Sleeve notes:
When you're in Wales, take a ride on one of our great little trains; there are six of them to choose
from, all different. To the legion of railway enthusiasts they are little gems, combining the romance
of steam with a nostalgia for a peaceful, leisurely age; a sense of adventure with the spirit of discovery.
They are the works of pioneers, handed down to us and restored as they were in their own brass-polished,
gleaming hey-day. Their gauge-and so the size of their engines and coaches-may differ, but there is one
thing all the railway routes have in common: superb scenery. The Snowdon Mountain railway takes you
to within a few short steps of the tip of Snowdon's 3,560 ft. summit; from Llanberis the newest line of all
gives superb views of Snowdonia, as it runs alongside Llyn Padarn; the Ffestiniograilway runs from
Porthmadog for 10 miles along the shoulder's of the Moelwyn Mountains in Snowdonia's National Park,
high above the sylvan vale of Ffestiniog. Is there a valley anywhere to compare with it? Perhaps the
Vale of Rheidol does, or the Talyllyn Railway's Dolgoch Valley, or, perhaps, that of the Banwy River, as
it cuts a course for the Welshpool and Llanfair Railway before turning aside on its way to the cornlands
of the Vale of Meifod, ancient seat of the mediaeval rulers of Powys. Who is to choose? Only those who
have seen them all can guess at the secret.
But whether you are a narrow gauge fanatic, or one of the thousands who come to Wales for a few
weeks of peace and quiet, and happen to discover the charms of the 'Great Little Trains', or simply one
who enjoys good folk Imusic , this record is the ideal souvenir of your visit to Wales. These three songs,
two in English and one in Welsh, performed by one of the most popular folk groups in Wales today, the
Hennessys, will enable you to relive at home those happy summer days until next summer once more
gives you the chance to take another trip on the 'Great Little Trains of Wales'.
Dave Burns and Frank Hennessy, both from Cardiff, have been singing together for three years and are
much in demand on television , on record and folk clubs in and outside of Wales. On this record Dave
sings lead while Frank harmonizes, and between them they play guitar, mandolin and banjo. Their good
friend Roger Gape provides the bass.
'Does dim angen cyflwyno'r Hennessys bellach i'w dilynwyr Cymreig. Erbyn hyn, aeth y tri yn ddau, ond ni
newidiwyd eu swn hollol arbennig. Mae caneuon yr Hennessys yn ddieithriad yn mynnu aros ym meddwl
dyn, ac mae graen ar eu perfformiad bob amser. A dyna gewch chi ar y record yma—canji da a chaneuon
hwyliog wrth i Frank a Dave fynd a ni ar daith ddwyieithog o gwmpas un o atyniadau mwyaf Cymru yn
ystod misoedd yr haf-y rheilffyrdd bychain.