The
Wurzels & Bristol City FC
Anyone
visiting Bristol City's home ground on match day will be aware of
the link between The Robins and The Wurzels. The recent re-issue
of the Bristol City anthem One
For The Bristol City 2007 managed to get into the singles
charts, and has already superceded the original 1977 version as
the song the team comes out to at all home games. Another
song forever linked with the club is Adge Cutler's cider-swilling
anthem Drink
Up Thy Cider, another favourite for the City fans. But
how far back does this love affair go? And was Adge Cutler a die-hard
City fan?

One
For The Bristol City 2007
One
For The Bristol City 2007 was re-recorded and re-issued
to celebrate the club's promotion from the First Division to the
Championship.
A
single was released on September 24th on CD, as a download on iTunes
and was also available as a ringtone. It was produced by Louie Nicastro,
and a percentage from all sales proceeds were handed to the BUI
Prostate Cancer Care Appeal, a charity very close to Tommy
Banner's heart after he was diagnosed with the disease.
The
single charted in the Official UK Charts for the week ending 6th
October 2007, at number 66, but failed to improve on that position
and dropped out the following week. It was however the first time
The Wurzels had had two singles in the charts in the same year since
1976!

One
For The Bristol City 1977
In
the impressively factually incorrect Adge
Cutler Wikipaedia entry, the author claims that "(Adge
Cutler)...was a lifelong fan of Bristol City, and re-wrote his
band's song Morning Glory to write his team's official song One
For The Bristol City, which is played when the teams enter the pitch
on both halves of their home games at Ashton Gate."
As
with much of the content on that webpage, the author has not let
the facts get in the way of a good story. Of course all Wurzels
fans (or at least those who browse this website!) know that Morning
Glory was not an Adge Cutler song at all. The song was written
by Guy Fletcher and Doug Flett, neither whom - when they are not
penning hits for Cliff Richard, The Hollies and Elvis Presley -
appear to be regulars down at Ashton Gate on a Saturday afternoon.
And,
as this song was released as a single by The Wurzels in 1976, it
is quite likely to have been written after Adge's death two year
earlier. Certainly One For The Bristol City, which was
released in 1977, was not re-written by Adge Cutler. At least, not
without the use of a medium!
One
For The Bristol City (described
on the single sleeve as 'the official Bristol City F.C. song")
was The Wurzels paying homage to their favourite football team,
Bristol City. It was released the year after Bristol City had been
promoted to Division 1 (what would now be the Premiership) at the
end of the 1975/76 season. By 1977 they were established in the
top flight, and One For The Bristol City was released as
the official club anthem.
The
song is obviously a blatant show of support by The Wurzels for their
home town club. I say 'home town' in the broadest sense of the word.
Pete Budd (born in Keynsham) has probably been a City fans since
he was a small scrumpybasher. I have my suspicions of the other
Wurzels at the time - Tommy Banner (born in Penicuik, a few miles
south of Edinburgh) and Tony Baylis (born in London); I have lived
in Edinburgh and London over the years, and there were not many
City fans around either city! But there is no doubting Tommy's enthusiasm
for the club - but then again, he has been living in the city for
40 years now.
Certainly
the lyrics are univocal:

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Other
Bristol City Lyrics In Wurzels Songs
One For The Bristol City is not the only Wurzels song to
mention the football club. The
b-side to the 1977 release of One for the Bristol City
was Cheddar Cheese - a Tommy Banner-Pete
Budd-Tony Baylis composition which was originally released on the
1975 The Wurzels
Are Scrumptious! album.
This
was another song which mentions Bristol City, and I presume this
was why it was selected as the b-side (this, and the fact that it
is a damned fine song!). The lyrics go as follows:
| |
Now Bristol City football side,
Down Ashton Gate they are the pride,
'Cause they all train on good old Cheddar Cheese |
and
I think we can certainly presume that this was written by a City
fan - or three City fans!
In
contrast though, Look At Her Lookin At I
which was also released on the The Wurzels Are Scrumptious!
album, has a slightly more ambiguous lyric:
| |
...and what followed was a pity,
I might as well 'as watched the City. |
This,
to me at least, does not sound very complimentary to the club. It
sound as if the songwriter - having being turned now by the object
of his affections - says that he might as well have wasted his time
doing something equally pointless; like watching the City!
This
doesn't sound like a lyric of a mad-keen City fan. Not necessarily
a Rover fan either - more a songwriter who had found a good and
relevant rhyme for his song! The song also mentions Ashton Gate
which may have been a reference to the football ground, but again
is may just refer to that area of Bristol.
The
songwriters? Adge Cutler and Henry Davies - and one would assume
that the those are Adge's lyrics with Henry's music.
So
was Adge a Bristol City fan? Well, I think the final proof that
he was not, is in the lyrics of Virtute Et Industrial.
This Adge Cutler song is the only other Wurzels song to mention
the club - and indeed the first to do so. It was released on the
1966 Adge Cutler &
The Wurzels album, and shows a complete disregard - indeed
a total lack of comprehension - for local football rivalries:
| |
...if the City don't win on Saturday,
Perhaps them Rovers will. |
I'm
pretty sure that most City fans would feel that is the City don't
win on Saturday then the last thing they want is the Rover
to win instead...and Rovers fans feel the same way if they lose.
A City fan would have written something like: "...if the
City don't win on Saturday, perhaps them Rovers won't neither so
at least we won't have them gloating round the office on Monday."
It doesn't scan or rhyme, of course - but does reflect the true
depth of feeling and rivalry between local football fans!
In fact, City fan 'Frome Valley' from the Bristol
City Fan's Forum says "I remember at a very early age,
Virtute Et Industrial being sung well
before City's promotion in 1976 in pubs around the ground. I was
too young to drink then, but I certainly heard it - but the line
was always "If the City don't win Saturday Rovers never will!"
(full comments below)
I
was rather surprised when City fans Tommy and Pete included Virtute
Et Industrial on The Wurzels'
A Taste Of The West album in 2004 - but then again,
it is another great song!
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So,
Was Adge Cutler A City Fan?
So,
I believe that Adge Cutler probably wasn't a Bristol City fan. And
before the Rovers fans start to gloat - he probably wasn't a Rovers
fan either. In fact I would suspect that he was a musician and a
vintage car collector, and didn't really care too hoots about football
either way! I may be wrong, of course - all I'm going on is the
lyrics to two of his songs.
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Drink
Up They Cider
As
an interesting postscript, I found the following article on Adge
Cutler and the Wurzels on the BBC
h2g2 website which has an interesting slant on the song Drink
Up They Cider - beloved by City fans and so hated
by Rovers fans. But, this wasn't always the case:
(Drink
Up Thy Cider) ...was not forgotten when it fell out of the hit
parade though. On the contrary, it went on to become the national
anthem of North Somerset and continued to be loved and sung by football
fans across the region, including those at Hereford, Bristol Rovers
and Bristol City. Today, it is the theme song for Bristol City Football
Club, sung at every game by the supporters - although in recent
times it has been adapted to insult the Bristol Rovers.
I
wonder if the Hereford fans still sing it?
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http://www.ziderheads.co.uk/ch/
http://www.bcfc3lions.co.uk/page8.html
http://www.bcfc3lions.co.uk/page36.html
Feedback
I
have always felt the Wurzels were almost synonymous with Bristol
City because of the cider and large following of City fans from
North Somerset.
I remember at a very early age, Virtute Et Industrial
being sung well before City's promotion in 1976 in pubs around the
ground. I was too young to drink then, but I certainly heard it
- but the line was always "If the City don't win Saturday,
Rovers never will!"
Drink Up Thy Cider has certainly been sung at Ashton
Gate since the 1970s, and this season (2007-8) I Am
A Cider Drinker seems to be becoming popular.
'Frome
Valley' from the Bristol
City Fan's Forum
One
For The Bristol City was released to celebrate City
being in (and doing well in) the top flight rather than an event.
City were promoted to the top flight in 1976 so the first full season
was 1976/77. The song was released in 1977 and was designated an
official club song.
'Eddie
Hitler' from the Bristol
City Fan's Forum
More
comments and feedback would be appreciated - especially anything
correcting any factual errors in the article.
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Links
I
have a few links which might be of interest to readers of this article.
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