The British band, Half Man Half Biscuit, refer to Bulbarrow Hill in the track, Third Track Main Camera Four Minutes, taken from their 2000 album Trouble Over Bridgwater, in which the narrator bemoans the increasing popularity of 'trendy' holiday destinations such as Cuba and Iceland, saying 'I’d much rather go down to Dorset, with its wonderful Bulbarrow Hill'.
Nove is the subject of Half Man Half Biscuit's "Nove on the Sly", a track from their 2000 album Trouble Over Bridgwater.
English indie band Half Man Half Biscuit mention the stones in their song Twenty Four Hour Garage People on their 2000 album Trouble Over Bridgwater.
Bridgwater | Trouble Over Bridgwater | Tom King, Baron King of Bridgwater | Trouble Along the Way | Trouble from the Start | The Trouble with Harry | Nobody Knows the Trouble I've Seen | Keef Trouble | Bridgwater North railway station | Bad Boy Trouble | Trouble Walkin' | Trouble Or Nothin' | Trouble at the Top | The Trouble with Success or How You Fit into the World | Monkey Trouble | Little Brother, Big Trouble: A Christmas Adventure | Dual! Parallel Trouble Adventure | Bridgwater and Taunton Canal | Big Trouble in Little China | A Footnote to History: Eight Years of Trouble in Samoa | 40 Pounds of Trouble | Trouble with the Curve | Trouble Will Find Me | Trouble Time | Trouble (Ray LaMontagne album) | Trouble Is... | Trouble in the Hood | Trouble in the Glen | Trouble Funk | ''Trouble'' |
Capel Curig is mentioned in the song 'Bottleneck at Capel Curig' by cult UK band Half Man Half Biscuit on their album 'Trouble over Bridgwater'.