 Rwy'n meddwl i'r mhwyng Brytsaeth yn y bydd hynny yn ymddangos hynny y dyma, ac mae'n gwaeth yn yn ymddangos. Mae'n gweithio'r mhwyng hynny yma, ac mae'r mhwyng hynny yn ymddangos Brytsaeth yn ymddangos hynny yn ymddangos hynny fflaen. Ond ond, ond diwrnodd gyda Jesse J, Rita Aura, ac Amy Winehouse, yn y cychaf, ond dwych yn enwedd cyngor, Duffy wedi cael wilde, ac mae'r gwneud hyn, ac ond mae'n iawn hefyd. Yn ddweud, mae'n cawasio'r awn yw ein graf. Ond o'r mewn diwrnodd gyda, fel yna, fel Ypa'r Llywodraeth, Yred Dillir, yn yma yna, ein rhaid hefyd – yr Yred Dillir erwaith ein gweithio'r pertydd I'm sure that Ed Sheeran is as surprised as the rest of us about the fact that just a normal British boy could end up speaking such a universal language to the rest of the world. I don't think actually that being British necessarily secures you to accept internationally. I know that I experienced that with my first album which did really well in the UK and actually didn't do that well internationally. Already with the second album I'm experiencing the opposite side of that which is that I've now got an American label and they're all kind of really excited and giving it a massive push. I think you know just because you're British doesn't mean it's easy. I think it's actually in my opinion harder but we just happen to be churning out very high quality music at the moment. Illegal downloading and other kinds of types of piracy is a massive problem for the music industry now and I think the music industry as a whole has done its fair share of kind of compromising with that in the sense that people are always trying to be innovative in their businesses, trying to combat and think of new exciting ways to create and generate incomes but obviously the key problem is that people are generally ripping music for free. You know as an artist myself I think in an ideal world it would be amazing if somebody could figure out a way to log who's doing it and make it punishable properly so that it doesn't happen or it scares people off doing it. I'm not exactly sure how to do that because I am a creative person rather than a business person but I'll leave that down to other people. With music in particular I think with speaking to the world in a very inclusive way and you know I just think that like it's a vital art form and the Brits are kind of flying the flame not just the Olympics this year but also in music.