I think I would be pushed to solve three grids of this complexity in an hour, which bodes ill for October, but nonetheless there should be few complaints if the competition puzzles are of this calibre. There was no insulting of a solver’s intelligence to be found in the tough but very fairly clued demands on our general knowledge here. A bit of science, a bit of art, just a smidgin of Latin, geographical knowledge of all four corners of the globe, even some DIY knowhow… I was as happy as a quahog from 11ac. I would have speculated that our esteemed editor might have been involved due to his 5dn connections, but I’m reluctantly forced to concede that other setters may have heard of that excellent country (the home of many of my own ancestors, as it happens).
I didn’t get a single one of the across clues on my first pass, but fortunately the downs were slightly less alarming… 2dn might have been my FOI, possibly? I definitely remember my LOIs as I got badly stuck with just 13dn and 23ac to go. My beery brain was very quick to realise approximately how the clue must work, but having to change a one-letter compass point for a two-letter one was a little beyond it. COD to 21dn for its fun device, but there really wasn’t a shortage of excellent clues to choose from here.
What about you lot? Did you like it as much as I did? Or was a week in Wales recharging one’s cryptic batteries a prerequisite for full enjoyment?
Across
1 One who shuts up having caught out failure (5)
LOSER – {c}LOSER
4 Second team getting food before minor fixture (4-5)
GRUB-SCREW – S CREW getting GRUB before
9 Finished potential holder for piece in pad (9)
UPHOLSTER – UP [finished] + HOLSTER [potential holder for piece]
10 Major disturbance caused by EU stepping out of line about a king (5)
QUAKE – QU{eu}E about A K
11 Securing non-European terminal, army invades abandoned island (7,8)
MARTHA’S VINEYARD – securing {e}ARTH, (ARMY INVADES*)
12 Puts up rafter, not all of it as above (2,5)
UT SUPRA – {p}UTS UP RA{after}
14 Strict unopened communication about the setter (7)
EXTREME – {t}EXT RE ME
16 Yorkshire village wife’s put in a very little amount when pressure’s off (7)
HAWORTH – W’s put in HA'{p}ORTH
19 Brief role: a small boy is showing off (7)
PARADES – PAR{t} A DES
21 Cause of misapprehension of coalition — one pulls out (7,8)
OPTICAL ILLUSION – (COALITION I PULLS*)
23 African fascist changing direction (5)
SWAZI – {n->SW}AZI
24 Girl rudely interrupted by Dutch artist and jazz musician (9)
GRAPPELLI – (GIRL*) interrupted by APPEL (Stéphane Grappelli, French jazz violinist; Karel Appel, Dutch painter and sculptor)
25 Dogs also found in Jewish villages, not the first time (9)
SHETLANDS – AND found in SH{t}ETLS
26 Pastoral feature of Russia, in short (5)
RURAL – R. URAL, short for the river Ural
Down
1 Trap undermining flashy gossip (9)
LOUDMOUTH – MOUTH undermining LOUD
2 Leader in Strictly now appearing in extremely prestigious balls (7)
SPHERES – S{trictly} + HERE appearing in P{restigiou}S
3 Man from Armagh regularly holding record (5)
RALPH – {a}R{m}A{g}H holding LP
4 Run over side, almost, clutching extremely big sail (2,2,3)
GO TO SEA – GO over TEA{m}, clutching OS
5 Announcement of instrument to rule European republic (7)
UKRAINE – homophone of UKE REIGN
6 Remove question for head of maths in term (9)
SEQUESTER – SE{m->QU}ESTER
7 Concerned with a foreign airline that’s brought up alcohol (4,3)
REAL ALE – RE A + reverse of EL AL
8 Handle an old wit, the last to be promoted (5)
WIELD – WILD{<-<-E}
13 Narrow glass container, mostly pink around interior (9)
PAROCHIAL – PHIAL, (with) reverse of CORA{l} inside
15 Basic lease isn’t up for renewal (9)
ESSENTIAL – (LEASE ISN’T*)
17 Attorney stopping payment as a measure of power? (7)
WATTAGE – ATT stopping WAGE
18 I for one ring back, say, before noon (7)
HALOGEN – HALO + reverse of E.G., before N
19 Supporters wrongfully blocking standard entrance to stadium (7)
PILLARS – ILL blocking PAR + S{tadium}
20 Old engineer‘s design left during communist revolt (7)
DAIMLER – AIM L during RED reversed
21 No time for toast — it’s water you may find here (5)
OASIS – {t}OAS{t} I{t}’S
22 Drug found in meal, but not initially (5)
UPPER – {s}UPPER
Thanks to setter and verlaine.
My approach to jazz musicians is as follows: is it Armstong or Ellington? No? Oh. um.. Peterson? Kenny Ball? That one who did Stranger on the Shore? No? I give up, then…
Fortunately I was able to drag up Grappelli from somewhere, he did some of the music for the film Chocolat. No problem otherwise bar thinking the engineer must be Doppler for quite some time .. strange, as he wasn’t one anyway!
Nevertheless, I was impressed enough by this one to stick with it after my normal hour had elapsed, pressing on for another half-hour only to be defeated by the island and the engineer.
I might have got DAIMLER with a bit more pushing, but I’m not sure I would have got MARTHA’S VINEYARD. Unfortunately, although I’ve heard of it, I crucially didn’t know it was an island, and these partially-built anagrams including words not in the clue are normally the kind of thing I can only put together after I’ve biffed the answer.
Ah well. Reasonably pleased with myself for deriving the unknown Jewish village, conjuring the excellent SWAZI, remembering how to spell GRAPPELLI, finally working out the ha’porth, remembering what PAROCHIAL means and at least knowing enough Latin to spot the unknown UT SUPRA…
I and my hangover thank both setter and blogger.
Edited at 2016-09-09 09:40 am (UTC)
Edited at 2016-09-09 08:58 am (UTC)
An hour and a half of solid graft on this true Friday puzzle, ending with wield of all things. Never knew MV was an island and having coalesced on something vaguely resembling the correct word Jewish village-wise, I couldn’t get two ts into it, but it fell eventually. In fact, I was lucky that just yesterday evening I was looking something up in Chambers and I noted that sheltie was an abbreviation for a dog as well as a pony.
So much to enjoy but I think I’d make 13d my pick.
Spent a couple of minutes trying to think why 20dn might be DRILLER, though ‘old’ excluded that, but otherwise most difficulty was in SW. At 16ac was stuck for a while with PINCH for the ‘small amount’, while at 23dn was looking for a 5-letter fascist that might make 21dn OCEAN somehow.
Edited at 2016-09-09 10:48 am (UTC)
So I’ve decided to take a one-shot penalty rather than the statutory three. This isn’t as controversial as it might seem, as my 41:54 still leaves me at 12 over for the day and 20 over for the tournament. Oh well, it gives me something to improve on next week.
Anyone wanting to claim victory for the week? I reckon anything near par would get the job done. Not that it matters, we’re not playing for sheep stations.
Today’s crossword? Brilliant, as everyone seems to agree. SWAZI possibly my favourite, and LOI.
Also great to see Verlaine back with a rediscovered ebullience.
Thanks setter and V, and have a good weekend everyone.
This was a super puzzle, completed on my knee in the car (as a passenger), 43′ all told, and well-satisfying. The construction of HAWORTH was excellent, pity about the non-surface. LOI was in fact 13d, even though I’m on such a body. UT SUPRA we had a few weeks ago. Brilliant, thanks setter and Verlaine.
As it’s an alternate Friday, I’ve blogged the QC and all comments are most welcome, please give it a go.
Excellent fare but it took me two forty minute sessions.
We have had UT SUPRA before.
FOI 3dn RALPH LOI (oddly)19dn PARADES COD 13dn PAROCHIAL
WOD 24ac GRAPPELLI
This was like the good old days!
Shame about the Galspray Golf – did any one break par? Better luck next week!
Thanks Verlaine.
horryd Shanghai
Edited at 2016-09-09 03:54 pm (UTC)
1hr 2m 50s so on the difficult side pour moi.
Edited at 2016-09-09 04:13 pm (UTC)
So I reckon that’s 2 over for the round and by dint of taking full advantage of the favourable conditions on day 1 a mere 4 over for the week.
Like others, I hadn’t come across APPEL before – or if I had, I’d forgotten him (possibly deliberately). I see that Tate Modern says of him: “Appel often took inspiration from children’s drawings, believing that ‘the child in man is all that’s strongest, most receptive, most open and unpredictable’.” Exactly the sort of artist to bring out the stuckist in me.
Tiredness at the end of an exhausting week meant that I perhaps didn’t enjoy this as much as I might have done, and I’m afraid it didn’t raise a smile in the way that the best Times puzzles do (even when I’m tired).
Edited at 2016-09-10 01:00 am (UTC)