The Greek valley might raise a few eyebrows, but it’s been here before, and I was a bit uncertain of spelling needed for the South American country and the African city.
The editor/setter must be congratulated for slipping in 14d: I spent much of last evening watching events unfold (again) in the Capitol, in rather more orderly fashion.
Below is my discussion of the clues, showing definitions and SOLUTIONS
Across
1 Family name of Swiss banker taken in by scam (8)
COGNOMEN Originally “the last of the three names of an ancient Roman indicating the house or family to which he belonged; a surname; an epithet or nickname.” So now you know: a familiar word now with a specific meaning. Formed here by CON for scam taking in a GNOME, conventionally of Zurich, and precisely a Swiss banker. So not a river, for once.
5 Lizard in S American region, one moving to prime position (6)
IGUANA The South American region is (French) GUIANA (hence the spelling) home to Devils Island. Move the 1 (I) to the front, the prime position.
10 Achieve prominent publicity making banners? (3,3,9)
HIT THE HEADLINES I sort of get this, since banners are newspaperspeak for HEADLINES, but I’m not entirely sure where the HIT THE comes from. Making? Perhaps it’s just a cryptic definition.
11 Illustrious celebrity entertaining the Spanish Left (7)
STELLAR The celebrity is a STAR, entertaining s in giving space to the (in) Spanish EL and L(eft)
12 Affair of big cat crossing road with last of cubs (7)
LIAISON As a choral singer, I can’t hear liaison without thinking it should have a kyrie in front, but here the big cat is a LION, the road it crosses is the A1 with the last (letter) of cubS providing the rest.
13 Confusion brought about by inspector’s instruction (8)
DISORDER The (Detective) Inspector’s instruction is the DI’S ORDER
15 Liberal leaving place of worship in wooded vale (5)
TEMPE A place I know only from this one, but it’s in Chambers as the valley of the Peneus in Thessaly, praised by the ancient poets for its unsurpassed beauty. It’s in heaps of poetry as a place of outstanding beauty. Here’s Catullus:
From Tempe’s vale next ancient Peneus came,
That fertile vale immortalized in fame!
Where Messos’ blue-eyed nymphs delight to rove,
Tempe o’erhung with many a circling grove!
To get your own economy sized Tempe, take the L(iberal) out of the TEMPLE place of worship.
18 Wizardry of fighting man in rainproof garment (5)
MAGIC Raincoat MAC (what else) and fighting man therein GI
20 Neatly trim thick hair covering current dog (8)
MANICURE My last in’ fooled into thinking of haircuts. Thick hair is MANE and the current dog is I (symbol for electric current) and CUR
23 Taking notice of ambassador, say, limiting noise (7)
HEEDING Ambassadors to the court of crossword are HE (His/er Excellency) and say is EG, the two surrounding DIN for noise
25 Gibbon, for one, a senior cleric (7)
PRIMATE The well known identity of apes and bishops
26 Great hopes Berg cultivated about a stage work (3,7,5)
THE BEGGARS OPERA Our first anagram (cultivated), of GREAT HOPES BERG and A. It would have been brilliant if the music for the 20th century version (The Threepenny Opera) had been Alban Berg’s, but it was Kurt Weill’s.
27 Money you and I brought back for evergreen tree (6)
CASHEW Hands up if you knew the source of the yummy nuts was an evergreen. Money is CASH, and you and I backwards produce the EW
28 Cheek of learner leaving lucky creature outside hotel (8)
BACKCHAT Quite cute. The lucky creature is a BLACK CAT, take out the L(earner) and add elsewhere the H(otel)
Down
1 Joint party-giver’s charge for keeping house (6)
COHOST Charge id COST and HOuse is kept therein. Chambers prefers it with a hyphen, as do I, otherwise it’s salmon with a T on the end.
2 Understanding crowd (9)
GATHERING A very simple double definition
3 Eponymous hero’s extremely offbeat greeting (7)
OTHELLO Is Othello a hero? Desdemona had cause to disagree if not for very long. Anyway, extremely OffbeaT plus HELLO for greeting gives the man and his play
4 Woman finally changes sides, finding compound (5)
ETHER Start with your random woman ETHEL and change her L(eft) to R(ight)
6 Good worker everyone held to be brave and chivalrous (7)
GALLANT G(ood) plus ALL for everyone and ANT for the “worker”, as so often.
7 Woman’s name concealed by mature son (5)
AGNES Should be followed by Dei (see 12 above). N(ame) is “concealed” by AGE for mature in verbal form, and tagged by S(on)
8 No-show sailors put on course right away (8)
ABSENTEE Sailors are ABS (Able Bodied) and the course from which you remove the R(ight) is ENTRÉE. I toyed with a D on the end, thinking “put on course” was ENTERED, but it doesn’t work.
9 Witch briefly keeping old Scottish pot for boiling (8)
CAULDRON The witch is a CRONE, cut short as indicated, and she “keeps” AULD for the Scottish version of old.
14 US politician eager to crush Yankee rabble-rousing (8)
DEMAGOGY The surface is undoubtedly today the redoubtable Nancy Pelosi successfully charting the House through Impeachment 2.0. The less exciting crossword version is DEM for American politician (other makes are available) eager: AGOG on top of (NATO) Y(ankee)
16 African city reached by libertine in thirty-one days (9)
MARRAKECH At least one other spelling available, trust the wordplay. MARCH is one exemplar of 31 days, and libertine supplies RAKE therein.
17 Forceful chap I met at sea (8)
EMPHATIC Only our second anagram (at sea), of CHAP I MET
19 Egyptian citizen displays anger, breaking stick (7)
CAIRENE Another slightly unlikely spelling, so again trust the wordplay, anger: IRE inside stick: CANE
21 Outstanding feature primarily of go-ahead Native American (7)
CHINOOK Outstanding feature (in most people) is CHIN. Promarily Of gives the first O, and go-ahead in the sense of giving it provides the OK.
22 Vehicle has got hired to go round old Mediterranean area (6)
LEVANT Formerly the eastern end of the Med. VAN the vehicle has LET the hired round it.
24 English archdeacon’s betting odds (5)
EVENS An archdeacon is styled VEN(erable). Put E(nglish) on the front.
Still, a good time on an “easier” puzzle.
Being an audio enthusiast, and not a choral singer, I look at Chinook and think of a very nice phono preamp.
Edited at 2021-01-14 04:03 am (UTC)
Couple of good crossword names in ‘Ethel’ and AGNES. Wonder when “Mackenzie” and “Addison” will start making an appearance. That should increase the solving times.
Thanks to setter and blogger.
I very nearly spoiled it by biffing MARRAKESH as my LOI, so I’m pleased I took an extra second or two to check the wordplay.
Edited at 2021-01-14 06:09 am (UTC)
Edited at 2021-01-14 06:26 am (UTC)
No problem with TEMPE. It is the suburb next door to the one I used to live in in Sydney, Marrickville, and it is right next to Sydney Airport.
I know CHINOOK as a helicopter and as a wind in the Rockies.
25 mins pre-brekker with the last few struggling to see Levant. It is strange what can trip me up.
I liked the black cat and I have learned a couple of things: Tempe and Cairene.
Thanks setter and great blog Z.
Soon he’ll not HIT THE HEADLINES we see
GATHERING DISORDER
And HEEDING no border
Is EMPHATICally DEMAGOGY
He’ll still be around, just you see !
He’s like a bad smell
And should just go to Hell.
But life is just not that E-Z
Steady solve. Thanks z.
Edited at 2021-01-14 08:44 am (UTC)
Anyone else bang in ‘Robinson’ for 1ac then have to delete it?
Thanks z and setter.
“Swiss banker” giving “gnome” is something I’ve remembered from previous crosswords when I didn’t get it, so it leapt out at me when I saw 1a and helped me get the unfamiliar COGNOMEN. Hadn’t heard of TEMPE or CAIRENE either, but the cluing was generous in both cases. Otherwise this was very straightforward.
FOI Agnes
LOI Backchat
COD Marrakech
Edited at 2021-01-14 09:42 am (UTC)
Worth remembering the old story of the 2 bulls in the field next to a herd of cows, and one day the farmer leaves the gate open.The younger bull says: ” Quick. let’s run down and have a couple of ’em!” And the older bull says:” No. Let’s walk down and have the lot.”
OK … it isn’t as simple as that … I’m also ‘a bloke’!
(And helpful tip for my country strolls)
Edited at 2021-01-14 10:59 am (UTC)
NW didn’t immediately present itself, did better in the NE, SW and in the middle of the park. The stage play didn’t leap out though had heard of it.
Like many, was left with clearing up the SE corner – the play giving CHINOOK, which prompted BACKCHAT and then a few minutes thought over LEVANT (which means ‘rising’ as of the sun, providing the Spanish verbs ‘levantar’ – to rise; and the reflexive ‘levantarse’ – to get up (to rise oneself).
LOI 1A: COGNOMEN
I had completed the Quick Cryptic previously and, working through this, I thought some of the clues were on a par, but perhaps I was warmed up and breezing through? My downfall: entered 10A with insufficient attention (and without parsing fully) and, upon completion, pressed submit without checking …. I had typed: HIT THE HEADLINSS!!!!
Thank you, z8b8d8k and the setter.
Needless to say really enjoyed this one. FOI iguana LOI heeding having spotted my schoolboy error of heading just in time. Not quite sure why I erred initially, I think it was jumping to ad as notice.
NHO of cairene but clear from the cluing. Other than that unexpectedly plain sailing.
Big thank you to setter. Can you do the job every day?
I did have a problem with 21d; there are so many Native Americans it seems. My parsing led to CHINOGA which made LOI 28a impossible until I returned to my first idea -the black cat. That gave me CHINOOK and all was done in under an hour. Enjoyed it.
Now for the QC. David
Lots of biffing today, although my first one in was ROBINSON at 1a having read ‘Family name of Swiss’… it was also my first one out.
I raced through most of this and saw the potential for a fast time. I biffed Ophelia which got changed to Ophelio after Disorder occurred and I failed to revisit. Then the predictable Marrakesh.
Astonvilla1’s Certainty Principle. You can be fast or accurate. But not both.
Brilliant work by setter and editor, fitting a puzzle with 14d in today.
I know it’s probably not challenging enough for many of the regulars here, but it was just right for me.
Thank you setter and Zabadak.
It is such a satisfying thing to complete the 15×15 and reassures me I probably haven’t got dementia (yet.) Agree that there will be a price to pay . There will be a Friday demon!
Thanks to gracious blogger and setter.
New word for me at 19dn CAIRENE which I will be using in the story of Henry King-Tenison.
FOI 5ac IGUANA – night of
LOI 7dn AGNES – dei
COD 16dn MARRAKECH I have been twice stayed at The Mamounia (18ac) – wonderful food – fully parsed from several footie teams – Najm de Marrakech, KAC Marrakech, Mouloudia de Marrakech and Chez Ali Club de Marrakech.
WOD 12ac DISORDER with 10ac HIT THE HEADLINES
Timeless – riding perhaps on CSNY’s Marrakesh Express!
Edited at 2021-01-14 12:18 pm (UTC)
However, M’Lud, I stated ‘Timeless’ as CSNY performed said ‘Marrakesh Express’ at Bristow, Va. 2000 (Farm Aid) and I ‘perhaps’ was referring to that gig – not mentioning any particular album. It is to be found on line if you search for ‘CSNY Marrakesh Express’.
Edited at 2021-01-14 02:38 pm (UTC)
Chinook helicopter and Avro as a Nina – a setter for the air enthusiasts.10’33”
My LOI TEMPE took an inordinate amount of time and an alphabet trawl for the letter in between M and E.
18:57.
FOI: cohost
LOI: backchat (but really a DNF as we cheated on 1A)
COD: Marrakech
Thanks to the blogger and setter.
FOI IGUANA
LOI DISORDER
COD BACKCHAT
TIME 6:27
Edited at 2021-01-14 08:43 pm (UTC)
Edited at 2021-01-14 07:11 pm (UTC)