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Welsh rugby fan descendant of Bread of Heaven writer backs Delilah ban "I can’t see how it crept under the wire all these years.
As Welsh rugby reflects on one of its darkest days, 19 March marks the 20th anniversary of one of its best.
BREAD of Heaven. They will have been cutting it thick in the valleys last night while the crumbs they left for Ireland will hardly fill the void at the end of what, truthfully, has been a most ...
This Saturday 75,000 Welsh rugby fans will be recorded for a charity single to be released the very next day. During half time in the Wales v France Six Nations decider Welsh artist Paul Child ...
This weekend, pubs and rugby clubs all over Wales will once again be ringing with rousing renditions of Calon Lan and Cwm Rhondda (Bread of Heaven) as Wales take on South Africa in the Rugby World ...
The Welsh have been the most exciting team in the 6 Nations. The mad city by the Taff has never seen anything quiet like it. Almost a million people in the town. Hymns and arias.
A Welsh rugby fan descended from the writer of one of the country's most famous hymns has waded into the Delilah row. John Wilesmith is distantly related to William Williams Pantycelyn, who wrote ...
This weekend, pubs and rugby clubs all over Wales will once again be ringing with rousing renditions of Calon Lan and Cwm Rhondda (Bread of Heaven) as Wales take on South Africa in the Rugby World ...
As Welsh rugby reflects on one of its darkest days, 19 March marks the 20th anniversary of one of its best.
John Wilesmith is distantly related to William Williams Pantycelyn, who wrote what would become Bread of Heaven. And while that tune's place in the Welsh rugby canon is assured, Delilah's is not.