Rambling Syd Rumpo

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Rambling Syd Rumpo was a folk singer character played by English comedian Kenneth Williams in the radio comedy series Round the Horne. The Rambling Syd sketches generally began with a short discourse on the nature of the song which would inexorably follow; these discourses in their own right would have assured Rambling Syd Rumpo a place in radio history as masterpieces of suggestivity and double-entendre. For this, Rambling Syd was customarily introduced by Kenneth Horne, who would set things up by (for example) inquiring as to the nature and origin of the song. Rambling Syd would (usually) respond with an "Ullo, mi dearios" before launching into the ensuing detailed explanation which left a great deal to the imagination. This action and the name were a parody of Ramblin' Jack Elliott. The delivery of the songs sometimes recalled the style of Elton Hayes.

The songs themselves pushed and extended boundaries of acceptable sexual suggestivity way beyond the narrow confines of a Sunday lunchtime radio slot, using nonsense (or little-known) words like 'moolies' and 'nadgers' in suggestive contexts.

Williams later starred (with Leslie Phillips and others) in the short-lived Radio sketch show Oh, Get On with It (based on a pilot episode entitled Get On With It), which also featured appearances as Rambling Syd.

Many of the words used by Rambling Syd were made up, and have subsequently entered the English language (such as 'nadger').

An excerpt from a Christmas episode:

Good King Boroslav looked out,
On a feast of grungers,
Saw them whirdling 'round about,
Armed with rubber plungers.

Brightly shone their moolies then,
With their possetts glowing.
He knew not from whence they came, (switching back into suggestive cockney accent)
But 'e knew where they were going!

[edit] Memorable songs

  • The Ballad of the Somerset Nog (to the tune of Widecombe Fair)
  • D'Ye Ken Jim Pubes (to the tune of D'Ye Ken John Peel)
  • Green Grow My Nadgers O! (to the tune of Green Grow The Rushes-O)
  • The Ballad of the Woggler's Moulie (to the tune of Clementine)
  • The Taddle Gropers' Dance (to the tune of Here We Go Round The Mulberry Bush)
  • What Shall We Do With The Drunken Nurker
  • 'Twas On The Good Ship Habakkuk
  • Clacton Bogle Picker's Lament
  • Runcorn Splod Cobbler's Song
  • Granny Went a-Wandering
  • Song Of The Australian Outlaw
  • The Black Grunger of Hounslow
  • Gladys Is At It Again
  • The Song Of The Bogle Clencher
  • The Grommet Tinker's Song
  • My Grussett Lies a Fallowing-oh
  • Bind my Plooms with Silage
  • The Russet-banger Ditty
  • The Lung-Wormer's Gavotte
  • Good King Boroslav