Stevens continued to record for various small labels throughout the remainder of the decade and backed other Welsh musicians. In 1978, he was in the short-lived subversive folk trio Y Bara Menyn with fiddle player Siân Phillips and vocalist Heather Jones, in addition to leading his own groups with their own revolving membership. (The Shevells -- who backed Stevens when he was using the name "Mike Stevens" -- are also known as the Welsh Conquerors.) In 1992, Stevens' best-of CD, entitled Dim Ond Cysgodion, was released. It concentrates heavily on the Welsh-language material that Stevens recorded between 1971-1992. In addition to numerous EPs that have been issued during his career, Stevens' songs have occasionally appeared on various-artists compilations, including tracks that appeared on two consecutive Electric Psychedelic Sitar Headswirlers releases. Stevens was featured in Mojo magazine's "Top 100 Cult Heroes." In 2000, the Welsh pop group Super Furry Animals released their own all-Welsh-language album, Mwng, which was inspired by their hero; they have often played Stevens' Y Brawd Houdini (aka Houdini's Brother), though their own version has yet to appear on any of their own recordings, unfortunately. Stevens continues to perform in Wales, where he is treated as a national hero. 2001's Y Baledl compiled Stevens' recordings from the previous 30 years, drawing from his early classics from the '60s to the present. The Sunbeam label reissued two compilations in 2006, Rain in the Leaves: The EPs, Vol. 1 and Sackcloth Ashes: The EPs, Vol. 2, and Stevens released a collection of all-new material, Icarws/Icarus, in 2007. ~ Bryan Thomas, Rovi