Wales is a part of the United Kingdom, but has had a long history as a culturally distinct Celtic country. Its music is thus related to the Celtic music of Ireland and Scotland. Welsh folk music has distinctive instrumentation and song types, and is often played at twmpathau (singular: twmpath), or communal dances, and gwyl werin, a form of music festival. Unlike its Celtic neighbors, Welsh folk musicians of the latter half of the 20th century have had to largely reconstruct the country's traditions, which had been moribund for some time, as well as compete with imported and indigenous rock and pop trends. The label Fflach Tradd has become especially influential, releasing albums by some of Wales' biggest-selling acts.
| Music of the United Kingdom | Celtic music | |
|---|---|---|
| History | Ethnicities | |
| Early British popular music | England | Brittany and Northern Spain |
| 1950s and 60s | Scotland | Cornwall |
| 1970s | Wales | Man |
| 1980s | Northern Ireland | Ireland |
| 1990s to present | Jamaican and Indian | Maritime Canada and Irish Americans |
| Genres | Classical and Opera - Folk - Popular - Rock | |
| Timeline and Samples | ||
| Awards | Mercury | |
| Charts | UK Singles Chart, UK classical chart | |
| Festivals | Glastonbury festival | |
| Media | NME - Melody Maker | |
| National anthem | "God Save the Queen" (Wales-"Hen Wlad Fy Nhadau", Scotland-"Scotland the Brave", "Flower of Scotland") | |
| Local music | ||
| Anglesey - Anguilla - Antrim - Armagh - Bermuda - Brecknockshire - Borders - Caernarfonshire - Cardiganshire - Carmarthenshire - Cayman Islands - Central Scotland - Channel Islands - Cornwall - Denbighshire - Down - Dumfries and Galloway - Grampian - East of England - East Midlands - Falklands - Fermanagh - Fife - Flintshire - Gibraltar - Glamorgan - Greater London - Highlands - Man - Merionethshire - Londonderry - Lothian - Monmouthshire - Montgomeryshire - Montserrat - North West England - Orkney - Pembrokeshire - Radnorshire - Shetland - South East England - Strathclyde - Tayside - Tyrone - Virgin Islands - West Midlands - Western Isles - Yorkshire and the Humber | ||
Since 1176, Welsh bards and musicians have participated in musical contests called eisteddfodau.
Some Welsh performers have mixed traditional influences, especially the language, into imported genres, especially John ac Alun, a Welsh language-country duo who are perhaps the best-known contemporary performers in Welsh. Since the 16th century, however, Welsh culture degenerated and its traditions were denigrated, especially after the rise of Nonconformist religion in the 18th century which emphasised choral singing over traditional instruments.
In the 1860s, however, a revival of sorts began, with the formation of the National Eisteddfod Society, followed by the foundation of London-area Welsh Societies and the publication of Nicholas Bennett's Alawon Fy Nghwlad, a compilation of traditional tunes, in the 1890s.
By the late 1970s, Wales, like many of its neighbors, had seen the beginning of a roots revival that picked up energy in the 1980s with Robin Huw Bowen and other musicians achieving great commercial and critical success. Later into the 1990s, a new wave of bands including Fernhill, Bob Delyn A'r Ebyllion, Moniars, Carreg Lafar, Jac y Do and Gwerinos. A contemporary singer-songwriter traditional also arose, led by Dafydd Iwan in the 1960s, inspired by other similar performers like Pete Seeger and Bob Dylan. This movement soon became closely associated with Welsh nationalism.
Following on from an underground post-punk movement in the 1980s, led by bands like Datblygu, the 1990s saw a considerable flowering of Welsh rock groups (in both Welsh and English languages) such as Catatonia, Manic Street Preachers, Stereophonics, Super Furry Animals, and Gorky's Zygotic Mynci.
A new century has seen the emergence of a number of new bands, including the Lostprophets, Goldie Lookin' Chain (GLC) and Funeral for a Friend.