Rugby bosses have been urged to stop โDelilahโ from being sung at games at Cardiffโs Millennium Stadiumโฆ
Tom Jones has spoken out about Welsh rugby bosses being urged to ban the singing of his hit โDelilahโ before matches because the lyrics โtrivialise the idea of murdering a womanโ.
Talking at the inaugural BBC Music Awards in London last night [December 11], the singer said taking the song literally โtakes the fun out of itโ. He commented: โIf itโs going to be taken literally, I think it takes the fun out of it, I think it takes the spirit out of why itโs being sung at a Welsh rugby match.โ
He said the song wasnโt meant to be a โpolitical statementโ, explaining: โIf theyโre looking into the lyric about a man killing a woman, itโs not a political statement, itโs something that happens in life. This woman was unfaithful to him and he just loses itโฆ I wasnโt thinking that I was the man that was killing the girl when I was singing the song โ I was acting out the part.โ He add that fans singing the song at matches made him โproud to be Welshโ, commenting: โI love to hear it being sung at the Welsh games. It makes me very proud to be Welsh, that theyโre using one of my songs to sing at a rugby match. Thatโs important to me.โ
It was previously reported that Dafydd Iwan, former president of Plaid Cymru, had asked fans at Cardiffโs Millennium Stadium to stop singing the song before matches because of its controversial content. The track currently acts as a second anthem for Wales, with the Rugby Union displaying the lyrics on the big screen before matches.
Iwan, who is also a folk singer, said: โIt is a song about murder and it does tend to trivialise the idea of murdering a woman and itโs a pity these words now have been elevated to the status of a secondary national anthem. I think we should rummage around for another song instead of โDelilahโ.โ
The song, written by Les Reed, Barry Mason and Sylvan Whittingham and recorded by Jones in 1968, is about a man who kills his former partner. Lyrics include: โAt break of day when that man drove away I was waiting/I crossed the street to her house and she opened the door/She stood there laughing/I felt the knife in my hand and she laughed no more/My my my Delilahโฆ I just couldnโt take any moreโ.
The Welsh Rugby Union are yet to take any action over the song. A spokesman for the union said: โWithin rugby, Delilah has gained prominence through its musicality rather than because of its lyrics. There is, however, plenty of precedent in art and literature, prominently in Shakespearean tragedies for instance, for negative aspects of life to be portrayed.
โThe Welsh Rugby Union condemns violence against women and has taken a lead role in police campaigns to highlight and combat the issue.
โThe WRU remains willing to listen to any strong public debate on the issue of censoring the use of Delilah but we have not been aware of any groundswell of opinion on this matter.โ
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