Share your opinion
Help us improve our services by filling in our quick survey to let us know how we're doing.
16.07.2019
The National Library of Wales is pleased to announce that Gwenan Gibbard is the winner of the Doctoral Scholarship to study the contributions of Dr. Meredydd Evans and Phyllis Kinney to Welsh folk music.
Gwenan Gibbard, a native of Pwllheli, is well known in the Welsh folk music scene as a harpist and singer, performer, composer, and adjudicator and accompanist at a national level. She has traveled extensively performing on her own and as part of music projects and has published three solo albums with Sain: Y Gwenith Gwynnaf (2006), Sidan Glas (2010), Cerdd Dannau (2013) and one EP: Y Gorwel Purple (2015). She is a prominent figure in the Welsh Folk Song Society, and Cymdeithas Cerdd Dant Cymru, and is a conductor and coach of the Cor yr Heli who specialize in cerdd dant and folk singing.
The Doctoral Scholarship is a collaboration between the Welsh Music Archive, at the National Library of Wales, the School of Music and Media, Bangor University and the Coleg Cymraeg Cenedlaethol. The aim of the PhD Scholarship (sponsored by Y Coleg Cymraeg Cenedlaethol and the National Library of Wales) will be to focus on specific aspects of collecting folk melodies in the second half of the 20th and 21st centuries in Wales.
Nia Mai Daniel, Welsh Music Archive Program Manager at the National Library of Wales said:
“I was pleased that there was so much interest in this scholarship, and that such a high caliber of applicants had applied. This reflects the national importance of the archives of Merêd and Phyllis Kinney. Congratulations to Gwenan Gibbard, we look forward to working with her over the coming years ”
Professor Chris Collins, Head of Bangor University's School of Music and Media added:
“As one of the nation's leading traditional performers and author of a wonderful volume on the life of Dora Herbert Jones, it will be a privilege for us at Bangor University's School of Music and Media to work with harpist Gwenan Gibbard. I am confident that the future will be an extremely productive time and a means of strengthening the link between us and the National Library of Wales and Merêd and Phyllis valuable collection."
Pedr ap Llwyd, Chief Executive and Librarian at The National Library of Wales said:
“The National Library is pleased to be able to support research in folk music which we see as an important aspect of our music collections. Merêd and Phyllis’s rich archives and research papers are truly incomparable and we are so excited to be able to welcome Gwenan, a gifted researcher and a brilliant musician, to the Library.”
The successful candidate will start in October 2019, and will study part time over 6 years. As well as a scholarly study, it is envisaged that the research will inform musical outputs and public activity and will promote the Merêd and Phyllis Archive, and the distinctive contribution of both to music in Wales.
Elen Haf Jones
post@llgc.org.uk or
01970 632 534