So well played setter, you win this round of the game and I tip my hat to you! Close to a Championship Finals level puzzle, to judge by the bruising I took…
ACROSS
1 Organ case of tin work one judge installed in Lincoln, perhaps (7,3)
CANOPIC JAR – CAN OP I [tin | work | one] + J [judge] “installed” in CAR [Lincoln, perhaps]
6 Water-carrier — originally plain Aquarius in Latin (4)
PAIL – P{lain} A{quarius} I{n} L{atin}
8 Recent spirit raiser using scientific principles (8)
NEWTONIC – NEW TONIC [recent | spirit raiser]
9 Musical sounds mostly performed by skaters in seconds? (6)
SONICS – ON IC{e} [“mostly”, performed by skaters] in S S [(two) seconds]
10 Former city business manager (4)
EXEC – EX EC [former | city]
11 Oddball tennis hero, one not really brilliant? (10)
RHINESTONE – (TENNIS HERO*)
12 Some slips of actors through that act (4,5)
IPSO FACTO – hidden in {sl}IPS OF ACTO{rs}
14 Michael’s ascended, reportedly in confusion (3-2)
MIX-UP – homophone of MICK’S UP [Michael’s | ascended]
17 Son put bracelets on, and drag, while walking (5)
SCUFF – S CUFF [son | put bracelets on]
19 Workers mature cheese out of British live collection (9)
MENAGERIE – MEN AGE {b}RIE [workers | mature | cheese, minus B = British]
22 Refuse building permission for concrete shelter (10)
BLOCKHOUSE – BLOCK HOUSE [refuse | building permission]
23 Mirror either side of small recess (4)
APSE – APE [mirror] either side of S [small]
24 Like “Samson’” English choir arranged (6)
HEROIC – (E CHOIR*)
25 Curtain‘s level in opening (8)
PORTIERE – TIER [level] in PORE [opening]
26 Unknown vehicle’s back for service (4)
NAVY – reversed Y VAN [unknown | vehicle]
27 Excited stir after early Christian city sacrifices old religious foe (10)
ANTICHRIST – (STIR*) after ANTI{o}CH [early Christian city, minus O = old]
DOWN
1 Disorderly collections of eels, that is admitted (9)
CONGERIES – CONGERS [eels] with I.E. [that is] “admitted”
2 Currency to have when splitting bill? (7)
NOWNESS – OWN [to have] when “splitting” NESS [bill, as in “Portland Bill”]
3 Auditor’s part behind with payments, reportedly, shillings down (5,3)
INNER EAR – a homophone of IN ARREARS [behind with payments], minus S = shillings
4 Lords and ladies give up preaching? (4-2-3-6)
JACK-IN-THE-PULPIT – the flower, or, unhyphenated, to JACK IN [give up] THE PULPIT [preaching]
5 More wildly adventurous food (6)
RASHER – double def
6 Cut up rubbish material (9)
PINSTRIPE – reversed SNIP [cut] + TRIPE [rubbish]
7 Fish caught round north and centre of Greenland, eaten by half Inuits (7)
INCONNU – C O N {gree}N{land}, “eaten” by INU{its}
13 Dealing with smells outside of offal plant (9)
OLFACTORY – O{ffa}L + FACTORY [plant]
15 Go back into press’s first books for a previous case (9)
PRECEDENT – RECEDE [go back] into P{ress} + NT [books]
16 Beer in cantina and island clubs of holiday isles (8)
BALEARIC – ALE [beer] in BAR [cantina] + I C [island | clubs]
18 A glowing hot lake across channel rises in crater (7)
CALDERA – reverse all of A RED LAC [a | glowing hot | lake across channel, ie in France]
20 Accompanying groups dancing around pier in India (7)
RIPIENI – (PIER IN I*) [“dancing around”]
21 Church starting a tea dance (3-3)
CHA-CHA – CH [church] + A CHA [a | tea]
Surprisingly NHO INCONNU second one in, from the cryptic with only the I in place, confirmed by mix-up. RIPIENI also straight in – an unknown English word, but known from Italian menus where it means “stuffed,” literally refilled.
A bad week results-wise.
INCONNU: I knew the French word, but not that it was also a fish!
I went to Chambers Word Wizard to find RIPIENI, though it would have been a logical guess from the wordplay if I’d only had the patience (I’d already sussed it was an anagram).
Then, since I’d already surrendered, I resorted to the same aid to fiind CANOPTIC, a word that I’ve surely come across before but remembered only upon sight.
Earlier, I also checked to make sure PORTIERE was a kind of curtain.
I only reluctantly accepted that NOWNESS was really an answer.
Edited at 2019-04-05 02:52 am (UTC)
My error was at 25ac where, after working out PORE as the ‘opening’, I plumped for EVEN as ‘level’ and then looked up POREVENE just to see if it existed, but unfortunately using an on-line dictionary it immediately offered PORTIERE as an alternative, so I never got to have second bite at it. I’ve heard the word in French as a type of door, but had no idea that it could also be a curtain.
CANOPIC JAR, CONGERIES, INCONNU were unknowns but arrived at through fair wordplay. Also NEWTONIC (not recognised in the usual sources which all have ‘Newtonian’). Biffed INNER EAR and didn’t get beyond REAR (behind) with the parsing which turned out to be wrong anyway. Was pleased to remember JACK-IN-THE-PULPIT as ‘lords and ladies’ from a puzzle I blogged last September. Knew RIPIENI as I am a big fan of Baroque concertos where it’s associated with the whole orchestra sections as opposed to the soloist(s) or ‘concertino’.
Although this was very hard I thoroughly enjoyed the battle of wits with the setter, unlike yesterday’s which was marred by errors and dubious wordplay and definitions. I still can’t believe that when these were pointed out to the Times they responded by replacing one of the clues completely! That’s surely got to be a first?
Edited at 2019-04-05 04:49 am (UTC)
Google… google… google…
It was 24463. Feb 17 2010. The new clue, replacing the old erroneous clue, was also erroneous and needed further amendment!
Memory still works, I’m not quite as gaga as I feared.
Edited at 2019-04-05 07:02 am (UTC)
I’ll freely admit to checking INCONNU, PORTIERE and RIPIENI before submitting. CANOPIC JAR I sort of knew from watching several different documentaries about ancient Egypt lately.
I enjoyed this the way some people enjoy running marathons (apparently), and I’m sure it’s equally good for the soul.
“Explosion in a dictionary factory” I like very much, v. Bravo to you and the setter
Edited at 2019-04-05 06:38 am (UTC)
Some of the other unknowns constructed correctly from wordplay, like INCONNU and RIPIENI.
Bits of the more obscure stuff came straight from my Crosswordy Words list—4d JACK-IN-THE-PULPIT was my FOI, for example, and is probably the only reason I didn’t take two hours to fail! That list is also the reason I can remember that they’re not “conga” eels 😀
Other stuff had to be pieced together from vaguer knowledge. I knew I’d recognise a CANOPIC JAR when I saw it, having watched so much Stargate, and luckily I’m steeped enough in Americana that I knew the car. Lincolns are popular among government agencies in the US; JFK was assassinated in a Lincoln Continental, to take a tragic example.
On the whole, though, I’m much more pleased to be beaten by this one than some of the week’s earlier offerings, and I enjoyed it a lot more along the way.
Edited at 2019-04-05 07:42 am (UTC)
Never heard of the mummy tube and had to cheat on pinstripe too – so all in all another win to the setter.
Was I the only one to be secretly disappointed that there were no spectacular foul-ups today? Solving today was like coming down to earth after an adrenaline high. Perhaps tomorrow…
Edited at 2019-04-05 07:04 am (UTC)
Like others, I wanted POREVENE to be a word and never thought of ‘tier’. I also thought first of ‘abe’ for Lincoln.
I see Pontius has misjudged things again. On a day when Verlaine took an astonishing (for him) 18m 49s, he clocked in at 7m 22s. Mmm.
For sure the Bay of Pigs was in the NE. I was brilliantly witty in putting in GILDERS for 2d – if you split the bill, you go Dutch, obvs. Sadly (it was a more fun answer than the quasi philosophical NOWNESS) that screwed the lid on the CANOPUS (no, CANOPIC) JAR, and didn’t help much with the dubious NEWTONIC, where in any case I was convinced the raised spirits was/were NIG. All very time consuming. If the Egyptian spare parts bin had been clued as “container” rather than “case” (which doesn’t look anything like a jar) I might have found the whole thing much quicker.
Let’s give a bit of credit to the setter for making the inconnun (sic, and sic) fish clue smooth with the Innuit link, since the dam’ thing is apparently Canadian.
But phew and double phew, that was at least as hard as V’s time suggests. And well played Keriothe.
Edited at 2019-04-05 10:43 am (UTC)
I’d add CALDERA to the ‘explosion in a dictionary factory’. It’s come up a few times here, so it’s understandable to think it’s a word normal people might know. JACK-IN-THE-PULPIT is arguably in the same category.
Edited at 2019-04-05 07:49 am (UTC)
😉
Edited at 2019-04-05 10:34 am (UTC)
a) you’ve ever been to Santorini or
b) you went to a jumble sale in about 1976 to which the then Radio 1 breakfast show producer (who lived locally) had donated a load of LPs and you bought a couple by a Latin-American jazz funk combo called Caldera because you liked the cover of one of them (see avatar).
I score on both counts.
Some very clever ones though, so thanks to the setter and of course our esteemed blogger for putting me right.
I was initially convinced that 2d must be ‘guilders’ but of course it doesn’t fit! That would have been a great clue if slightly modified to suggest it was an ex-currency and there were 8 spaces to fill in. Well, I think so anyway!
Witty, urbane and a very fine clue.
NOWNESS what the …..!?
Three in a row to die for.
horryd SW19
Mood Meldrew.
Chastened, battered and bruised.
I knew 4dn and 20dn, but needed to verify 7dn in Bradford.
IPSO FACTO was my favourite, an excellent hidden word that took me an age to spot. INNER EAR was my least favourite for some time.
Did like RHINESTONE.
Thanks verlaine and setter.
Thanks, setter. Thanks, Verlaine.