Another slow solve for me today at a little under an hour though I spent longer working out the wordplay as I went along than I would on a non-blogging day. Once again I don’t think there are any real obscurities and very little, if any, unusual GK was required, so other than perhaps a case of blogger’s nerves I don’t know what my problem was.
| Across |
| 1 |
MELODIST – Anagram of ISOLDe inside MET. “The Met” is the Metropolitan Opera House in New York. I usually think of a melodist as a tunesmith but it can also mean a singer. |
| 5 |
GRIPES – ‘Grapes’ as said by Dick Van Dyke in ‘Mary Poppins’ perhaps |
| 10 |
PETIT FOUR – PET followed by anagram of FRUIT around 0. A small fancy cake. |
| 11 |
CALIF – CALIFornia
|
| 12 |
ANTI – Sounds like ‘ante’, a stake put up in advance |
| 13 |
PRESENTER – PRESs,ENTER – ‘Press’ = ‘reviews’ as in ‘the show received a poor press’ |
| 15 |
ABSTENTION – ABS short for abdominal muscles then sounds like ‘tension’ |
| 17 |
TEMP – Cryptic definition. On edit: Thanks to Peter for pointing out this is also a hidden word. It was one answer that went in so quickly I didn’t really think about it though I had noticed the lack of hidden answers today when trying to decide which clues to leave out.
|
| 19 |
Omitted. Please ask if baffled. |
| 20 |
WINE TASTER – WIN(ETA S)TER – Not quite happy with the definition ‘helper in chateau’ here |
| 22 |
MARDI GRAS – M,AR(DIG)RAS – Arras is a town in Northern France once famous for tapestry |
| 24 |
DIES – Double definition, one being the Latin for ‘day’ |
| 26 |
NAOMI – MOA flying backwards in Northern Ireland
|
| 27 |
CHAPERONE – CH(A PERON)E – Our regular revolutionary returns to service alongside his fellow Argentinian and first lady |
| 28 |
YANKEE – NAY reversed, KEEp
|
| 29 |
BEDSTEAD – DEBATES*,widespreaD |
| |
| Down |
| 1 |
MOPE – MO,PE |
| 2 |
LET ONES HAIR DOWN – LET (ONE,SH,AIR) DOWN |
| 3 |
DETAILED – DE(TAIL)ED |
| 4 |
SLOOP – POOLS reversed |
| 6 |
ROCKER – c ROCKERy
|
| 7 |
PULL THE OTHER ONE – (HELP TO RUN HOTEL)* ,East
|
| 8 |
SAFARI PARK – S(A FAR I)PARK – The presence of the Island of Sark led to some confusion here |
| 9 |
GRUESOME – G(RUES)O,ME |
| 14 |
PAPER MONEY – PA(PERM,ONE)Y – ‘Perm’ = ‘set’ as in the hair treatment |
| 16 |
TAIL RACE – Tunnel,AIL, RACE – A channel that carries water away, from a waterwheel for example |
| 18 |
Omitted. Please ask if baffled. |
| 21 |
DIVINE – DIV(IN)E |
| 23 |
STAKE – S,TAKE |
| 25 |
SEED – The River DEE’S reversed |
7dn brings to mind the saucy joke that cropped up in the Guardian review of Stephen Fry’s stage show yesterday. It’s in the penultimate paragraph here: http://www.guardian.co.uk/stage/2010/sep/22/stephen-fry-comedy-review
I missed it too when solving, but 17 is also a hidden word, making – “Short employment contracts for me” an &lit/all-in-one.
“Good morning, good morning!” the General said,
When we met him last week on the way to the line.
Now the soldiers he smiled at are most of ’em dead,
And we’re cursing his staff for incompetent swine.
“He’s a cheery old card” grunted Harry to Jack,
As they slogged up to Arras with rifle and pack.
But he did for them both with his plan of attack.
But clearly my brain was more stubborn than ever, having the last f for 11a, I thought of kalif, then the l arrived, so I thought ok, but why the state? And very very very slowed it dawned upon me that calif might be the right spelling and there was the state suddenly as well. Miracles do happen.
Thanks for the blog.
All in all a satisfying week – I’ve been pleased to come on here and find that puzzles I’ve managed to get through in reasonable time have not been considered of the ‘nursery slope’ variety, so I suppose I must be making progress.
Funnily enough it was one of the omitted answers, 18dn, which gave me the most trouble and was my last in. I was convinced ‘guard’ = WARD was the first part of the wordplay so was then looking to tag on something meaning ‘sporting’ or ‘army’ to complete the word. Luckily the begninning of the word was at least right (for the wrong reasons!) so the correct answer came to mind and then I saw the error of my ways.
TAIL RACE was unknown as was YANKEE in this sense: something of a betting theme today.
I also thought “helper” was a bit odd for 20ac. Everyone involved in the production of wine will taste it of course but the word “taster” suggests a customer rather than a helper.
The point is that there isn’t really such a thing as a “wine taster” per se in a winery. It’s a bit like saying you’re the ball kicker in a football team.
However this is really just nit picking because the clue was perfectly clear.
I thought both 19A EXAM and 18D WARDRESS quite tricky clues in an overall pleasing puzzle with relatively few real grapes.
Because you’re doing this with mostly familiar words rather than mostly words you’ve never seen before or have only seen in other barred-grid puzzles, it’s perfectly reasonable to have different rules to those used in Mephisto.
(I can’t see what’s “supposed” about the Dickensian pronunciations when he uses unorthodox spelling to make the sounds obvious.)
BEDSTEAD. Now there’s a word I always associate with a wonderfully funny song by Flanders and Swann: The Bedstead Men.
After an hour of this, I was left with 18 down, which would just not come. I saw well enough it probably ended in ‘-dress’, and was a feminine.
My usual trick to shake up my brain is to make a phone call. When I come back to the puzzle, I see it instantly. On this occasion, I was actually explaining the balky clue to my mother over the phone, when I saw what it must be.
A few were put in from the literals, I never saw the cryptics for ‘temp’ and ‘rocker’. Rather an easy puzzle for a Friday, but tomorrow we may get something more challenging.
A strange frisson on 29ac, which my instant brain told me was DEATHBED. Unfair on us older solvers and/or retirees, I thought!
I actually really liked the clue for gripes, quite happy that it was based on cod cockney.
I can’t explain 19ac satisfactorily, either. I can see E = each, X = ten, M = Mark(?), but how does it all fit together?
Think we may have somethig marginally tougher tomorrow!
Other than that I was pleased with about 18 mins on the basis that i felt it might be a harder one. Perhaps this was solely because it was friday, but then some of the definitions were a little less straightforward than they could be.
I was also going to have a moan about the definition of ROCKER, since I thought it was more about music than choice of transport, but on looking up I was reminded of the specific MODS vs ROCKERS culture which makes it a more justifiable definition. (My main gripe I guess was that I still considered myself to be a rocker, even though I cant stand motorbikes!)
I was puzzled by the “perhaps” in 19ac. Is this to indicate definition by example? Isn’t an exam a type of test, just as much as a test is a type of exam (assuming the two aren’t synonymous)?
Does that cover it?
What the heck is ‘ewai’?
Oh, hang on, that’s you…