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1->''"I drove my tractor through your haystack last night, ooh-arr, ooh-arr"''
2
3The Wurzels are an English "Scrumpy & Western" band [[note]] the genre is actually named after their 1967 EP of that name[[/note]], hailing from Somerset in UsefulNotes/TheWestCountry. Founded in 1966 and originally known as Adge Cutler & The Wurzels, they are are best known for "The Combine Harvester", which got to #1 in the British charts in 1976. Their songs, often pastiches of songs from the folk, pop and rock genres, are characterised by many references to farming and cider, sung with a strong West Country accent while playing up to various regional stereotypes. To this day they retain a strong following in the south-west of England and do regular live performances in the region, with people from other parts of the country tending to regard them as a rustic-themed novelty act that was briefly big in TheSeventies.
4
5Not to be confused with Literature/WorzelGummidge -- although both get their name from mangelwurzel, a type of root vegetable (of the ''Beta vulgaris'' species and so closely related to beetroot and sugar beet) which is mostly used as livestock feed.
6
7----
8!!Principal Members (current ones in bold)
9* '''Tommy Banner''' - accordion, sometimes piano (1967-present)
10* Tony Baylis - bass, vocals (1969-1984)
11* '''Pete Budd''' - lead vocals, banjo, guitar (1972-present)
12* Adge Cutler - lead vocals, songwriting (1966-1974)
13* Mike Gwilliam - bass (1984-1995)
14* '''Sedge Moore''' - bass, ukulele (2007-present)
15* John "Amos" Morgan - drums (1981-2021)
16* '''Louie "Gribble" Nicastro''' - keyboard, sound engineering (2001-present)
17* Reg Quantrill - banjo, guitar (1966-1974)
18* Dave Wintour - bass (1995-2002)
19
20----
21!!I am a cider troper, I tropes it all of the day...
22* AdamWesting: They appeared [[AsHimself as themselves]] in the ''Series/CoogansRun'' episode "Thursday Night Fever", in which they have a new single -- "Brand New Brand New Combine Harvester", which is exactly like the original song, except they sing the words "brand new" twice.
23* AffectionateParody: Many of their songs are pastiches of songs from various genres. The most obvious example is (of course) "The Combine Harvester", in which the titular brand new combine harvester is used in an attempt to impress the narrator's love interest, just like the brand new pair of roller skates in Melanie Safka's "Brand New Key" (the original song).
24* AudienceParticipationSong: Quite a few, especially with the choruses.
25* AutoErotica: At play in "The Back of My Old Car".
26-->''Everybody's been satisfied in the back of my old car.''
27* TheBandMinusTheFace: Something of an aversion, as the band achieved mainstream success in 1976, two years after the untimely death of founder, frontman and singer-songwriter Adge Cutler.
28* BirdPoopGag: This is one of the reasons why the narrator of "The Blackbird" has it in for said bird.
29-->''Underneath the open sky, in spring, we loves to dine,\
30We likes to 'ear the flapping of the misses' washing line.\
31We listens to a tuneful song, a blackbird or a tit,\
32But on me vest and underpants, he scored a direct hit!''
33* CharacterCatchphrase: The West Country interjection "ooh-arr" (which can be used to indicate agreement, refutation or innuendo) is often used.
34* ChristmasSongs: ''The Wurzels Christmas Album'' (2011) is [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin full of covers of Christmas classics]] like "Rocking Around the Christmas Tree", [[Music/{{Slade}} "Merry Christmas Everybody"]] and [[Music/RoyWood "I Wish It Could Be Christmas Everyday"]].
35* CoverVersion: While most of their songs are affectionate parodies of other songs, some of their later material does consist of straight cover versions, most of which can be found on their albums ''Never Mind the Bullocks'' (2002) and ''A Load More Bullocks'' (2010). Most notable is their version of the Music/KaiserChiefs' "Ruby" -- in which the "ah-ah-ah-ah-ah-ah" refrain is replaced with "ooh-arr, ooh-arr, ooh-arr" [[note]] the Kaiser Chiefs themselves were reportedly confused when the audience used the Wurzels' refrain when they played Glastonbury, which is of course located in the latter's home county of Somerset [[/note]]!
36** What few people realise is that "The Combine Harvester" is actually a cover of a song (written as a pastiche of Melanie Safka's "Brand New Key") by Irish comedian Brendan Grace, who had a #1 hit with it in Ireland in 1975, the year before it became the Wurzels' only #1 hit in Britain.
37* DoubleEntendre: Frequently. "Theshing Machine" and "The Market Gardener" are perhaps the most blatant examples.
38* DownOnTheFarm: What with UsefulNotes/TheWestCountry being a particularly rural part of Britain, agriculture features in their songs ''a lot''. Most obviously, "The Combine Harvester" is sung from the perspective of a farmer who has just bought a brand new one of these machines (and is using it to woo his neighbour). Meanwhile, "Farmer Bill's Cowman" starts by mentioning this trope by name:
39-->''Down on the farm, don't need no alarm,\
40I rise from the bed at five thirty.\
41Around six o'clock, I puts on me smock,\
42[[SarcasmMode I feel just like]] [[SharpDressedMan Burlington Bertie]].''
43* DrinkBasedCharacterization: Being from the West Country, they really play up to that region's love of cider. Which is often pronounced 'zyder', in keeping with the accent. Many of their songs reference it (most obviously, "Drink Up Thy Zyder" and "I Am a Cider Drinker"). Mention will often be made of scrumpy, which is a cloudy, strong variant. They sometimes drink it during live performances, traditionally from a stone 'zyder jar' or a tankard but more recently from a plastic pint glass or a can.
44* ExplicitContent: A downplayed example; although it contains no overt sexual references or bad language, "Twice Daily" (the B-side of the band's 1967 single "Drink Up Thy Zyder") was deemed too raunchy to be played on Creator/TheBBC (which may well have actually ''helped'' the song in terms of publicity). It tells the story of a farm labourer who begins a sexual relationship with a female co-worker, which leads to her getting pregnant, and her father arranging a ShotgunWedding.
45-->''We had such fun in the summer sun, Lucy were so thrillin',\
46Sweet and pure, but I wern't sure, that young maid were willin'.\
47Till one day, among the hay, we was working gaily,\
48She ups and slips, and zomut rips, and I went there twice daily.''
49* FarmersDaughter: These do tend to [[{{Pun}} crop]] up, notably Lucy Bailey in "Twice Daily" -- in which a RollInTheHay leads to pregnancy and a ShotgunWedding.
50* GenreShift: Done out of necessity after Adge Cutler died in a car crash in 1974. Prior to that, Adge had been the band's frontman (reflected in the original name, Adge Cutler & The Wurzels) and had written most of their songs. Subsequently, the band -- now simply called The Wurzels -- concentrated more on parodies of pre-existing hit songs, resulting in two top ten hits.
51* HaveAGayOldTime: The word 'gaily' is used in its non-homosexual sense (meaning, 'cheerfully' or 'nonchalantly') in "Twice Daily", purely because it rhymes with 'daily'.
52* AHeroToHisHometown: Several decades on from their chart-topping days, The Wurzels are still popular in UsefulNotes/TheWestCountry and their live performances at events there are well-attended. People from the rest of Britain, meanwhile, tend to act with surprise upon learning that they still exist.
53* LeaveMeAlone: "Don't Tell I, Tell 'Ee" is all about a man who does not want to be burdened with the troubles of others.
54* LongRunnerCastTurnover: They've been going since 1966, during which time there have been a lot of band members! The longest-serving ones, Tommy Banner and Pete Budd, have been members since (respectively) 1967 and 1972 and are still happily doing live performances in their eighties. The 'classic' chart-topping line-up of Banner, Budd and Tony Baylis lasted from 1974 (when founder Adge Cutler died) to 1981 (when they recruited John Morgan, the group's first permanent drummer).
55* MamasBabyPapasMaybe: Discussed ''at gunpoint'' in "Don't Tell I, Tell 'Ee".
56-->''Young Sarah Jones one day, got in the family way\
57Her father come with a girt big gun, said, "Ee, you'll have to pay!"\
58He chased I up a tree, I hollered, "Leave I be!\
59I happen to know, 'twere old Fred Snow!\
60So don't blame I, blame 'ee!"''
61* MyLocal: Quite a few songs mention going to the pub. Their version of "A Pub With No Beer" comes with an interesting twist, as the pub in question still has plenty of cider. Also worth noting that a few real-life pubs in Somerset are name-checked in some of the songs that were written by Adge Cutler, and the Royal Oak in Nailsea is mentioned in the title of the band's first album, as that's where it was recorded.
62* PunnyName: For their live acts, the keyboard is always known and referred to as the 'Wurzelitzer', a play on 'Wurlitzer'.
63* RelationshipUpgrade: The narrator of "The Combine Harvester" is hoping that his brand new combine harvester will sufficiently impress his love interest into agreeing to this, even though he does seem to be rather blatant about the fact that he is mostly interested in her because she owns significantly more land ("I've got 20 acres, and you've got 43") than he does.
64* RereleaseTheSong: They've done this a few times.
65** "The Combine Harvester" was re-released as double A-side single with "I Am a Cider Drinker" (their ''other'' top ten hit [[note]] "The Combine Harvester" got to #1 and "I Am a Cider Drinker" peaked at #3, both in 1976[[/note]]) in 1980.
66** In 2001, a remixed version of "The Combine Harvester" was released as a single and got to #39 in the charts. It was subsequently re-recorded again for the band's 2006 album ''Top of the Crops''.
67** A new version of "I Am a Cider Drinker" was released in 2007, with guest vocals by Radio/TonyBlackburn of all people [[note]] not as random a connection as it sounds; back in 1976, Tony had presented an episode of ''Series/TopOfThePops'' that The Wurzels had appeared on[[/note]]. A year previously, The Wurzels had released a double A-side single with Music/BritishSeaPower in which The Wurzels covered BSP's "Remember Me", while BSP covered "I Am a Cider Drinker".
68** "One for the Bristol City", a re-write of "Morning Glory" which celebrates the band's favourite [[UsefulNotes/BritishFootyTeams football team]], was released as a single in 1977 and again in 2007.
69* RippedFromTheHeadlines: During TheEighties, they recorded songs about [[Series/{{Dallas}} J.R.]] and even dabbled with ''rap'' music.
70** In 2014, "The Mendip Windfarm Song" was inspired by complaints from the inhabitants of Laverton about proposals to construct a 66-metre wind turbine near said Somerset village.
71* RollInTheHay: Sometimes invoked, especially when a FarmersDaughter is involved.
72* SanitySlippageSong: PlayedForComedy. "The Combine Harvester" is used by WebVideo/AtopTheFourthWall whenever Linkara [[SanitySlippage loses his sanity]] from reading bad comics, despite the song's [[SoundtrackDissonance upbeat]] [[LyricalDissonance nature]]...
73* ShotgunWedding: The narrator of "Twice Daily" is forced into one of these after he gets his girlfriend pregnant. In a rather sweet twist on this trope, the final chorus reveals that they went on to have several more children and remain happily married (and sexually active) in their old age.
74* StageName: Bassist Sedge Moore's real name is Russ Crook; the stage name is a [[PunnyName punning]] reference to Sedgemoor in Somerset.
75* StepUpToTheMicrophone: Pete Budd did this after Adge Cutler's death, and has been the lead singer ever since.

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