Solving time 20:25 – a bit on the slow side, but this was quite tricky in places (I seem to remember…looking back on it now I can’t see where I got stuck).
Across | |
1 | DAMAGED GOODS – DAM + AGED + (dog so)* |
9 | AFTER – (r)AFTER |
10 | METHADONE – MET HAD ONE, MET being short for the Metropolitan Police. |
11 | EARPHONE – EARP + HONE. I suppose “work on” can equate to sharpen… |
12 | CARNAL – (waite)R inside CANAL. |
13 | SPIFFING – S(on) + PIFF(l)ING. |
15 | DIVING – double definition, in football “diving” means pretending to be fouled, as perfected by Jurgen Klinsmann and practised by practically every player in the Premiership! |
17 | DRY ICE – DRY + ICE (= rocks as in “whisky on the rocks”, something you’ll never hear a Scotsman ask for). Liked the definition, “old disco release”. I suppose Health & Safety won’t let them any more. |
18 | LISTLESS – nice cryptic definition for the wordplay. |
20 | SLEEVE – always useful in emergencies when you haven’t got a hankie! Remember when records used to come in sleeves rather than jewel cases or digipaks? |
21 | BLACK TIE – BLACK + TIE |
24 | SAVILE ROW – (rucku)S + A VILE ROW. “Fitting way” is a neat definition. |
25 | VALID – V(essel) + A LID. |
26 | RECORD PLAYER – could be a description of Shane Warne, but it’s another type of spinner required. |
Down | |
1 | DIAPERS – REP in SAID, all reversed. |
2 | MATERNITY LEAVE – (relative yet man)*. |
3 | GIRTH – (right)* |
4 | DOMINANT – double definition. A dominant note is “the fifth above the tonic”, whatever that means! |
5 | OATH – OAT + H(eroin). |
6 | DRAMATIST – DRAM + A(r)TIST |
7 | COINCIDENTALLY – COIN + CID, then TALLY underneath EN (a printer’s measure). |
8 | JET LAG – JET (black) + LAG (prisoner). |
14 | FACE VALUE – ACE (fine) + VA (state) inside FLUE. |
16 | WILLOWED – ILL inside WOWED. |
17 | DESIST – (cassi)S inside DEIST. |
19 | SLENDER – S + LENDER. |
22 | CAVIL – CAVI(ty) + L, “object” being used as a verb. |
23 | ARNO – hidden in “TamAR NOrmally”. River in Italy, not Cornwall. |
Didn’t get 4d which as a musician of 32 years is appalling: the tonic note is the key you’re in and the fifth means five notes up in the scale. So the dominant in C major is G (C,D,E,F,G) and in G is D (G,A,B,C,D). Why can I understand that and not the rest of the clues??!
Particularly on a Saturday I like clues that are not just mundane run of the mill stuff but have a little piquancy.
I have been unable to get into the Times Crossword site today. Is it just my turn or have you also had trouble?
The fifth plays a dominant role (no pun intended, ha!) in the cycle of fifths, so beloved of Bach and other Baroque composers and Country & Western musicians (change key!), without which we wouldn’t have the even or well tempered scale we have today. My scales are always on the angry side these days. Age and C&W music (is that not an oxymoron?) will do that to you.
I didn’t fully understand the wordplay to 9 and 22 until coming here so thanks Linxit.
I put a smiley face against record player for being a fun clue, but gave dry ice my COD for the neat definition.
http://home.earthlink.net/~vinyl1/whiter2.jpg
I also had a strange block on 9ac, even though it should have been obvious enough.
I did find 17 fairly witty, but my COD would be 24.