dawn and the dusk and the dark
And the light and the day and the night
It’s all his by right
He’s the king of the acorns

Looking down from on high
As the sky collides with the ground
His hide and seek quarry is found
With the instincts of a bloodhound
He knows his labours through the year
Are hidden here and he must clear it all
Before it disappears like morning mist
and schoolboy fears

He’s the king of the acorns…

(c) Rich Clarkson 2025

Photo by Gary Fultz on unsplash.com

Take my life and let it be

I’m part of an online worship songwriting group and each month we are set a new challenge.  This is my take on the theme of “commitment songs”.  It draws on the old hymn “take my life and let it be”, and a prayer from the licensing service of a new vicar

Take my life and let it be
Rooted firmly like a tree
Planted by the waters of your love
Take my mind and let it soar
Like an eagle, searching for
All the truth that’s hidden in your love

Every moment, every day
Everything I have, I pray
Take my life and fill it with your love

Take my lips and let my words
Sing your praises like the birds
Every breath a story of your love
Take my heart and let it blaze
Like a fire, filled with praise
For your burning, never failing love

The Ravens Go Dancing

The ravens are dancing together
as the sunlight warms the air
burning off the mists and cares
of the late autumn weather
and the ravens go dancing together

The children are walking together
and their voices fill the air
as the classroom calls them where
from their earthbound endeavours
they watch ravens go dancing together

The passengers jostle together
daily gossip twists the air
into tales of who and where
and what happened and never
notice ravens go dancing together

The loved ones all gather together
as the bells resound the air
and in hope and joy they swear
to be faithful forever
like the ravens out dancing together

The curtains are long drawn together
silent memory soaks the air
while a rasping whispered prayer
rises fragrant as heather
where the ravens are dancing together

The ravens are dancing together
weaving magic in the air
all of life below them sharing
the spell of their feathers
like the ravens we’re dancing together
life is just dancing together
the ravens are dancing

(c) Rich Clarkson, 2024

Photo by Alexandr Rusnac on Unsplash

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