Times 29395 – “Woke up this morning with light in my eyes….”

Time: 23:39

Music: Byrds, The Notorious Byrd Brothers

This was pretty much an ordinary Monday puzzle, with a few clever constructions that are starting to creep in, along with one or two rather loose constructions.    Skilled solvers should not have much difficulty.   I did get into trouble by putting backhoe instead of bicycle, but I realized quickly that the long across clue had to start with first-class.   I was also afraid I couldn’t get what turned out to be mess, as the crossing letters were very unhelpful, but I left it for later, and when I came back it was obvious.

 

 

Across
1 House instruction to make Cabot king (4-2-4)
BACK-TO-BACK –  If you back TO BACK, you get K CABOT!   I had not heard of this type of house, but the cryptic gives it to you.
6 Type of glass from old China (4)
OPAL –  O + PAL.   A decorative type of glass first developed in the 19th century.
10 Relative in one financial city area in northeast (5)
NIECE –  N(I, E.C.)E, a compendium of cryptic cliches.
11 Competition certain to involve zero sang-froid (9)
COMPOSURE –  COMP (O) SURE.
12 Mail used by top-rated fencer? (5-5,4)
FIRST-CLASS POST –  FIRST-CLASS + POST, to be used by the kind of fencer who builds fences.
14 Person no longer working on Scottish island (7)
RETIREE –  RE + TIREE – unless, of course, you volunteer to run the crossword blog.
15 Put pressure on Doctor Milligan? (7)
DRAGOON –  DR + A GOON, which is what Spike Milligan was.
17 Terribly shy in pictures which will include mechanics (7)
PHYSICS – P(anagram of SHY)ICS.   Either Newtonian or quantum will do.
19 Pet bird for example (7)
PATTERN –  PAT + TERN.
20 Small pub, possibly one worlds away from here (6,5,3)
LITTLE GREEN MAN –  LITTLE + GREEN MAN, a likely enough name for a pub.
23 Popular assembly holding society unfeeling (9)
INSENSATE –  IN + SEN(S)ATE.
24 Some cats showed excessive curiosity, it’s said (5)
PRIDE –  Sounds like PRIED.
25 Style and verve of some Romance languages (4)
ELAN –  Hidden in [Romanc]E LAN[guages].
26 Court activity let a sinner off (4,6)
REAL TENNIS –  Anagram of LET A SINNER.
Down
1 Group not allowed on the radio (4)
BAND – Sounds like BANNED.
2 Moan about hard times unravelling special relationship? (9)
CHEMISTRY –  C(anagram of H TIMES)RY.
3 Book something else on Crete? (8,6)
TREASURE ISLAND – TREASURE + CRETE, invoking the slang meanings of something else and treasure.
4 Reported what harvester may have needed to do for vehicle (7)
BICYCLE –  Sounds like BUY SICKLE.   Backhoe nearly works, but doesn’t fit the crossers.
5 Order of butterfly with tails of green and red (7)
COMMAND –  COMMA + [gree]N, [re]D.    The setter’s favorite butterfly.
7 Hades! Plus two but losing both points (5)
PLUTO –  PLU[s] T[w]O.
8 Rank place getting on top of renter (10)
LIEUTENANT –  LIEU + TENANT.   This should be a chestnut, but is not.
9 Work in line running underneath Eternal City (14)
CONSTANTINOPLE – CONSTANT + IN(OP)LE, i.e. an anagram of line.  The setter is trying to trick you into using Rome or Roma at the top.
13 Pushing previous LP spun (10)
PROPULSIVE –  Anagram of PREVIOUS LP.   According to my listening spreadsheet, it was Miles Davis, Sketches of Spain.
16 Medical procedure involved atropine and oxygen (9)
OPERATION – Anagram of ATROPINE + O.
18 Perhaps hoarding autograph over a number of years (7)
SIGNAGE – SIGN + AGE – the trick here is the literal.
19 Obtain early buyer of gift with lines for books (7)
PRESELL –  PRESE(-nt,+LL), a clever letter replacement clue with an extended definition.
21 A lot of rubbish about opera (5)
TOSCA –  TOS[h] + CA.
22 Awkward situation — he is out of nets (4)
MESS –  MES[he]S.

67 comments on “Times 29395 – “Woke up this morning with light in my eyes….””

  1. 19’30” but looking at others’ times I know that’s not good. Still don’t quite follow the TREASURE = SOMETHING ELSE link. I get that SOMETHING ELSE means excellent (viz. Eddie Cochran’s She’s somethin’ else). But who’d ever swap it with TREASURE? She’s a treasure? Not the same league or register or dimension of excellence. -OON words connected to Milligan invite the answer PUCKOON but luckily it didn’t match. Only last Saturday I was at the REAL TENNIS court in Fontainebleau — where a group of young boys were getting coaching. Many thanks.

  2. 39 minutes, but still very easy except for what held me up for the last ten or so: PRIDE (fortunately I did eventually see the alternative to PRIZE, which of course didn’t really fit the verb tense in the wordplay) and TOSCA, which made no sense at all until I saw what kind of rubbish was partially involved. PRIDE is actually quite good, but there were many other clues I didn’t really like.

  3. 18:40. Have read through hoping that someone would explain why “treasure” = “something else”, but everyone who’s commented seems to be as baffled as I am. Would someone kindly put me out of my misery?

    COD LITTLE GREEN MAN, cracking clue.

    Thanks vinyl.

  4. Not much trouble with this one, although there were two I couldn’t parse (I don’t try very hard if I’m happy that the answer is correct).

    These were TOSCA, which I now understand (thanks to blogger), and TREASURE ISLAND, which I still don’t understand; Crete = ISLAND, obviously, but how does ‘something else’ = TREASURE? What “slang” expression are we talking about here? My imagination fails me and I remain baffled.

  5. I knew back to back, having enjoyed the National Trust tour in Birmingham.
    The reference to Spike raised a smile, as did remembering the hunt for his modest grave. I biffed presell, thanks for the explanation.

  6. Nice puzzle. Only the 3rd or 4th time I’ve completed the cryptic without aids (aka cheating), so I’ll take that as a late Xmas present.

  7. Thanks setter and vinyl
    My first attempt at doing the Times crossword on my phone app whilst waiting for my partner who was in an optometrist appointment – was able to complete it in 39m 4s which is about average time for a Monday puzzle.
    Didn’t know of the BACK-TO-BACK houses, but did like the clue a lot when I worked out how the word-play went. Had FIRST GRADE POST initially until BICYCLE fixed it in the end. Didn’t pick up on the homophone ‘buy sickle’ – clever when it was explained – had gone down the bi-cycle path where a farmer would use the land differently between crops.
    Finished with INSENSATE (not a word that I was familiar with) and DRAGOON (after twigging to the GOON connection).

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