Broom Buzzems
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"Buy Broom Buzzems" (or "Buy Broom Besums") is a song attributed by many to William Purvis, probably better known as "Blind Willie" (1752–1832), a
Tyneside Tyneside is a built-up area across the banks of the River Tyne in northern England. Residents of the area are commonly referred to as Geordies. The whole area is surrounded by the North East Green Belt. The population of Tyneside as publishe ...
songwriter and performer in the end of the 18th and start of the 19th century, and is considered by many to be his piece de resistance.


Possible authorship

William Purvis is described as the writer/composer of this piece by many books and journals, while others dispute this. There is no real evidence either way. But what can be said is that he made it his own and he was in the habit of adding new verses and removing old verses as it suited him. These verses may have been written by himself or by others for him, and usually had no connection with the original theme. There are several other versions of the song. One version was popular just over the border in Southern Scotland and of which Rabbie Burns, for one, knew and in 1796 wrote a satirical piece, Buy Braw Troggin, set to the tune. Another version, The Besom Maker or Green Besoms, although it shares a refrain with this song, is otherwise quite different (the Roud Index assigns it number 910) and can be seen, as The Besom Maker, at Bodleian Library Broadside Ballads.


The lyrics

"Broom Buzzems" refers to
broom A broom (also known in some forms as a broomstick) is a cleaning tool consisting of usually stiff fibers (often made of materials such as plastic, hair, or corn husks) attached to, and roughly parallel to, a cylindrical handle, the broomstick. I ...
s ( besoms). For a translation of other words, see
Geordie dialect words Geordie () is a nickname for a person from the Tyneside area of North East England, and the dialect used by its inhabitants, also known in linguistics as Tyneside English or Newcastle English. There are different definitions of what constit ...
. Part 1 – the main (original) verses: Part 2 – to the original, these are some of the new wimple verses that Blind Willie (the native minstrel of Newcastle) had added:


Recordings

* Richard Lewis CBE (10 May 1914 – 13 November 1990) was a Welsh tenor * YouTube recording by Richard Lewi

* YouTube recording by Northumbrian Smallpipes (in dialect

* YouTube recording by Ray Beasle


References

{{Reflist


External links

* he Newcastle Song Book or Tyne-Side Songster W&T Fordyce Newcastle upon Tyne
Conrad Bladey's Beuk O' Newcassel Sangs
English folk songs