Time taken to solve – 42 minutes, but it seemed longer because apart from the four 3-letter words that went in immediately I took a while to get properly under way. After that the LH was slow and steady but when I returned to the NE the answers almost wrote themselves in and the SE followed on quite nicely. Apart from 1ac there’s nothing too obscure today, I think, the NZ region being the only other reference that gave me a problem for a while. The poet, composer and opera are all fairly Dorset-friendly ones I would imagine and I get to quote an old lyric so my cup runneth over. Off shortly to see how the commentators’ ‘New Murray’ theories stand up when he is tested by a real opponent for the first time this tournament.
| Across | |
|---|---|
| 1 | ADMASS – AMASS (gather) takes in D (head of department). This is a word unknown to me, to the Oxfords and to Collins but it’s in my ageing Chambers and at dictionary.com. The meaning required here is the segment of the public easily influenced by advertising in the mass media. |
| 4 | APPROVAL – LAVA (molten rock) takes in OR (gold) PP (pennies), all reversed. |
| 10 | UNDERWEAR – UNDE (nude*), REAR (back) takes in W (women). ‘Shot’ is the anagrind. |
| 11 | GONER – GONER |
| 12 | HAND IN GLOVE – HANDING (passing), LOVE (fancy very much). |
| 14 | OBI – The kimono sash that was invented with crossword setters in mind is hidden and reversed at intervals within ‘In BoOk’. |
| 15 | BEWITCH – B |
| 17 | NATIVE – NAVE (church body) encloses IT (appeal) reversed (to the West). |
| 19 | KIBOSH – Bookish* minus an O. To ‘put the kibosh’ on something is to finish it off once and for all, usually with negative connotations in my experience. |
| 21 | LIBERIA – LI (some distance in China), BERIA (old secret police chief). I didn’t know the unit of length – c590 yards, apparently – but Stalin’s henchman was within my ken. |
| 23 | BIZ – BIZ |
| 24 | ADVANCEMENT – AD (Anno Domini, modern times), VAN (those in front), CEMENT (make fast). If I ever knew how AD comes to mean ‘modern times’ I have forgotten it, but I have met it before in crosswords. |
| 26 | OTAGO – |
| 27 | NAIL-BITER – NAIL (catch), BITE (champ), R (close to despair). |
| 29 | BAGUETTE – B |
| 30 | CANYON – CAN |
| Down | |
| 1 | ABU DHABI – A, BUD (China to US) HABI |
| 2 | MID-ON – M (Middlesex opener), I (one), DON |
| 3 | SIR – reversed and hidden in ‘florist’. |
| 5 | PART-OWN – PAR (standard), TOWN (urban location). |
| 6 | REGRETTABLE – RE (soldiers), GETTABLE (in range of capture) encloses R (resistance). |
| 7 | VANCOUVER – V (see), A, NCOUVER (uncover – show – with its first letter U moved to its centre). |
| 8 | LARKIN – LARK ( singer flying), IN (home). The gloomy poet who wrote something rude about parents. Betjeman was much more fun. |
| 9 | LENGTH – LE |
| 13 | IL TROVATORE – (Travel to Rio)* – the opera by Verdi |
| 16 | WHIZZ-BANG – WHIZZ (ace), BANG (dead, as in ‘precisely’). I only knew this bomb from the song in ‘Oh, What a Lovely War’: Hush, here comes a whizzbang, Hush, here comes a whizzbang, Now, you soldier men, get down those stairs, Down in your dugouts and say your prayers. Hush, here comes a whizzbang, And it’s making straight for you, And you’ll see all the wonders of no-man’s-land, If a whizzbang hits you. |
| 18 | CAST-IRON – CON (criminal) encloses ASTIR (moving). Safe as in ‘cast-iron guarantee’. |
| 20 | HAVE-NOT – HAVEN (shelter), OT (closed, reversed). If anyone wants to discuss doors open, closed and ajar please feel free, but I shall not be joining in this time. |
| 21 | LENTIL – LENT (fast, in the religious sense), IL |
| 22 | ABSORB – ABS (muscles), ORB (heavenly body). |
| 25 | Haven’t left any out so far so I’ll knock this one on the head… |
| 28 | …and unless there’s any other business I’ll wrap up and bid you a good morning. |
Thanks to Jack for the full parsing of the cricketing term and the Middle eastern city where England are currently trying to claw their way back into the series with Pakistan.
The li is an interesting unit of measurement round here: different when going uphill than when going downhill, I believe, and, whenever the fabled “Long March” of Mao et al is mentioned, able to stretch to even greater lengths.
Edited at 2012-01-27 06:49 am (UTC)
A few (LIBERIA, BAGUETTE, MID-ON) I didn’t understand today, so thanks for the explanations. I always seem to get caught out by these clues where you have to remove things more extensive than single letters. For some reason I associate this sort of clue with the Guardian*.
In 11ac I think you have to use the alternative spelling “Gonerill” to make the wordplay work. This puzzled me because I didn’t know there was an alternative.
I know OTAGO mostly from the wine. Good pinot.
Nice to see LARKIN. Not the cheeriest of fellows but a great poet. Timely because I think there’s a new Collected Poems coming out, although I’m not clear on why it’s needed.
*For the avoidance of doubt and without prejudice to the generality of the foregoing this is not a complaint
I knew AD-MASS, a phrase that’s been around some time. At 10A “briefs” is unnecessary DBE. Was too ignorant to know that “Gonerill” is an alternative spelling. At 15A I associate “brew” with to make beer and “a brew” with tea or coffee. I don’t think “AD” can be defined as “modern times”. It’s all niggling stuff that leaves one feeling slightly irritated.
Well, it was Gatlinburg in mid-July
And I just hit town and my throat was dry,
I thought I’d stop and have myself a brew.
At an old saloon on a street of mud,
There at a table, dealing stud,
Sat the dirty, mangy dog that named me “Sue”
Oddly enough my first shot at 14 was BOA, at intervals but not reversed in “book at”. Would have been a very dodgy definition. Perhaps over influenced by the secret policeman, my first shot at 21 was SIBERIA, and I spent a while trying to get SI by taking some sort of distance from some sort of China, probably for once not from some sort of mate because I’d already got BUD in 1d.
I knew ADMASS, but thought it meant makeweight until today.
I also knew OTAGO, but though it might be in Canada. Educational, this thing, isn’t it?
Again lots of candidates, but CoD on a whim to CAST IRON as a real smoothie.
I can see an argument for “modern times” being post the industrial revolution, post various discoveries and inventions of the last 100 years (electronics say), or just the last 20 years. How can something that occurred about 2,000 years ago be described as “modern”
Took an age, but got there in the end, with fingers crossed for ADMASS (looks an odd word…).
Needed blog to appreciate fully the parsing for several, so thanks for that, Jack. New vocab for me today: LI, BERIA, AGUE; and new towns: OTAGO, LEITH.
Best wishes to all for a good weekend.
Edited at 2012-01-27 12:28 pm (UTC)
Curiously, the very first puzzle I blogged for this site, April 20 2009, had Abu Dhabi, but of course I still puzzled over it for a bit. Even then, it took me a while to figure out how it worked.
I was left at the end with ‘whizz bang’/Otago, and I had WHITE _ _ _ G for a long time. Then I took a break, came back and saw it at once. I was trying ‘Obago’, which seemed vaguely familiar and approximately fitted ‘game’, when I saw what ‘catching game’ must be.
I’d have been a little faster but for 29ac. The first thing that came to my addled brain was BAGNETTE (food is not one of my strong suits!), and although I realised pretty quickly that the word I wanted was almost certainly BAGUETTE, I was a bit fazed by the whole thing and made heavy weather of justifying it from the word-play.