Independent 9,666 / Gila

It is Gila’s turn to occupy the Thursday slot this week, with a real tour-de-force of a themed puzzle.

This puzzle must have taken Gila an age to compile, and I hope that it was at least as much fun to set as it was to solve. References to all things musical ran through almost all of the clues and a great many of the solutions, and although I didn’t recognise all the bands that were alluded to in the puzzle, for example those at 11, this did not stop me from arriving at the correct solutions. I always admire themed puzzles that do not exclude solvers who don’t happen to have a particular interest in the chosen theme.

My favourite clues today were 13A, for making me laugh out loud; 17 and the quite brilliant 4, both for surface reading; and 16, for the deceptive use of “cover”. Incidentally, my version of the puzzle has “records” in plural at 22, whereas surely “record” in singular would better suit both the grammar of the wordplay (deed=record) as well as the surface reading of the clue?

*(…) indicates an anagram; definitions are italicised; // separates definitions in multiple-definition clues

Across  
   
09/23 DAMON ALBARN Rock band with a normal lead singer

*(BAND + A NORMAL); “rock” is anagram indicator; the reference is to English singer-songwriter Damon Albarn (1968-), lead singer of Blur

   
10 GRACELAND Musician’s house is wicked and large, with lavish surroundings

[ACE (=wicked, brill) + L (=large, of sizes)] in GRAND (=lavish); the reference is to the home of Elvis

   
11 STAIRWELL The place to see Steps supporting Another Level?

Cryptic definition: the references are not to the bands but to features of a building!

   
12 OBOES Nothing fits in-between a lot of very large instruments

O (=nothing) in OBES<e> (=very large; “a lot of” means only last letter is dropped)

   
13 TRUMPET The noise coming from an elephant‘s backside, outwardly offensive

RUMP (=backside) in TET (=offensive, i.e. during the Vietnam War)

   
15 RESTAGE After break time, put on another concert

REST (=break) + AGE (=time)

   
17 ADELE Singer led drunkenly into A&E

*(LED) in A + E; “drunkenly” is anagram indicator; the reference is to English singer-songwriter Adele (1988-)

   
18 LAP Album sleeves are going round

A (=are, i.e. measure of land) in LP (=album, i.e. long-playing record)

   
22 ADAMANT Hard 80s pop star

ADAM ANT (=80s pop star, from UK, 1954-)

   
25 DELETED Allowed record boxes to be removed

LET (=allowed) in DEED (record, i.e. legal document)

   
26 DUBAI Make a recording with leads from audio input port

DUB (=make a recording) + A<udio> I<nput> (“leads from” means first letters only are used)

   
27 KANYE WEST Rapper from Kenya blowing up with extraordinary set

*(KENYA) + W (=with) + *(SET); “blowing up” and “extraordinary” are both anagram indicators; the reference is to US rapper Kanye West (1977-)

   
30 AIR GUITAR An unreal performance by Strummer?

Cryptic definition: Strummer is to be read not as a reference to Joe Strummer of The Clash but to someone strumming a pretend guitar, hence “unreal performance”

   
Down  
   
01 ADOS Hoo-has resulting from the rise of pop …

SODA (=pop, i.e. soft drink); “the rise of” indicates vertical reversal

   
02 IMMATURE … it’s music marketed at teens primarily, occasionally hurried and juvenile

I<t’s> M<usic> M<arketed> A<t> T<eens> (“primarily” means first letters only) + <h>U<r>R<i>E<d> (“occasionally” here means alternate letters only)

   
03 ONER Single – the first from Revolver – is something unlike anything else

ONE (=single) + R<evolver> (“the first from” means first letter only); a oner is a unique person or thing

   
04 AGRESTAL Wild Rolling Stone with a lager!

*(ST (=stone, i.e. measure of weight) + A LAGER); “rolling” is anagram indicator; agrestal means growing wild, uncultivated

   
05/31 TAYLOR SWIFT A pop singer is quick to follow fashion, we’re told

Homophone of “(to) tailor” (=fashion) + SWIFT (=quick); the reference is to American singer-songwriter Taylor Swift (1989-)

   
06 REMORSEFUL Plaintive intro to requiem fuels more tears

R<equiem> (“intro to” means first letter only) + *(FUELS MORE); “tears (=rips)” is anagram indicator

   
07/20 PALOMA FAITH Eccentric singer knocking back a second drink with conviction

PALOMA (A + MO (=second, as in in a mo) + LAP (=drink); “knocking back” indicates reversal) + FAITH (=conviction, belief); the reference is to English singer-songwriter Paloma Faith (1981-)

   
08 ODES Lyric poems found in the cases of old elegists

O<l>D E<legist>S; “cases of” means outside letters only are used

   
13 TRA-LA Orchestral arrangements featuring some joyful notes

Hidden (“featuring”) in “orchesTRAL Arrangements”

   
14 PRECARIOUS Transporting small piano with a courier is risky

*(S (=small, of sizes) + P (=piano, in music) + A COURIER); “transporting” is anagram indicator

   
16 EPHOD Very early cover of record initially had Orbison’s disapproval

EP (=record, i.e. extended-play) + H<ad> O<rbison’s> D<isapproval> (“initially” means first letters only); an ephod is a linen surplice worn by Jewish priests in the Bible, hence “very early cover (=garment)”!

   
19 PEDANTRY After mini-album is rejected and scrapped, have a go at focusing on the technical details

PE (EP=mini-album, i.e. extended-play record; “rejected” indicates reversal) + *(AND) + TRY (=have a go at); “scrapped” is anagram indicator

   
21 IN THE AIR Imminent release from Phil Collins – out tonight!

IN THE AIR <tonight> (=release from Phil Collins, from 1981); “out tonight” means the word “tonight” is dropped

   
24 TAKE TO Begin to like the sound of a second recording

Homophone (“the sound of”) of “Take Two” (=second recording, i.e. after Take One)

   
26 DEAF Unable to hear sound fade out

*(FADE); “out” is anagram indicator

   
28 EASE Disco biscuits reportedly alleviate pain

Homophone (“reportedly”) of “Es” (=disco biscuits, i.e. Ecstasy tablets)

   
29 TITS Songbirds being somewhat dulcet, it seems

Hidden (“somewhat”) in “dulceT IT Seem”

   
   

 

20 comments on “Independent 9,666 / Gila”

  1. Julius

    Very much in my comfort zone so quite a quick grid-fill but no less enjoyable for that. Great clues for AIR GUITAR and a beautifully constructed anagram surface for DAMON ALBARN
    thanks to Gila and RR

  2. Jason

    Damon Albarn was too obscure for me, but I managed to work him out in the end from the anagram. A bit of a slog for someone not too familiar with pop music.

  3. Hovis

    Despite your intro, I think this is next to impossible for solvers without an interest in the theme. I was OK with it, except for DAMON ALBARN, so I had to wait until I had all the crossers, make an informed guess from the anagram fodder and then google. So, an enjoyable solve for me but possibly not for others. Didn’t know EPHOD or AGRESTAL (did know ‘agrestic’) but both were easy to get. Thanks to S&B.


  4. A quick (for me) gridfill here too, which made for an extremely high enjoyment/time ratio.

    A=are again! It didn’t catch me out for quite as long today.

    I met two unfamiliar words in EPHOD and AGRESTAL.

    Lots of smiles today. TRUMPET made me laugh, as did the singers getting up to drunken antics (PALOMA FAITH and ADELE). I also liked the TITS.

    Many thanks to Gila and RatkojaRiku.

  5. Sil van den Hoek

    Thanks Gila for a kind of puzzle that must have taken more time to compile than to solve it.
    [I know this actually from experience]

    Very enjoyable and, like for Julius, very much in my comfort zone.
    RR (and thanks for the comprehensive blog), you say:
    I always admire themed puzzles that do not exclude solvers who don’t happen to have a particular interest in the chosen theme.
    Not sure that was the case today (see Hovis’ first line) with entries like eg Kanye West, Damon Albarn and Paloma Faith.

    Is Paloma Faith really eccentric?
    And did you know that Blur, Damon Albarn’s band, had a song on their 1995 album The Great Escape called ‘Dan Abnormal’ …. ?

    I messed up the NW a bit by entering ‘staircase’ at 11ac, making it impossible to find something reasonable for 4d.
    I also had to think deeply about how to parse OBOES (12ac), being focused on OS meaning ‘very large’ which it wasn’t.
    I am not sure an EP is a ‘mini-album’ (19d), more an extended single (often with 4 tracks instead of 2).
    In those (early) days of vinyl, there was something in-between a single (7 inch) and an LP (12 inch): a 10 inch kind of mini-lp.

    Nice puzzle.

  6. WordPlodder

    Definitely not in my comfort zone, but finally got there with quite a bit of guessing along the way, both for theme related clues and for words such as AGRESTAL and EPHOD. Knowing next to nothing about the theme though was actually an advantage for STAIRWELL. I agree that TRUMPET was great and the inclusion of the name of the present incumbent of The White House made it even better.

    Thanks to Gila and RR.

  7. allan_c

    To echo WordPlodder, definitely not in our comfort zone, but we finally got there with quite a bit of guessing, checking in Chambers (AGRESTAL, AIR GUITAR) and a final google for PALOMA FAITH. Favourites were those that could be solved without too much knowledge of the theme – including IMMATURE, PRECARIOUS, PEDANTRY and the brilliant TRUMPET.

    Thanks, Gila and RatkojaRiku.

  8. Dutch

    I think it is more difficult to include a theme in the clues as well as the answers, so this is quite an effort. I knew the arises except for blur’s lead singer, who I guessed and googled. Like others, I didn’t know Agrestal and ephod, but I also made life hard by entering Staircase – which works, doesn’t it?

    I particularly liked DUBAI, and of course also TRUMPET

    Manny thanks Gila and RR

  9. Dutch

    That was meant to be artists, not arises


  10. I entered STAIRCASE at first too.

  11. James

    Thanks Gila, RatkojaRiku
    I liked the whimsical TRA LA, and the Phil Collins one.
    I spent a few seconds wondering how ‘with lavish surroundings’ could mean ‘containing a C’, trying to make GRACELAND from wicked(AND LARGE)* + C.
    Agree with Hovis’s disagreement @3, as to required knowledge. On the other hand, they’re all much more familiar than EPHOD.


  12. Loved it. Solvable (well, almost as I got done by 4 & 19d) with loads of nice surfaces, jokes and a well-worked theme to boot. Too many goodies to choose a fave so I’ll just say thanks to The Monster for the puzzle and to RR for a great blog.

  13. flashling

    Loved 30 when I got it, good un Ali

  14. flashling

    But agrestal. Really? Seriously, daily paper? Ali that isn’t on for a daily.

  15. flashling

    Hmm, sorry Ali, insoluble without help. This is meant to be a weekday puzzle and as such Eimi is at fault. Soluble without aids for someone on the commute? Not a prayer. A good one for the weekend, today? No.


  16. Ah, I dunno about that, Flash @15 – I think Thursdays are the hard day in the Indy as well as Saturdays. And we do have mobile devices now so the commute is liable to be Wi-Fi’d. 🙂

  17. cruciverbophile

    In fairness AGRESTAL was the only plausible anagram once you had the crossers, and it sounds like it means wild so I didn’t have a problem with it.

    I confess I groaned when I saw it was a pop one but surprisingly I knew all the singers except PALOMA FAITH and that was easily gettable from the clue. It’s to Gila’s credit that this was a fun solve even for someone with as little knowledge of pop as me!

    Shame there was no Seinfeld connection though 🙂

  18. Dormouse

    Not my cup of tea, but in the end there were only two I couldn’t get and one of those, 4dn, I actually considered what turned out to be the right answer and then dismissed it as not being a word. Couldn’t be bothered to reach for the dictionary to check. Couldn’t get 21dn, didn’t know the Phil Collins.

    However, I did actually see the opera Dr Dee by 9/23. I didn’t like it.

  19. Gila

    Hi all,

    Many thanks to RR for the excellent blog and to all who’ve taken the time to drop by and comment. This is the most (non-Inquisitor!) comments I’ve had, and they are all always very much appreciated.

    I’m glad this seems to have gone down pretty well overall.

    Compiling it was definitely a bit of a slog at times. I had variously written clues for the named musicians and thought it would be an interesting and fun challenge – and, in turn, hopefully a fun solve – to try to get some kind of music reference into every clue and/or answer.

    I appreciate that solvers might not be familiar with all the names – though they’re all alive, musically active and, in many cases, hardly shy of publicity – so I hope the crossing letters (and clues) helped in that regard. I did also try to have a fair range of musical genres and references to artists from across the decades in the clues. And, unlike everywhere else these days, there was no Ed Sheeran.

    Picking up on a few comments above:

    @Sil – yep, you’ve totally rumbled me on the Damon clue, which was, ahem, inspired by his Mr. Mojo Risin’-style anagram in that song! I did wonder too if the ‘eccentric’ tag was inappropriate for Paloma Faith – but a quick Google revealed that she’s quoted as saying (positively) that “it’s celebrated in British culture to be eccentric”, so I think it’s all good.

    @flash – I’m guessing you live much nearer your office than I do mine! Apologies for spoiling your commute. AGRESTAL (and EPHOD) were admittedly far from ideal words, but the thematic entries did put some constraints on the grid fill. Maybe one day I’ll manage to get a workable grid for my ‘perfectly-normal-dictionary-words-that-are-also-bands/artists’ puzzle. I have, sadly, started a list.

    And, as has been pointed out here and on Twitter, both STAIRCASE and MEZZANINE would I’m sure be perfectly good answers for the Steps clue!

    Many thanks again to all for commenting.

    Cheers
    Ali

  20. Bertandjoyce

    Late to the party as usual.

    Despite our age, we had heard of all the artists. We appreciate how long this must have taken to compile. Thanks Gila, the solve was worth the effort you put in!

    Thanks RR for the blog.

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