Having finished it, I think this is another fine puzzle on a par with the last two days; perhaps They have indeed noted keriothe’s graph (v. 26302) and decided to shake us up a bit. Unfortunately it took me around 40 minutes, not being the sharpest knife in the box this morning after a fitful night of coughing and snuffling; this cold (or whatever alien virus it is) just refuses to leave me alone even after three weeks. I went astray with 12a for a while, which messed me up for 3d, and the brilliant 20a took me an age to see.
On Monday I was castigated in these circles (and others) for suggesting that the reaction to the passing of you-know-who was somewhat OTT – a full half hour as the only item on the BBC1 main news, the normally restrained Radio 4 talking about little else, etc. etc. Since then I have familiarised myself a little with the chap’s œuvre on YouTube. I see he performed live with several of my own musical icons – Jagger, Tina T, Annie Lennox and others – and made a good fist of it. Somehow I had passed four decades without realising the true width and depth of this immense popular talent; I have some catching up to do. Nevertheless, I still think it was OTT and reserve the right to say so. Nuff said!
| Across |
| 1 |
GO TO PIECES – GOT O PIES would be ‘was given no pastries’; insert CE for the civil engineer; D crumble. |
| 6 |
SPEC – DD; SPEC short for specification, ‘on spec’ being a decision made with chance involved. |
| 10 |
AMISS – A miss is as good as a mile, D out. |
| 11 |
PIVOTALLY – (VITAL PLOY)*, D &lit. The first of several words today containing the letter V, my least favourite or most annoying in Scrabble. |
| 12 |
RUMP PARLIAMENT – Chuckle if you will. I breezily entered HUNG P.. thinking steak is well hung (ideally). Only near the end when struggling to solve 3d with the second word starting with G did I twig I had been hung out to dry. The right answer is much better! |
| 14 |
PRAIRIE – PR AIR = process of enhancing image, add IE = that is, D plain. |
| 15 |
PIGTAIL – PIG Napoleon was the number one pig in Animal Farm, TAIL sounds like TALE; D twist. |
| 17 |
TAYSIDE – (I STAYED)*, D Scottish region once. |
| 19 |
FIR CONE – FIRE = sack, insert CON = rook, D fruit from tree. |
| 20 |
LOLLIPOP LADIES – Definitely my CoD for the clever definition, which took me an age to twig; I was fixated on LADDER for the second word. LOLL = lounge, I, POP = music; LA = note, DIES = ends; D young conductors. |
| 23 |
BOX CLEVER – BOX = container, C, LEVER = handle; D intelligently manoeuvre. |
| 24 |
ALIEN – Young George Washington was alleged to have told his Dad he ‘could not tell a lie’, a trait which as a politician I feel sure he soon left behind. Add N for new; D unfamiliar. |
| 25 |
GIRT – GRIT = determination, move the I forward; D surrounded. |
| 26 |
ADAM AND EVE – D couple; CRS for believe = credit. |
| Down |
| 1 |
GOAD – GO = attempt, AD = publicity; D drive. |
| 2 |
TRIBUTARY – TUB I RT = pot one right; upturn that; add A RY (track); D flower. The old flower = river thing again. |
| 3 |
PAST PARTICIPLE – Once I’d found out the second word began with P not G (see 12a), this was easy; four DBEs of this part of speech. |
| 4 |
EXPIATE – EXPAT = migrant, like me, insert I = keeping one, E = close to home; D make up for. |
| 5 |
ENVELOP – EN = French for in, V = vest’s heading, ELOP = Pole (European) got up; D cloak. |
| 7 |
PULSE – DD; pulse speeds up in excitement, a runner bean is a sort of pulse. |
| 8 |
CRYSTAL SET – Another DD; apparently the 15th is the crystal wedding anniversary, although it’s so long ago I can’t remember and certainly didn’t take any notice of it at the time. |
| 9 |
AT DAGGERS DRAWN – (DREAD GANG WAS T)*; D in hostile state. |
| 13 |
SPITTLEBUG – (PUT GIBLETS)*; D small insect. The nymph of the froghopper, the one which makes that frothy stuff known as cuckoo spit. |
| 16 |
AT ONE TIME – Hidden reversed in VEG(EMITE NOT A)NCHOVIES; D previously. Nice surface with ‘sandwiches’ involved. |
| 18 |
EVOLVED – DEVOLVE = delegate, move the D to the end (heading down); D progressed gradually. |
| 19 |
FULCRUM – FUL(L) = almost replete, CRUM(B) = cut tiny piece of bread; D supporter. |
| 21 |
LUXOR – City in Egypt next to the ruins of Thebes, so I suppose a historic site. LUR(E) = endless attraction, insert X for ‘by’ and O for nothing. (Thanks Alan C below). I was as dim as a Toc H lamp this morning. |
| 22 |
KNEE – Alternate letters of o K e N t E r E d; D joint. |
Liked pigtail too.
Regarding recently dead people, the OTT reaction is always seen in spades whenever an old journalist dies..
I’m glad you corrected your comment on David Bowie, Pip. I have never been a fan either but there’s no doubting his immense cultural impact. Of course the reaction is overblown, but 1) it always is in these cases and 2) a large proportion of today’s most prominent journalists are of that generation.
Edited at 2016-01-13 10:12 am (UTC)
I give myself about 15 minutes with the online papers every morning and that’s the full extent of my intentional news exposure these days. I haven’t watched TV news for about 10 years and rarely hear it on the radio (as a former news junkie, I was amazed at how little I missed it). There are great advantages to not being exposed to the hysterics of the modern media. Bowie is part of the soundtrack of my life, but I’ve been able to take the John O’Hara line (on learning of the death of Gershwin): “”George Gershwin died on July 11, 1937, but I don’t have to believe it if I don’t want to.”
With regard to the recent passing, at least I’d heard of this one. I remember when Freddie Mercury’s death received endless coverage in the press that was the first I’d ever heard of him or his group.
Edited at 2016-01-13 11:26 am (UTC)
Serendipity popped in to say hello today as this morning I overheard a colleague announcing that today was his 15th wedding anniversary and the conversation inevitably turned to what the thingamabob for the 15th was. Receiver of old was a neat def for that one too.
Didn’t know the parliament and had somehow made the link from froghopper to spittlebug via cuckoo spit.
Loved the definition for L Ladies.
Best of the day the LL definition, no chance of that until crossers were in, but of course totally fair.
Thanks setter and Pip.
Edited at 2016-01-13 02:26 pm (UTC)
No problems, a steady solve but at the office for the first 10 minutes then finished at home so the timer says 2 hours or something, for a lovely puzzle
U-Gov have run a poll on TV media coverage of Bowie – 61% of the population think it was well OTT and I’m one of them!
I also dug myself into a massive hole by confidently inserting BEEF WELLINGTON at 12ac on very little evidence.
Edited at 2016-01-13 09:48 pm (UTC)
Re Bowie, I see that some here think that the media reaction and coverage of his passing has been OTT. My view is that he was a giant in his field and deserved the coverage. Lennon was almost deified but he couldn’t hold a candle to Bowie. You just wait till Dylan goes! Then you’ll see some overreaction!
As a general rule I’m not very good at convoluted clues like 20ac (LOLLIPOP LADIES) and fare much better with the simpler wordplay but more esoteric knowledge required to solve Times crosswords of the 1960s, 1970s and 1980s. Today’s puzzle was clearly clever stuff, but not really my cup of tea.
Not to pour petrol on the fire, and this has nothing to do with whether BBC coverage was OTT, but Bowie does have 5 albums in Rolling Stone’s all time list of the 500 best albums. For the record, only the Beatles (10), Dylan(10), the Stones(10), Springsteen(8), Clapton(8), Lou Reed(6), Neil Young(8), and the Who(7) have more. We can argue about whether Neil Young belongs in that category later.
As for Martinp1’s comment of “just wait till Dylan goes” – am I the only one here who didn’t realize he was still alive? (And, out of idle curiosity, why the “1”, Martin? It seems a bit like calling the original Jaws “Jaws 1”.)