On St David’s Day, Aled Jones is in Penarth, just a few miles south of Cardiff, to celebrate Wales’s rich hymn-singing heritage. Aled visits St Augustine’s in Penarth – a church of great personal significance to him as it is where he recorded most of his albums as a boy treble in the 1980s. There, he meets Tim Rhys-Evans of the Royal Welsh College of Music & Drama. Tim has championed the Welsh musical tradition for decades and discusses with Aled why Wales is worthy of its fond nickname, the Land of Song. Their conversation also pays respect to Welsh composer Joseph Parry, who is buried in the churchyard.