Independent 11,246 by Phi

It’s Friday, it’s Phi-day once again.

Needless to say that we didn’t spot the theme last week. Having not missed an Indy puzzle since they started, we should have thought about the Wellington Burger Festival which Phi uses to help fill the grid. Well, we have looked again this week. We checked out the cocktails and beers available during the Wellington on a Plate event but no luck.

Not that it matters as once again, we enjoyed the Phi-day challenge. There are a few words in the grid which make us think that something is going on so hopefully someone can spot it before Phi (hopefully) drops in.

Hopefully we will see some of you in York tomorrow.

 picture of the completed grid

ACROSS
1. More complex area flickered with introduction of vanadium (8)
ADVANCED

A (area) DANCED (flickered) around or ‘introducing’ V (first letter or ‘introduction’ to vanadium)

6. American composer introducing Spanish article into G&S (5)
GLASS

LAS (Spanish article) inside G and S – not a composer that we are familiar with

10. African money backing some agrarianism (5)
NAIRA

Hidden (‘some’) and reversed or ‘backed’ inside agrARIANism

11. International body discussed hosting Women’s Open? (9)
UNWRAPPED

UN (International body) RAPPED (discussed) around or ‘hosting’ W (Women)

12. After a struggle we finally got native plants (10)
VEGETATION

An anagram (‘after a struggle’) of E (last or ‘final’ letter of we) and GOT NATIVE

14. Be in awe of fine appreciation of music (4)
FEAR

F (fine) EAR (appreciation of music)

16. Confidential approach: agreed to return, taking control of nursery he ignored (7)
SECRECY

A reversal (‘to return’) of YES (agreed) around or ‘taking control of’ CREChe (nursery) without or ‘ignoring’ he

18. Recalled a lot of tricks in a menagerie? (7)
ANIMALS

A reversal or ‘recall’ of SLAM (a lot of tricks) IN A

19. No time in prison for this guy (3)
SIR

StIR (time in prison) without T (time)

20. Prophet establishing a church in African nation (7)
MALACHI

A CH (church) inside MALI (African nation). We’d heard the name but did not remember he was a prophet.

21. United Nations initially investing in equipment provided by source of talks (7)
KNITTED

N (first or ‘initial’ letter of nations) inside or ‘investing in’ KIT (equipment) + TED (source of talks – online)

23. Evidence of impact? Most of the unemployed losing heart (4)
THUD

THe (missing last letter or ‘most of’) UnemployeD (first and last letters only or ‘missing heart’)

24. Astonishing damage encompassed by nasty break and cut leg (10)
REMARKABLE

MAR (damage) inside or ‘encompassed by’ an anagram (‘nasty’) of BREAK + LEg (missing last letter or ‘cut’)

27. That is hard, turning back only us, sick, in a very bad way (9)
HEINOUSLY

A reversal or ‘turning back’ of IE (that is) H (hard) + an anagram (‘sick’) of ONLY US

29. Stablehands dismissing initial accommodation (5)
ROOMS

gROOMS (stablehands) without or ‘dismissing’ initial letter

30. Judges claiming new parts of the building (5)
WINGS

WIGS (judges) around or ‘claiming’ N (new)

31. Part of Manchester squad not showing aggression (8)
TAMESIDE

A play on the fact that a TAME SIDE would be a team or squad not showing aggression. We were not familiar with the area of Manchester but once we had some crossing letters it was easy to sort out.

DOWN
2. Forgetting lines not actor’s ultimate failing (5)
DYING

DrYING (forgetting lines) without the ‘r’ (last or ‘ultimate’ letter in actor)

3. Just Mad Hatter’s act (2,1,7)
AT A STRETCH

An anagram (‘mad’) of HATTER’S ACT

4. Matter is dry, distributed on middle of field in rural areas (11)
COUNTRYSIDE

COUNT (matter) + an anagram (‘distributed’) of IS DRY and E (middle letter of field)

5. Depicted no river or other source of moisture (3)
DEW

DrEW (depicted’) without the ‘r’ (river)

6. Target shot entirely falling short (4)
GOAL

GO (shot) ALl (entirely) missing last letter or ‘falling short’

7. Program cartel developed is retail vehicle? (9)
APPLECART

APP (program) + an anagram (‘developed’) of CARTEL

8. Some praised a rising American humorist (7)
SEDARIS

Hidden (‘some’) in praiSED A RISing

9. Cutters founder, overturned, with last two of five on board (6)
KNIVES

A reversal (‘overturned’) of SINK (founder) with VE (last two letters of five) inside or ‘on board’

13. Ancient poet to observe grass in Irish county, piled up (4,7)
OMAR KHAYYAM

MARK (observe) HAY (grass) in a reversal (‘piled up’) of MAYO (Irish county)

15. Skimpy garments? Minister avoids grabbing one (10)
MINISKIRTS

MIN (minister) SKIRTS (avoids) around or ‘grabbing’ I (one)

17. Change of heart in strike, leading to working together (9)
COLLUSION

COLLiSION (strike) with the ‘i’ (middle letter or ‘heart’) changing to U

20. Religious writer: dull hack (7)
MATTHEW

MATT (dull) HEW (hack)

22. Sharp pressure to abandon university before end of May (6)
DRESSY

DuRESS (pressure) without or ‘abandoning’ the ‘u’ (university) + Y (last letter or ‘end’ of May)

25. Family line – be derisory towards daughter about that (5)
BLOOD

BOO (be derisory to) D (daughter) round L (line)

26. Iconic mountain-climber avoiding English bog (4)
MOSS

MOSeS (iconic mountain climber) without or ‘avoiding’ the ‘e’ (English)

28. Rigged several games (3)
SET

Double definition

14 comments on “Independent 11,246 by Phi”

  1. Quizzy_Bob

    Where IS everyone? I have kenopsia.
    A straightforward solve with nothing ADVANCED or REMARKABLE, but I FEAR I’ve not UNWRAPPED the SECRECY of the theme, assuming there is one as usual. Please can we have a hint, Phi, SIR? I’m DYING to know it.

  2. KVa

    My favourites: SECRECY, MINISKIRTS and COLLUSION.
    Thanks, P and BJ!

  3. KVa

    QB @ 1!
    You have kenpsi now, I guess (15x15ly speaking)!

  4. TFO

    Thanks both. Not here to help with the theme. Here to celebrate as I have recently bemoaned London or South centric answers so here’s to TAMESIDE rather than Thames-side

  5. MoldyOwl

    I’m wondering if there’s something spooky going on for Halloween? KNIVES, BLOOD, FEAR, THUD, HEINOUSLY, DYING… Wikipedia says MALACHI is a character from a Steven King story, though perhaps that’s a bit obscure.

  6. Alexicon

    I feel, as a relative amateur, that I can usually take on Phi’s puzzles and understand the wordplay. Not sure if they’re slightly more accessible or if me and Phi are slightly more attuned of mind. Regardless, thanks Bert, Joyce and Phi!

  7. Phi

    This is one of the more recondite themes – one for Dormouse, really. With the death of Sir Harrison Birtwistle earlier this year, I listened again to his opera The Mask of Orpheus. Its second act is set on a huge viaduct with 17 arches, each having an attribute such as KNIVES or DYING.

    And so I had a readymade list of words – I managed to work nine of them into the grid. MoldyOwl has four and I can recall COUNTRYSIDE and GLASS (I think). There’s a full list on the opera’s Wikipedia page.

    The point, as I reiterate, is not to be recondite, but to stave off the horror of an empty grid. That the puzzle can be solved without knowing the theme has to be part of the package.

  8. NNI

    Everything parsed except TED from “provided by source of talks”. Can someone explain this, please?

  9. allan_c

    All solved without help over a pub lunch earlier today, although we’d never heard of SEDARIS (got from the clue alone and confirmed via Google this evening) and we failed to parse ANIMALS. We liked KNITTED for the misdirection which kept us guessing till we realised we had to lseparate ‘United Nations’. No idea about the theme, thus proving Phi’s point @7.
    Thanks, Phi and B&J.

  10. Dormouse

    Well, I was at the first night of The Mask of Orpheus back in 1986 – I think I saw that production twice. And I was at the Royal Festival Hall performance that was released as a recording, and the more recent ENO production, which was not as good as the original staging. But I never noticed all the arches in the answers.

  11. Phi

    I was at the RFH performance too, sat in the gods, rather unexpectedly next to Mitsuko Uchida. During the interval. she spotted Alfred Brendel down in the stalls (he is rather tall) and never came back.

  12. Dormouse

    At the Huddersfield Contemporary Music Festival once, there was a film shown about Stockhausen’s Helicopter Quartet. I found myself sitting next to Björk.

  13. DiBosco

    Thought Tameside was a great clue 🙂

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