The New Zealand Youth Choir Wins Llangollen’s Choir of the World

    In a spectacular climax to 4 days of world-class performances, the New Zealand Youth Choir was crowned Choir of the World at the Llangollen International Eisteddfod 2025. In a thrilling finale, the mixed choir captivated the adjudicators and proudly lifted the prestigious Pavarotti Trophy, presented by Nicoletta Mantovani and Eisteddfod Chairman John Gambles.

The dramatic announcement, made by Artistic Director Dave Danford, ignited jubilant celebrations. The New Zealanders launched into an impromptu haka, before racing to the stage to join their conductor David Squire, who also claimed the coveted Jayne Davies Conductors Prize.

Meanwhile, Nachda Punjab Youth Club from India danced their way into the hearts of the audience and judges alike, triumphing as the Lucille Armstrong Dance Champions. Waving the Indian flag and glowing with pride, their joy lit up the Pavilion as they received their trophy from Sir Terry Waite.
The evening’s special guest, West End superstar Lucie Jones, flew in directly from touring Taiwan with Les Misérables to deliver two show-stopping sets. Her breathtaking rendition of Wicked’s “Defying Gravity” brought the house down and earned a rapturous ovation.

The Choir of the World concert is the crowning jewel of a week featuring over 4,000 competitors from around the globe. A highlight of the evening was a heartfelt speech by Nicoletta Mantovani, widow of Maestro Luciano Pavarotti. She spoke movingly about Llangollen’s influence on her late husband and his enduring affection for the town, where he performed in both 1955 and during a triumphant return in 1995. She then proudly presented the trophy bearing his name to the New Zealand Youth Choir.

During the interval, audiences enjoyed a special mini documentary on Pavarotti, produced in partnership with Decca Records to celebrate the Maestro’s 90th anniversary year. As part of the tribute, Decca also illuminated the iconic Castell Dinas Brân with a spectacular light show over the 700-year-old castle.

Dave Danford, Artistic Director of the Eisteddfod said, “What an amazing night – congratulations to the New Zealand Youth Choir and their inspirational conductor David Squire. To win Choir of the World in Llangollen, where standards are so high, is a phenomenal achievement. For Nachda Punjab Youth Club to be crowned Dance Champions is also a fantastic result – they’ve been dazzling all week. Huge thanks go to Lucie Jones for her barnstorming performance, to Sir Terry Waite, Nicoletta Mantovani, the team at Decca Records, and above all, our incredible volunteers. Tonight showed exactly why the Llangollen Eisteddfod is so loved across the world.”

The Eisteddfod concludes tomorrow with a Family Fun Day from 10am–4pm, featuring beloved children’s TV presenter Andy Day and his brilliant band Andy and the Odd Socks. The day’s highlight will be a lunchtime concert in the Pavilion, produced in partnership with Music for Youth, showcasing incredible young talent from across the UK and the festival’s international performers.

There will also be a variety of family-friendly activities throughout the site and exciting performances on the Eisteddfod’s outdoor stages.

The festival ends tomorrow on a truly unforgettable note with a sea-inspired evening concert featuring legendary bass-baritone Sir Bryn Terfel, folk favourites Fisherman’s Friends, and the ethereal voice of Eve Goodman.

Eisteddfod 2025 Results:
Choir of the World 2025:
New Zealand Youth Choir
Jayne Davies Conductors Prize:
David Squire, conductor of New Zealand Youth Choir
Lucille Armstrong Dance Champions:
Nachda Punjab Youth Club, India

Eisteddfod puts Llangollen on the international map says area’s MP on visit to the festival

Its famous Eisteddfod is something that puts Llangollen on the international map, according to the area’s MP Becky Gittins.

Member for Clwyd East visited the festival to look around the field, watch the competitions and meet some of the volunteers which make it possible each year.

She said: “I’ve been to the Eisteddfod many times before because people who grow up in North Wales as I did know it as an opportunity to experience a lot of things that they haven’t before. It’s a place where people from all over the world gather to share in our cultural and musical richness.

“But the Eisteddfod is crucially important not just to this area but the whole of Wales. It’s also a truly an international event, something that really puts us on the world map.”

Ms Gittins added: “The Eisteddfod not only has huge cultural capital but is also good for travel and tourism to this area. And North East Wales is always ready to rise to the occasion each year. Our restaurants, cafes and hotels are always ready to welcome people and, especially in Llangollen, they make sure that people are welcomed back again and again.

“People come on a personal pilgrimage each year to see beautiful Llangollen and its Eisteddfod.

“The team work very hard to put the festival on. There’s a huge amount of organisation that goes into it, so fundraising and sustainability is very important and I, along with Ken Skates the Senedd Member for this area, was happy to play my small part in helping to secure funding for the Eisteddfod from the Arts Council of Wales.”

Young performers shine in Eisteddfod competitions.

Young performers have been showing how important Llangollen Eisteddfod is to them as they shone in its competitions this week.

At last year’s festival well-known local actor and singer Shea Ferron was the winner of the Voice of Musical Theatre competition.

And now it appears he and his girlfriend Hannah Williams have made a bit of Eisteddfod history after she took the same coveted title earlier this week.

A delighted Shea took to social media to say: “So b***** proud of Hannah! She absolutely smashed it out the water today. Just a few weeks ago she told me that she was pulling of the competition because ‘what’s the point,’ she said.

“I insisted she carried on because knew she had it in her to win the competition and she only goes and gets FULL MARKS in the competition. Proud is definitely an understatement.

“As far as we know, we are the first couple in the Eisteddfod’s history to win the same competition two years consecutively. Making history together and hopefully will continue to as a couple in the creative industries.”

Also showing the breadth of young talent that exists locally at the Eisteddfod was 15-year-old Rose Burgon.

Singing the song Somewhere in the Under 16 Musical Theatre preliminary round at Llangollen Town Hall, she went on later the same day to take a highly respectable second place in the final on the Pavilion main stage – wearing a dress she made herself.

Rose will next perform in Around Town during the current Llangollen Fringe Festival and will sing at the Bridge End at 3.30pm tomorrow (Sunday).

She moved to Llangollen two years ago and enjoys singing a range of music from 60s folk music to opera and musical theatre.

She is a regular at local open mics and other events in and around North Wales and has recently enjoyed performing as Cinderella in Into the Woods with Llangollen Operatic Society.

Her proud mum Rachel said on social media: “It was an amazing performance. Rose – you sang beautifully and held that enormous stage so well! You should be incredibly proud of yourself! Also, equally blown away that you made your own dress for the occasion (out of a bedsheet). You really are a real life Maria Von Trapp.”

Pavarotti’s widow makes an emotional visit to Llangollen Eisteddfod which was the starting point of his career.

The widow of the great Luciano Pavarotti had a fanfare arrival in Llangollen on Friday when she paid her first ever visit to the home of its iconic Eisteddfod.

And Nicoletta Mantovani says that she cried when she heard the world-famous Froncysyllte Male Voice Choir serenade her with a Welsh song so special to her late husband when she left Corwen station aboard a vintage steam train bound for Llangollen.

After travelling along the heritage railway line she was greeted on the platform by an Italian choir and watched a Bulgarian dance group go through their stylish paces.

She then walked to a vantage point close to the Eisteddfod field from where she had a clear view of a stunning 60 metre chalk sculpture of the Maestro in full voice which adorns a hillside overlooking the town.

Nicoletta Mantovani, who was married to the singing legend until his death in 2007, journeyed from her home in Italy to celebrate three major milestones of the Maestro’s close association with the Eisteddfod.

Pavarotti was just 19 and a trainee teacher when he came to the Llangollen in 1955 with his father, Fernando, as part of Chorus Rossini, with their choir from their home city of Modena. He returned as a global star in 1995 to perform a sell-out concert. This year would also have been his 90th birthday.

On Saturday, she will be on the world-famous Pavilion stage to present the Pavarotti Trophy, named in honour of her late husband, to the winners of the Choir of the World Competition alongside festival Chair John Gambles and Artistic Director Dave Danford.

In another coup for the festival, on Sunday evening Nicoletta will hand over the coveted Pendine Trophy to the winner of the International Voice of the Future competition, sharing the presentation with Mario and Gill Kreft, owners of the arts-loving Pendine Park care organisation which is once again sponsoring the award, and another megastar of the opera world, Sir Bryn Terfel.

On Friday Nicoletta made her first visit to Llangollen and its Eisteddfod, setting off on the train from Corwen station.

She was sent on her way to the accompaniment of songs from the award-winning Froncysyllte Male Voice Choir, who appropriately included We’ll Keep a Welcome in the Hillside, which Pavarotti loved.

After a trip through the sun-drenched Dee Valley the train steamed into Llangollen station to be entertained by two international groups competing at the festival – the CRUC choir from Cagliari in Italy and the Folklore Dance Formation from Bulgaria – both in their colourful national costumes.

After a brief walk through the Eisteddfod field – surrounded by photographers and TV crews – Nicoletta walked up the Donkey Hill pathway to a point where she had a commanding view of the Pavarotti sculpture inscribed on the hillside, depicting Pavarotti in his heyday and arranged by his Decca recording company.

Later there was time for Eisteddfod chairman John Gambles to give her a guided tour of the busy festival field where she met a number of volunteers and enjoyed viewing a special exhibition of Pavarotti’s long association with the Eisteddfod prepared by the archive committee.

She also signed the visitors’ book and was shown an original programme from the 1955 Eisteddfod where the Maestro competed with his choir and which sparked his lifelong love affair with the festival.

Nicoletta said: “My arrival was incredible. It was exactly the way Luciano told me how the people of Wales are so warm and friendly. And to hear the Fron Choir perform – especially the welcome song that was a favourite of his – I cried.

“Travelling on the train was also very special, seeing the countryside and when we arrived at Llangollen station I enjoyed the choir and the dancers who greeted us. I knew one of the songs and mimed along to it.

“At the Eisteddfod it was fantastic to meet the volunteers who have a passion for what they do. It is really important and so precious for people from all different countries to come together in the name of culture and music.”

Nicoletta added: “I thought the sculpture on the hillside was really great and it is good that it is there for people to see someone who was so closely connected to the festival.

“I am looking forward very much to making the presentations on Saturday and Sunday at the Eisteddfod, which was a such a great starting point for Luciano’s career.”

KT TUNSTALL TAKES EISTEDDFOD STAGE BY STORM!

“This has turned my long held dream into reality.”

Scottish singer songwriter, KT Tunstall, played a one-time only concert at a packed Llangollen International Eisteddfod on Thursday and her delight was plain to see.

With her first album Eye to the Telescope reaching its 20th anniversary, she played it in full, not only with her band but also the Absolute Orchestra, conducted by Eisteddfod musical director, Dave Danford.

“It has been my long standing dream to see this album played with an orchestra and I lucked out being able to do it here at the Eisteddfod,” she told the packed audience.

KT opened as the album does with one of its best known tracks – Other Side of the World – and the evening then followed the track list.

The orchestra blended seamlessly with the singer and her band – who included Razorlight’s drummer, Andy Burrows. It took the album to a new level.

And KT took the audience to a new level when she got them on their feet for the fabulous, Suddenly I see.

Listening to the album with the orchestra was a delight.

Silent Sea was a magical example with the woodwind section bring the sound of the sea to the track.

“What Dave has done with this song is absolutely exquisite,” KT said.

Then came Universe and I which starred the brass section.

The singer herself alternated between acoustic and electric guitars and took to a grand piano for one song. Between the music KT told anecdotes many linked with Wales and even the Eisteddfod.

“This isn’t the first time I have been to the Eisteddfod, I came down here in the 90s driving a white van to sell merchandise from my friend’s shop,” said.

Her parents met at Bangor University. “Dad was president of the climbing club and mum decided to start climbing.”

And she spoke affectionately of holidays on the Welsh coast, where she said it was always sunny.

While the evening was one of nostalgia the singer revealed that a new version of the title track will be released later this year.

“It has taken me 20 years to finally finish the song and it will be released in October,” she said.

“Three days ago, I received a very special string arrangement from Nashville for the finished song and an incredible flute solo.

“We managed to get a PDF of them – and Dave Danford sorted it out this morning so we could present it to you tonight.”

The hugely successful night began with support artist, Edie Bens.

The 23-year-old singer songwriter from Swansea now based in Brighton took to the stage in Welsh plaid and celebrated her home country including singing her song Mwfanwy.

Combing folk and country influences she plays her self-penned songs which stemmed from moments in her life. One told of crashing her boyfriend’s car on Christmas Eve, another told of a former boyfriend, which she told the audience, brought an angry complaint from his father.

Edie was thrilled to be at the Eisteddfod.

“I was performing on one of the outdoor stages last year whilst Tom Jones was playing in the pavilion. Now I am standing on the Pavilion stage,” she said.

The Eisteddfod evening concerts continue with Choir of the World with Lucie Jones on July 12 and Bryn Terfel and Fisherman’s Friends on July 13.

Secretary of State stresses importance of ‘unique’ Llangollen International Eisteddfod to North Wales

Llangollen International Eisteddfod is a unique festival which is very important to the town which hosts it, but also to the economy of North Wales as a whole. That was the message from the Secretary of State for Wales, Jo Stevens MP, when she visited the Eisteddfod.

Ms Stevens visited as Day President at the invitation of the Chair of the Eisteddfod, John Gambles. They last saw each other 40 years ago when Ms Stevens collected her A Level results from John who taught her. Another connection to the Eisteddfod was that her mum successfully competed in 1973 in the mixed choir competition with the Hawarden Singers.

The Secretary of State, who has been a Labour Member of Parliament in Cardiff since 2015, was given a guided tour of the site, meeting competitors, visitors and the many volunteers who make the festival possible each year.

She said: “I was really interested to see how the whole set-up works because it relies so heavily on its amazing volunteers, many of whom I met today. The Eisteddfod is so impressive and has such a reputation for the wide range of performers from all over the world.”

She added: “I think the festival is unique. It’s got such a history because of the way in which it began, coming out of the Second World War, with its message of peace. Its culture and music bring people together from all over the world and that makes it a unique festival. Obviously it’s really important to Llangollen but also to the economy of North Wales as a whole.

“People come from many countries. We are such a welcoming nation, and I hope that people who have been to Llangollen come again and also visit different parts of Wales too. For the Eisteddfod to have survived for so long, particularly with the impact of the pandemic, when many festivals fell by the wayside, is a real credit to the people who run it and all the volunteers.”

Celebrity Welsh composer can’t wait to judge best world choirs at Llangollen International Eisteddfod.

The “special” thing about Llangollen International Eisteddfod for one of its most respected judges is the high standard of the choirs who compete there.

What also mightily impresses Brian Hughes, Chorus Manchester at the Royal Northern College of Music in Manchester for 25 years, has been a regular adjudicator at the festival for the past decade or more and is a composer of renown in his own right, is its strong international flavour.

All this brings him to admit that he’s very much looking forward to giving his valued opinions on the 2025 competitions which are now playing out in earnest in and around the world-famous Pavilion between now and Sunday July 13.

Brian is considered to be one of the most important choral composers living in Wales today.

The highly charged rhythmic energy of his music coupled with his knowledge of vocal technique produces a fresh, contemporary style that is both readily singable and stimulating for both audiences and performers alike.

His works are regularly performed by both amateur choral groups and professional singers throughout the world. A recognition of his choral expertise is the fact that the Llangollen International Eisteddfod commissioned him to write a test piece for the 2007 Male Voice Choir competition. This was a setting of William Blake’s ‘Tyger! Tyger! Burning Bright’.

Brian, who comes from Ponciau near Wrexham just up the road from Llangollen, says he was a regular at the Eisteddfod years before he became an adjudicator there, going along to sing with his own local choir.

“I remember coming here to compete with them and that was many years ago. But even before that I learned a lot by listening to the adjudicators and applied what I’d learned from them to my own choir,” he said.

Brian’s has written extensively for choir and orchestra.

“With the choral work my main interest is in the voice. The first thing I want to hear from choirs is a healthy resonant sound. I find that some choirs don’t work enough on tone – the actual quality of the voice doesn’t come through. The choirs who concentrate on the sound are best ones.”

The two things that impress him most about the Eisteddfod from his unique musical standpoint are the standard of the choirs and the festival international character.

He explains: “The standard of choirs at Llangollen is world class in some cases, and the international flavour is amazing. The ones from America, particularly the universities like Yale and Michigan, is very high. They are a huge force to be reckoned with. Their standard is very high, almost professional.

“The best of the Philippines choirs are of immense quality. In the past we had choirs competing from Bulgaria and they were also very fine.”

Brian will be adjudicating throughout Eisteddfod week and he says the one he is particularly looking forward to is the Solo Under 17 competition.

“That’s always a very interesting one as it is packed with enthusiastic parents and supporters of the Eisteddfod.”

 

FURTHER STATEMENT FROM THE LLANGOLLEN INTERNATIONAL EISTEDDFOD:

“Further to the previous statement, we can confirm that following the declaration of an extraordinary incident by the Welsh Ambulance Service, following Public Health Wales advice – the incident related to a flu-like outbreak and related to multiple people with similar symptoms. The extraordinary incident was called by the Welsh Ambulance Service due to the number of people who presented ill at one time.
“The Llangollen International Eisteddfod takes the safety of its audience, competitors, performers and volunteers extremely seriously. Therefore, following advice – we were forced to cancel an event in this way for the first time in our history.
“We are pleased to report our site has been cleared to reopen tomorrow at 9am, as we continue to welcome the world to Wales. We’d like to thank our staff, medical staff and our volunteers for their swift response this evening.”

WEDNESDAY AT THE LLANGOLLEN INTERNATIONAL EISTEDDFOD

It’s Day 2 of the Llangollen International Eisteddfod 2025 – and it’s set to be an action-packed day at the festival.

Gates open at 9am for what is expected to be one of the busiest days of this year’s event – both in the Pavilion, on the field, and across Llangollen. Over 4,000 competitors from around the world begin their competitions. Highlights include the Parade of Nations, the Peace Lecture, Community Rhythms and Roots Wales, and an incredible evening concert to commemorate the 80th anniversary of the United Nations.

Tomorrow evening’s concert – Uniting Nations: One World – promises to be an extraordinary celebration of music, unity and hope, as the legendary Sir Karl Jenkins conducts his powerful masterpiece One World live on stage. This landmark event brings together voices from across the globe to celebrate peace, harmony, and the universal language of music.

DAY 2 HIGHLIGHTS

Competitions in the Pavilion today:

Senior Children’s Choir

Children’s Open Choir

Academi Heddwch Peace Talk with Derek Walker

Children’s Traditional Group Folk Dance

Junior Children’s Choir

Young Choir of the World – winner announced!

1pm: Recitals at St Collen’s Church featuring Akademisk Kor Århus (Denmark) and Bob Cole Conservatory Chamber Choir (USA).

1.15pm: Academi Heddwch Peace Lecture with Derek Walker.

Join Derek Walker, Future Generations Commissioner for Wales, as he reflects on the role of Cymru in promoting peace.

12–4pm: Community Rhythms and Roots Wales – a vibrant showcase of six multicultural and multilingual community groups based in Wales, sharing performances inspired by their own creative traditions and the Eisteddfod’s themes of peace and friendship.

4.30–5.30pm: With over 4,000 competitors from 35 countries taking part in our annual parade, expect a sea of colour and vibrancy. Follow the samba band back to the Eisteddfod site and enjoy live entertainment on our outdoor stages. Entry to the grounds is just £1 during this time. Don’t miss The Gathering – a celebration of dance and culture featuring international and UK participants.

7.30-10.30pm: Uniting Nations: One World

A Once-in-a-Lifetime Celebration and Call for Peace

This concert is more than just music. The P5 Peace Child premiere brings together young artists from the five Permanent Members of the UN Security Council (UK, USA, China, France and Russia) to co-create a powerful call for unity and peaceful collaboration – focusing on global existential threats such as climate change, which the UN must address in the decades ahead. The survival of future generations depends on it. In partnership with Peace Child International.

Sir Karl Jenkins Conducts His Masterpiece

Renowned for breathtaking works such as Adiemus and The Armed Man, Sir Karl Jenkins leads an international massed choir and orchestra in a performance of One World – a symphonic vision of a better future, where human rights are universal, nature is cherished, and harmony prevails across nations.

There are dozens more activities on the Eisteddfod Field including dozens of events on outside stages including live music, poetry, crafts, food from around the world and much, much more.

 

Stirring concert featuring master composer Hans Zimmer’s work is perfect prelude to 2025 Llangollen International Eisteddfod

An enthralled Pavilion audience was treated to a glittering concert featuring some of the most unforgettable movie scores of all time by German master composer Hans Zimmer which provided the perfect prelude to the 2025 Llangollen International Eisteddfod last night (Tuesday).

A world-class orchestra under the baton of internationally acclaimed conductor Anthony Gabriele presented “Beyond Time: The Music of Hans Zimmer in Concert” on the first night of the festival which runs from July 8-13.

The audience delighted to a programme of music made famous by a man with over 150 movie scores to his credit, including the powerful and moving backdrops to a host of the biggest blockbusters which have brought Zimmer two Academy Awards, two BAFTAs and five Grammy Awards plus a coveted star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.

The evening’s conductor, Anthony Gabriele, who has led orchestras all over the world, wielded the baton over the 70-piece Cinematic Orchestra which stormed ahead with some powerful scores such as the Theme from Backdraft, Suite from The Dark Knight, Tennessee from Pearl Harbour, the Suite from The Last Samurai, the End Titles from Driving Miss Daisy and the Suite from Man of Steel, each one reaching new heights of emotional stimulation.

After the break the audience returned to more exhilarating musical masterpieces including Discombobulate from Sherlock Holmes, Chavaliers De Sangreal from The Da Vinci Code, the Suite from Wonder Woman, Hero from Kung Fu Panda and rounding off with the blood-stirring Suite from Gladiator.

The audience were on their feet as the concert finished with a rousing rendition of the theme from Pirates of the Caribbean.

Weaving the programme seamlessly together as he delivered the narration for the evening was acclaimed Rhosllanerchrugog-born film and TV actor Mark Lewis Jones.

Dave Danford, Artistic Director of the Llangollen International Eisteddfod said, “Tonight was a fantastic opening to our 2025 Eisteddfod, celebrating one of the world’s greatest film composers of all time. I was delighted that Mark Lewis Jones agreed to come and present it for us, and I’m very grateful to Anthony Gabriele for bringing his enthusiasm and first-class musicianship to the stage.

“This is just the first concert in a very exciting week, and we continue tomorrow evening with a truly international celebration of the United Nations, featuring Sir Karl Jenkins, which will follow our first day of competitions in the pavilion.”

 
Eisteddfod week evening concerts are:
 
* Wednesday July 9: Uniting Nations: One World featuring Sir Karl Jenkins
 
* Thursday July 10: KT Tunstall with the Absolute Orchestra
 
* Friday July 11: Il Divo with special guest Laura Wright
 
* Saturday July 12: Choir of the World with special guest Lucie Jones
 
* Sunday July 13: Bryn Terfel: Sea Songs with special guests Fisherman’s Friends and Eve Goodman