Sat, 18th July Cardiff 19°
Nation.Cymru wordmark
Advertisement

Culture

Project on the road to discovering what it means to be Welsh

By David Owens
The A470 trunk road passing over Bwlch Oerddrws. Picture by Velella (CC BY-SA 2.5).

From Llandudno to Cardiff Bay, the A470 twists and turns for almost two hundred miles stretching from North to South Wales, providing a link to Wales’ past, present, and future.

So much of our country’s culture, history, and language leads back to this blacktopped backbone yet defining exactly what it means to be Welsh in Wales has never been more difficult.

Starting this month and funded through the Arts Council of Wales’ Create scheme, Ffordd Sain will harness the power of music and this iconic road to explore people’s connectivity to Wales, its everchanging landscape, and notions of ‘Welshness’.

Drawing on its experience as one of the nation’s leading music-focused organisations, Community Music Wales will work closely with ten groups from areas spanning the length of the A470.

From the capital onto the historic valley towns of Pontypridd and Merthyr Tydfil, through the rural farming villages of Mid Wales up to the dramatic summits of North Wales and back down into the Victorian seaside town of Llandudno.

[mid-content-banner]

Identity

Using a variety of forms that will reflect the musicality of each area – from song writing to sound walks, traditional hillside choirs to experimental city soundscapes– Ffordd Sain promises to deliver an exciting calendar of activity, events, sessions and shows inspired by the A470.

“We’ve been developing this idea for some time and after consultation found that since devolution and its growing visibility during the coronavirus crisis, this question has become more relevant than ever,” explained Community Music Wales director, Hannah Jenkins. “We aim to document, explore and celebrate identity, community and diversity. We want to discover what it truly means to be Welsh.”

From the mountains of the north to the post-industrial south, Ffordd Sain will document its findings through an interactive map that will compile the sights and sounds of this astonishing sonic highway.

Featuring audio, video, photography, and the spoken/written word, it will send visitors on a historic, topographic, and sociological journey into the heart of Wales using music as its vehicle. In the process, providing a digital destination for Welsh identity for many years to come.

Find out more via Community Music Wales

For the price of a cup of coffee a month you can help us create an independent, not-for-profit, national news service for the people of Wales, by the people of Wales.

Get more trusted Welsh news

Choose Nation.Cymru as a preferred source in Google News to see more of our journalism.

Choose Nation.Cymru as a preferred source in Google News

1 comment

James William Soares Jones

The internet led me to my Cymro self. I rescued a sidewalk sourced iMac, provided it with my first broadband-capable connection and started exploring. I discovered Cwtch.com, and I'm not even sure that was its domain suffix. WOW! wow wow wow wow...what IS this song in an incomprehensible tongue? Yma O Hyd...what does that mean? Why do the hairs on my neck prickle up when listening? Why do I IDENTIFY with whatever it is they are singing about? WHY?! I discovered just who the songwriter and lead singer was, Dafydd Iwan. I discovered we shared a surname, just in different tongues. I discovered our not too dissimilar appearance. I explored further. I am still exploring my Cymric roots. Welsh without a paper trail save my surname, looks, temperament and IDENTITY. Diolch, Dafydd!

Reply

Leave a comment

Comments are reviewed before they appear.