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Alan John "Adge" Cutler (19 November 1930 – 5 May 1974) was an English singer best known as the
frontman The lead vocalist in popular music is typically the member of a group or band whose voice is the most prominent melody in a performance where multiple voices may be heard. The lead singer sets their voice against the accompaniment parts of the ...
of the comic folk band
the Wurzels The Wurzels are an English Scrumpy and Western band from Somerset, England, best known for their number one hit "The Combine Harvester" and number three hit " I Am a Cider Drinker" in 1976. They are known for using British West Country phra ...
. Cutler was known for his songs, but also his dry, West Country humour, and gained the unofficial title of "The Bard of Avonmouth".


Early life

Alan John Cutler was born in Portishead, Somerset. Nicknamed 'Adge' by his friends, from his initials A.J., he lived in the small North Somerset town of Nailsea. He spent his earlier years pursuing various jobs he would use as material for later songs, including road manager for Acker Bilk, working in a
cider Cider ( ) is an alcoholic beverage made from the fermented juice of apples. Cider is widely available in the United Kingdom (particularly in the West Country) and the Republic of Ireland. The UK has the world's highest per capita consumption, ...
mill (Coates of Nailsea), and working on building a power station in North Wales. He spent a year in Spain working as an agent looking for property. During his time there he grew to love the country and the Spanish way of life, as well as becoming fluent in Spanish. On 2 September 1972, he married Yvonne, moving to Tickenham, a few miles north of Nailsea. The first biography of Adge Cutler, ''Adge: King of the Wurzels'', by John Hudson, was published by Bristol Books in November 2012.


Musical career

Cutler's songs are largely sung in his own accent, though some are in an exaggerated Bristolian accent, and one in West Indian dialect. Cutler was influenced by Len "Uke" Thomas, a singer who left no recordings but who sang in the Bristolian dialect and who was a well known Bristol entertainer. Virtually all of Cutler's recordings are live; one album, ''Cutler of the West'', was recorded at the
Webbington Compton Bishop is a small village and civil parish, at the western end of the Mendip Hills in the English county of Somerset. It is located close to the historic town of Axbridge. Along with the village of Cross and the hamlets of Rackley and Web ...
Country Club, which is very easy to see on the M5 motorway, on the slopes of
Crook Peak Crook Peak to Shute Shelve Hill is a 332.2 hectare (820.9 acre) geological and biological Site of Special Scientific Interest near the western end of the Mendip Hills, Somerset. The line of hills runs for approximately from west to east a ...
.


Death

On 5 May 1974, he died when he crashed his MGB sports car on a
roundabout A roundabout is a type of circular intersection or junction in which road traffic is permitted to flow in one direction around a central island, and priority is typically given to traffic already in the junction.''The New Shorter Oxford En ...
in Chepstow, following a Wurzels concert. Cutler is buried in the graveyard of Christ Church, Nailsea. A bronze statue of Cutler was installed outside the Royal Oak pub in Nailsea in October 2016. In June 2020, the statue was defaced by the addition of googly eyes, but these were quickly removed.


Songs

Some of Cutler's best known songs include: "Pill Pill" – A song about Pill, Somerset, a village dear to Adge's heart "When the Common Market Comes to
Stanton Drew Stanton Drew is a small village and civil parish within the affluent Chew Valley in Somerset, England, lying north of the Mendip Hills, south of Bristol in the area of the Bath and North East Somerset unitary authority. Just outside the vil ...
" – Written in response to opening up of trade with Europe, Adge suggests what might happen to Somerset culture when Europeans come over. "Champion Dung Spreader" – An answer song to " My Old Man's a Dustman", where Adge tells of his father's occupation as a champion dung spreader. "Thee's Gott'n where thee cassn't back'n hassn't" – A song about a young couple getting into all sorts of jams in their new car around Bristol (except for one verse, which happens in Paris), very double-entendre-ish. Much of it is sung in Bristolian. The title is 'translated' as "You've got it where you can't reverse it, haven't you?". "The Charlton Mackrell Jugband" – About a village band and their rise to the top of the charts. The fictitious band members are Amos Draper, Bernard Mace, Arnold Slugg and the singers (we assume to be Adge). The name of Charlton Mackrell is not used in the lyrics, so other bands have adapted it; including "the Piddletrenthide Jugband". "Drink Up Thy Zyder" – Regarded as the National anthem of North Somerset and Bristol, if not all of Somerset. By far the most famous Adge Cutler song, often played on local radio. Also the 'theme tune' of Bristol City F.C. "Don't tell I Tell 'ee" – A song about not wanting to be burdened with others troubles. "Twice Daily" – Perhaps one of Adge's best known and loved songs, it was released as a B-Side on the band's first single "Drink up thy Zyder" in 1967. Deemed too raunchy and banned by the BBC, it tells the story of a farm labourer who begins a physical relationship with a female fellow worker called 'Lucy Bailey'. ("She ups 'n slips, zummat rips, I went there Twice Daily!"). This results in her pregnancy and a subsequent
shotgun wedding A shotgun wedding is a wedding which is arranged in order to avoid embarrassment due to premarital sex which can possibly lead to an unintended pregnancy. The phrase is a primarily American colloquialism, termed as such based on a stereotypical ...
arranged by her father. All ends happily, however, since they spend 40 years together and produce a further nine children, with no apparent slowdown in the physical side of the relationship either. ("Tho' I'm old and grey when I gets me way, I still go there Twice Daily..").


See also

* * Scrumpy & Western EP * List of bands from Bristol 'Adge, King of the Wurzels' by John Hudson (2012)


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Cutler, Adge 1930 births 1974 deaths English comedy musicians British novelty song performers Musicians from Bristol Musicians from Somerset People from Portishead, Somerset Road incident deaths in Wales Scrumpy and Western 20th-century English male singers 20th-century English singers 20th-century British comedians