Solving time: Not recorded
I worked this puzzle while watching the last 7 holes of the Frys.com on TV, so no time. I would watch a hole or two, put in a few answers, and go back to watching. I wanted to see if Sang-Moon Bae could manage to bogie enough holes to make it interesting, but he just managed to hang on.
Music: None, golf on TV again.
| Across | |
|---|---|
| 1 | TIBETAN, T(I BET)AN. |
| 5 | NEMESIS, NE(ME)S[t] + IS, just entered from the literal by me. Is a ‘nest’ really a ‘hideout’? |
| 9 | SENTIMENTAL, anagram of TALE SET IN + M[anhatta]N. Again, I didn’t bother with the cryptic. |
| 10 | ROT, double definition, one from the Quickie. |
| 11 | AVENGE, anagram of GAVE [p]EN. |
| 12 | FIVE STAR, FI(VESTA)R. |
| 14 | SOME LIKE IT HOT, anagram of TITLE IS OK, HOME. Another one I could just write in. |
| 17 | MONEY SPINNERS, M(ONE)Y + SPINNERS, delayed by incorrect crossing letters. |
| 21 | TAG LINES, anagram of STEALING. |
| 23 | PALACE, P(A[ristocrats])LACE, a simple &lit I should have seen immediately but didn’t. |
| 25 | CUE, sounds like QUEUE, another one from the Quickie. |
| 26 | PROVISIONAL, PRO + VISION + A L. |
| 27 | NOTELET, TELET[h]ON backwards. |
| 28 | EYEBROW, E + YE(BRO)W. |
| Down | |
| 1 | TUSCAN, TUS + CAN, from CANTUS. I tried ‘Theman’ briefly, which fit the cryptic but didn’t seem like a very onvincing Italian. |
| 2 | BANNERS, double definition, and a very simple one. |
| 3 | THINGUMMY, THIN + GUMMY, a popular chestnut. |
| 4 | NOEL, sounds like NO L. |
| 5 | NIT-PICKING, another obvious double definition. |
| 6 | MILNE, MI(L)NE. |
| 7 | SCRATCH, double definition. |
| 8 | SATURATE, SAT + U[ppers] + RATE. |
| 13 | CLAPPED OUT, double definition, one semi-jocular. |
| 15 | ITERATIVE, IT + E.R. + EVITA upside down. |
| 16 | EMOTICON, anagram of COME INTO. For this one, I actually did use the cryptic to get the answer. |
| 18 | NEGLECT, N + E(G[overnment])LECT. |
| 19 | STAINER, double definition, a composer I had never heard of, which is rather a neat trick to pull off. |
| 20 | YELLOW, double definition, our third or fourth Quickie clue. |
| 22 | IMPEL, I(MP)EL, that is, in LEI upside-down. |
| 24 | LIFE, cryptic definition…make that a hidden in [maxima]L I FE[ar]; thanks Jack! |
24 is hidden but I’m not sure where’s the enclosure indicator. Also not sure why “moving image” at 16; I know some are animated but as far as I’m aware this is not a requirement.
I hope we’re not in for a repeat of the notelet/letter/paper/card argument.
Edited at 2014-10-13 02:01 am (UTC)
The enclosure indicator at 24d I took to be ‘for a stretch’.
John Stainer’s best know work is the Crucifixion, but he also wrote some hymn tunes, the best known of which is probably his version of the Charles Wesley favourite, ‘Love Divine’. The Blaenwern version is most commonly sung in the UK these days (including at William and Kate’s wedding).
As for the hidden-answer indicator in 24dn, I suspect “for a stretch” indicates the literal as well as meaning “some parts of”. (See Ulaca’s comment.) A bit of licenced double duty to give an &lit flavour?
And as for the device at 4dn: reminds me of a great ad slogan for a certain brand of Scotch published around 4dn.
“INGLE ELLS — not the same, is it?”
Edited at 2014-10-13 06:29 am (UTC)
Thanks setter and blogger.
Cantus (1d) looks like a made up word (though I see it’s not) which I’ve not come across before. STAINER I’ve sung, and most probably so have you. His arrangement of that most boring of carols, The First Nowell, is the one most commonly sung. Now that’s the sort of quaint arcanum I’d expect a setter to know, which explains why we’ve got the Christmas cracker at 4d.
Oops?
“He also made a lasting contribution to the music of Christmas in his Christmas Carols New and Old (1871), produced in collaboration with the Revd. H. R. Bramley, which marked an important stage in the revival of the Christmas carol. The book includes Stainer’s arrangements of what were to become the standard versions of “What Child Is This”, “God Rest Ye Merry Gentlemen”, “Good King Wenceslas”, “The First Nowell”, and “I Saw Three Ships”, among others.”
Fling wide the gates of knowledge!
Edited at 2014-10-13 07:07 am (UTC)
Could have been a pb for me at 22:45, but for the One Error at 24dn where I had ‘time’. Damn those pesky hidden words.
dnk STAINER or CANTUS, and dnp NOEL. Only when I came here and had another look, did I realise the spelling of Yuetide in the clue. Doh!
Apologies if you were referring to summat else.
On edit: I too puzzled over the enclosure indicator for the hidden 24 ac and came to the same conclusion as the contributors above, that it is “for a stretch” as in a stretch of road. The whole then provides the definition & lit. An admirable clue.
Edited at 2014-10-13 11:14 am (UTC)
Sadly I didn’t appreciate how good 4dn was to begin with because I though it was just another in the long line of recent typos, misprints and sundry errors. If a clue depends on a deliberate missing letter, you need to have an impeccable track record for accuracy for it to be properly interpreted…
LOI Nit-picking (my CoD) and Five-star.
That reminds me that on Friday’s Countdown the word WHATEV was played successfully. I have to draw the line against the use of such words, and not just because the lad who played it is about half my age and so much better than me.
Edited at 2014-10-13 12:53 pm (UTC)
Edited at 2014-10-13 12:48 pm (UTC)
Noel was my first in and I spotted the hidden easily enough although I took the definition to be just “it” which didn’t make sense.
I also had a query about tag line which I only knew as a sort of advertising slogan which wouldn’t necessarily be funny but there’s dictionary support for it meaning punchline as well.
Seated one day at the organ, I jumped as if I’d been shot
For the Dean was upon me, snarling ‘Stainer – and make it hot.’
All week I swung Stainer and Barnby, Bach, Gounod and Bunnett in A
I said, ‘Gosh, the old bus is a wonder!’ The Dean, with a nod, said ‘Okay’.
And that, pop-pickers, is how I know Stainer.
20.16
Edited at 2014-10-13 05:09 pm (UTC)
Edited at 2014-10-13 04:49 pm (UTC)
Edited at 2014-10-13 06:34 pm (UTC)
An enjoyable start to the week. My one (very) minor objection would be to 13dn, where the wordplay leads more naturally to CLAPPED OFF.
STAINER last came up as recently as No. 25,702 (5 Feb 2014), when Z quoted the reply attributed to Beecham:
“What do you think of Stainer’s Crucifixion, Sir Thomas?”
“I’m all for it.”