Financial Times 15,354 by Mudd

Prize puzzle from the Weekend FT of September 24, 2016

A breezy and enjoyable puzzle from Mudd, I thought.  My clue of the week is the clever and unusual 1a (EAR-SPLITTING) and I also like 28a (DELICATESSEN) and 21d (EMULATE).

Across
1 EAR-SPLITTING Deafening – as are loud gongs, primarily, in Elgar? (3-9)
I am unsure of how to categorize this clue but the wordplay identifies LG (loud gongs primarily) as splitting the E and the AR, thus EAR, in Elgar.  Edward Elgar did use gongs in his music.
10 EXTRACT Draw more colourful things, originally (7)
EXTRA (more) + C[olourful] T[hings]
11 CASCADE Rat drowned by situation, series of waterfalls (7)
CAD (rat) in CASE (situation)
12 MUMPS Footnote on parent getting childhood disease (5)
MUM (parent) + PS (footnote)
13 TEENSIER More slight changes seen with rite (8)
Anagram of SEEN RITE
15 DISHONESTY Lying in bed, I shone stylishly (10)
Hidden word
16 TEAL Brew requiring head on lager for bird (4)
TEA (brew) + L[ager]
18 SPAT Argument, as cold and hot the wrong way round? (4)
TAPS (cold and hot) backwards
20 COMPLEMENT Entire crew required – staff in total one short? (10)
MEN (staff) in COMPLET[e] (total one short)
22 OUTSTRIP Unfashionable kit is better (8)
OUT (unfashionable) + STRIP (kit).  I find that ‘strip’ can be used to mean the attire or uniform of a sports team, a usage I do not recall encountering before.
24 FAUST Opera house’s heart breaking rapidly (5)
[ho]U[se] in FAST (rapidly)
26 TOURIST US author captivated by infant, one on holiday (7)
[Leon] URIS (US author) in TOT (infant)
27 BEEFALO Meaty complaint, at loggerheads over starters – so cross (7)
BEEF (meaty complaint) + A[t] L[oggerheads] O[ver].  The answer refers to a hybrid animal that is a cross between cattle and buffalo.
28 DELICATESSEN Fudge as selected in food store (12)
Anagram of AS SELECTED IN
Down
2 AT TIMES Being wild, it’s tame occasionally (2,5)
Anagram of ITS TAME
3 SNAPSHOT Informal image in card game, ruined (8)
SNAP (card game) + SHOT (ruined)
4 LUTE Sound money for old instrument (4)
Homophone (“loot”)
5 TICKER-TAPE Credit repeat broadcast that’s kind of welcome? (6-4)
TICK (credit) + anagram (broadcast) of REPEAT.  Non-Brits may be unfamiliar with the expression “to buy on tick” which means the same as “to buy on credit”.
6 IBSEN Popular housing foundation evicting a playwright (5)
B[a]SE (foundation evicting a) in IN (popular)
7 GRANITE Resilience shown by elderly relative with sex appeal and energy (7)
GRAN (elderly relative) + IT (sex appeal) + E (energy)
8 BERMUDA SHORTS Informal wear that’s old, terribly smart brushed coats (7,6)
O (old) in anagram (terribly) of SMART BRUSHED
9 PETROL STATION Lost swimming among a quota of goldfish, say, where tank filled up (6,7)
Anagram (swimming) of LOST in PET RATION (a quota of goldfish, say)
14 HEDONISTIC His diet ruined munching on first of cakes – that’s decadent (10)
ON (on) in anagram of HIS DIET + C[akes]
17 SELFLESS Charitable organisations ultimately lacking spirit? (8)
[organization]S + ELFLESS (lacking spirit).  Do I have this right?  I think of an elf as being a supernatural creature, not a spirit.
19 ASTOUND A noise surrounding onset of traumatic shock (7)
A (a) + T[raumatic] in SOUND (noise)
21 EMULATE Bird behind mirror (7)
EMU (bird) + LATE (behind)
23 TWILL Material things initially put before last wishes (5)
T[hings] + WILL (last wishes)
25 ABET A pledge to support wrongdoing (4)
A (a) + BET (pledge)

9 comments on “Financial Times 15,354 by Mudd”

  1. Thanks Mudd and Pete

    Did this one near publication date and have it marked as being completed in two 10 minute sessions which is most unusual for me with this setter.

    Had everything parsed as per the blog with EAR-SPLITTING as my favourite as well ! It’s a sort of unpictorial rebus … :). A clever clue type that JH does present occasionally and which I always enjoy.

    Finished in the SE corner with HEDONISTIC, FAUST and SELFLESS (which raised a slight chuckle as it parsed) as the last few in.

  2. I too managed to finish this one. Although I solved beefalo as it had to be correct I spent too long in reading “cross” as “angry”. Bermuda shorts gave me trouble.

  3. Hello psmith, thanks for commenting. You present an interesting idea. I am not convinced but it does seem plausible. And, while it did not occur to me in the context, I am familiar with Elf in this sense.

  4. My undoing was the SE where I had never heard of a beefalo . Is a bet really a pledge? I have my misgivings about elf as well.

  5. Bamberger, I wondered about ‘bet’ and ‘pledge’. They seemed close but not close enough perhaps. A consultation of a thesaurus does however support an overlap in meaning in the sense that a pledge can mean an amount that one bets.

  6. I seem to be able to get on the Mudd wavelength – I completed and parsed this one, with the same reservations as noted by Pete. Thanks to both, and all the commenters.

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