Guardian Cryptic crossword No 29,804 by Imogen

The puzzle may be found at https://www.theguardian.com/crosswords/cryptic/29804.

.An excellent puzzle, maybe a notch easier than Imogen can sometimes compose, but none the worse for that.

ACROSS
9 IMPROMPTU
I am at concert, and put out a piece of music (9)
A charade of I’M (‘I am’) plus PROM (promenade ‘concert’) plus PTU, an anagram (‘out’) of ‘put’. I am particularly fond of Schubert’s Impromptus.
10 KNAVE
One rascal that can beat nine or ten (5)
A reference to card games where a KNAVE or Jack ranks higher in a suit than the 9 or 10.
11 CORELLI
Composer’s heart problem returned (7)
A charade of CORE (‘heart’) plus LLI, a reversal (‘returned’) of ILL (‘prob;em’, adjective). Arcangelo Corelli was an important composer and violinist of the 17th and early 18th century.
12 STAND UP
Fail to appear for pub performance perhaps (5,2)
Double definition.
13 VOID
Unoccupied, love to be cast in a film (4)
An envelope (‘to be cast in’) of O (‘love’) in VID (video, ‘film’).
14 ANNE BOLEYN
Queen bee only confused by a new name (4,6)
A charade of ‘a’ plus N (‘new’) plus N (‘name’) plus EBOLEYN, an anagram (‘confused’) of ‘bee only’.
15 RAG DOLL
Create lines on paper for soft toy (3,4)
A charade of RAG (news ‘paper’) plus DO (‘create’) plus LL (‘lines’).
17 BEACHES
Runs on the shore, having to live with twinges (7)
A charade of BE (‘live’) plus ACHES (‘twinges’). The definition is BEACHES as a verb, to bring a boat onto land.
19 DARLINGTON
Old Chancellor not going about town (10)
A charade of DARLING (Alistair, ‘Chancellor’ of the Exchequer 2007-2010) plus TON, a reversal (‘going about’) of ‘not’. There are many DARLINGTON towns, but perhaps the one intended is in County Durham.
22 BRIO
Energy from writer, one moving along (4)
BIRO (‘writer’) with the I moved along one.
23 HASTATE
Recoil from being pierced by a stone shaped like a spear point (7)
An envelope (‘being pierced by’) of ‘a’ plus ST (‘stone’ 14 lb) in HATE (‘recoil from’).
24 AND SO ON
I won’t mention the rest, even quickly (3,2,2)
The definition follows the enumeration; without the second space, it becomes AND SOON (‘even quickly’).
26 CONIC
Study one initially complicated section of maths (5)
A charade of CON (‘study’) plus I (‘one’) plus C (‘initially Complicated’). Circles, ellipses and hyperbolas are conic sections.
27 BROWN RICE
Edible grains in near frozen state stuck to part of face (5,4)
A charade of BROW (‘part of face’) plus NR (‘near’) plus ICE (‘frozen state’).
DOWN
1 DISCOVERED CHECK
Was first to see a pattern that threatens the monarch (10,5)
A charade of DISCOVERED (‘was the first to see’) plus CHECK (‘pattern’ of a fabric). The definition refers to chess, and the threat to an opponent’s king.
2 SPORTING
Arranging to take power, but refusing to take advantage (8)
An envelope (‘to take’) of P (‘power’) in SORTING (‘arranging’).
3 FOIL
Frustrate one buttoned up for Olympic event (4)
Two and a half definitions. In the Olympic event, the foil has a button on the point so you cannot actually impale your opponent.
4 OPTIONAL
Not forced to disband one platoon (8)
An anagram (‘to disband’) of I (‘one’) plus ‘platoon’.
5 PURSUE
Be after contract United accepted (6)
An envelope (‘accepted’) of U (the second one, ‘United’) in PURSE (‘contract’, verb).
6 OKLAHOMA
State that is briefly satisfactory (8)
OK (‘satisfactory’) is the USPS approved abbreviation for the state.
7 SADDLE
Cut of meat, second to go bad (6)
A charade of S (‘second’) plus ADDLE (‘go bad’).
8 KEEP ONES COUNSEL
Be very discreet and retain a personal lawyer (4,4,7)
Definition and literal interpretation.
16 OLIGARCH
Say, Roman soldier up in old tree (8)
An envelope (‘in’) of IG, a reversal (‘up’ in a down light) of GI (US ‘soldier’) in O (‘old’) plus LARCH (‘tree’). The definition is a reference to the Russian oligarch, Roman Abramovich (one-time owner of Chelsea F.C.).
17 BOOGALOO
Express disapproval of girl with glasses going to dance (8)
A charade of BOO (‘express disapproval’) plus GAL (‘girl’) plus OO (‘glasses’). The name of the Latin american music and dance has been largely superceded by the far-right movement, whose adherents are generally referred to as boogaloo boys, and who hope to foment a second civil war, “the boogaloo”.
18 HARMONIC
March round in ragged sort of progression (8)
An anagram (‘ragged’) of ‘march’ plus O (’round’) plus ‘in’. Mathematics again.
20 RESENT
Object to being given another errand? (6)
RE-SENT (‘being given another errand’).
21 GOES BY
As authority, accepts passes (4,2)
Double definition. I generally go by what Chambers says.
25 DUNK
Dip into Brown Book at last (4)
A charade of DUN (‘brown’) plus K (‘booK at last’).

 picture of the completed grid

55 comments on “Guardian Cryptic crossword No 29,804 by Imogen”

  1. AlanC

    A great finish to the weekday puzzles, with his lovely misdirections and clever wordplay. I didn’t know HASTATE but it was fairly clued. Loved the two long down clues plus IMPROMPTU, ANNE BOLEYN, DARLINGTON (maybe obscure overseas? – BROWN another one), AND SO ON, FOIL, OKLAHOMA, HARMONIC and OLIGARCH. Thanks for the additional on BOOGALOO. Great stuff and not too difficult.

    Ta Imogen & PeterO.

  2. muffin

    Thanks Imogen and PeterO
    This seemed impossible at first pass, but once a few had gone in (PURSUE was first) it went fairly steadily.
    I knew HASTATE from botany – it’s a standard description of a type of leaf shape.
    I’m not sure that parts of speech for SPORTING quite match.
    Favourite AND SO ON.

  3. AlanC

    I think GOES BY is a triple definition as you have underlined Peter?

  4. Offspinner

    I think STAND UP is transitive. She stood me up , not she stood up.

  5. gladys

    HASTATE was new to me also, and I didn’t think of Abramovich for the OLIGARCH or find purse=contract sprang quickly to mind. But lots to enjoy, and a loud clang when the penny dropped on KNAVE. Thanks Imogen and PeterO.

  6. Donnut

    Excellent puzzle – thanks Imogen. Great blog too. Harmonic progression also has a musical meaning, I believe. Oligarch my LOI and CotD.

  7. grantinfreo

    Nice puzzle, thanks both. I’m sure there’s a song Boogaloo, boogaloo my little something… can’t quite hook it out; and dnk the current far-right connotation. Apart from that and hastate, pretty straight and cruisy, enjoyed it.

  8. KVa

    Thanks Imogen and PeterO.

    Liked STAND UP, AND SO ON, D CHECK (‘that’ should be included in the def, I think), OK, OLIGARCH and HARMONIC.

    AlanC@3
    GOES BY, I think is a DD.
    As authority, accepts —->accepts as authority

    Offspinner@4
    STAND UP
    Was thinking about it.
    Will ‘Fail to appear for’ work as the def? Not sure.

  9. AlanC

    ginf @7: Ringo released Back off Boogaloo in 1972.

  10. muffin

    GinF @7
    Back off Boogaloo by Ringo Starr

  11. Henty

    Some real chuckles today. Kicked myself when I finally understood Roman long after writing in the answer. Oklahoma and Beaches were such elegant little surfaces I’m surprised not to have seen them before.

  12. AlanC

    KVa @8: I take your point but I thought ‘As authority’ could stand alone as a definition and then ‘accepts’ another, i.e. goes by the name of…
    Just a thought, but you’re probably right.

  13. poc

    10a (KNAVE) seemed unfair to me. The Knave or Jack is higher than all cards below it, not just the 9 or 10 (though it depends on the game) and there’s no ? to indicate a DBE.

  14. Shanne

    grantinfreo @7 – there’s a Scouting / Guiding camp song “Let me see your BOOGALOO” that I’ve now got as an earworm.

    Thank you to PeterO and Imogen.

  15. muffin

    poc @13
    We had EUCHRE as a solution recently, in which the Knave of trumps is the highest card of all!

  16. grantinfreo

    Thanks Alan and muffin @ 9 and 10. Not the one that’s teasing my inner ear, but yes I remember Ringo’s now you mention it.

  17. JudithG

    grantinfreo@16; Alvin Stardust My Coo Ca Choo?

  18. Robi

    Lots of help needed to solve this one. I didn’t see the Roman in OLIGOARCH. I liked ANNE BOLEYN, which gave me an early foothold, DISCOVERED CHECK, PURSUE, and KEEP ONES COUNSEL.

    Thanks Imogen and PeterO.

  19. Balfour

    poc @13 KNAVE seems ‘unfair’ to you, but did it hold you up for a moment in solving the clue? It was my FOI, and I was not having a good solving session in the early hours this morning – head was in the wrong place.

  20. SimpleS

    Thanks both. Found it a bit pf a mixed bag that’ll put down to being a bit hungover. Some brilliant clues such as impromptu, foil, corelli, boogaloo.
    I had tank Instead of sunk which led to and so on taking a while to get, once I did I decided to dislike the presence of even in the clue, not really sure what its doing. Similar views on the use if One before rascal – spent ages looikong doe a answer beginning with I or A. Also might of expected a location indicator for the town,but that was easy enough.
    Overall a great crossword. Thanks.

  21. Jim Weaver

    In 10ac ‘one’ is redundant – it only seems to be there for association with the other numbers involved – the clue would work without it.

  22. epop

    As a Chelsea fan particularly annoyed that I didn’t parse 16d. Great clue.

  23. Ace

    I found this pretty tough, with almost nothing on the first pass. Nothing unfair, just hard for me to get into Imogen’s thought processes. I failed to parse a couple, and OLIGARCH defeated me entirely, although it did take me on an interesting digression learning about the structure of the Roman legions. So a DNF for me.

    Anyway, thank you Imogen and PeterO.

  24. poc

    Balfour@19: yes it did hold me up. In fact I lost patience and revealed it.

  25. Dr. WhatsOn

    A lot of post-parsing in this one, but all fair.

    Figured out HASTATE from hasta from first-year of Latin when I was 8. Do they still start it that early? Do they still teach Latin at all?

  26. mrpenney

    I found this tough, but Imogen always is. The main thing I wanted to mention, per AlanC @1: yes, Americans have little hope of solving a clue like DARLINGTON. A politician from two decades ago who never did anything remarkable enough to make the news over here,* used to clue a town, also fairly obscure? File that under “you have to be British for that.”

    * I can be counted on to know the PMs, and I know some of the opposition leaders who lost general elections, and of course the ones at the center of major scandals. But that’s it.

  27. grantinfreo

    Thank you Shanne @14 and Judith @17, but I checked both those songs out and nup, not those either. I suspect it might be a figment … 🙂

  28. muffin

    MrP @26
    DARLINGTON has been in the news here recently, as this year is the 100th anniversary of the first public steam railway, which ran between Stockton and Darlington.

  29. Steffen

    6d: I am probably a million miles away from understanding this.

    Does OK = satisfactory?
    If so, where does LAHOMA come from?

  30. muffin

    Steffen @29
    OKLAHOMA briefly (i.e. state abbreviation) is OK, so “satisfactory”.

  31. paul

    Defeated by OLIGARCH – a pretty loose definition given how many oligarchs abound in the world today – but otherwise an enjoyably stretching challenge, with some wonderful surfaces, as always from this talented setter. I didn’t hesitate with STAND UP for ‘fail to appear’ – do verbs have to match transitive/ intransitive form? I tend to see using one for the other as an example of ‘near enough in crossword land’. Many thank Imogen and PeterO.

  32. Zoot

    Donnut@6 There are certainly HARMONIC progressions in music. They are the basis of most Western music. Better known in some genres as chord sequences.

  33. Zoot

    We almost got some real Roman soldiers in 23 ac.

  34. Cedric

    Muffin@28. It’s 200 years. A big exhibition is about to take place in the Darlington/Shildon area. Thought 1d was very clever. Never thought of chess! Imogen tough as usual.

  35. muffin

    Cedric
    Yes, 200, of course!

  36. Steffen

    Ty

  37. pianola

    Aren’t 4D & 18D stretching the sort-of-rule about avoiding indirect anagrams? That is, one has to translate “one” into I and “round” into O before assembling the word.

  38. jellyroll

    mrpenney@26
    I have no political affiliation but Mr Darling deserves better. See the Guardian article
    “How underrated chancellor Alistair Darling helped weather financial crisis”.

  39. Ray

    What a great 1-2 with Serenos yesterday. As a chess player had no trouble with 1d , but ashamed to admit as a bridge player that 10a produced a late teatray moment.

  40. Paul the Plumber

    Excellent ! Setters have poetic licence to stretch the truth a little; solvers must accept this!

  41. Davey

    Took Oligarch to point to the Republican period, during which ancient Rome was governed as an oligarchy. The contemporary reference is maybe likelier and probably more gettable!

  42. polyphone

    grantinfreo@27 …. you may be thinking of ‘my ding a ling’ from Chuck Berry, wh has the same syllable count and stress … . Anyways, nice to be reminded of that.

  43. paddymelon

    Even with all the crossers I had no hope of solving DISCOVERED CHECK.

    Learned a lot about diseases threatening the monarch butterfly.

    The word picture in the clue for BROWN RICE was amusing. Also liked the surface for KEEP ONE’S COUNSEL.

  44. Martin

    I had a foothold this morning. Then destroyed myself at the gym, battled through a long day of work, then came back to slog away at this for what seemed like hours – successfully though. I think that, like Balfour, my mind wasn’t in the right place. As always, I appreciate the challenge.

  45. Alphalpha

    paddymelon@43: I agree about BROWN RICE but I also liked the ‘resting’ actor in VOID (a personal resonance) and the childhood memories evoked by RESENT. Imogen is climbing my scale of preferred setters so thanks to him(?) and PeterO.

  46. Simon S

    Alphalpha @ 45 Imogen is Richard Browne, so a he.

  47. paddymelon

    Alphalpha@45. Imogen is a he. For his eminent credentials and aliases (Vulcan in the Guardian) and why he chose the pseudonym Imogen, go to Meet the Setter Guardian Imogen (or Vulcan).
    (Sorry, couldn’t get the link thing figured out.)

  48. Mig

    Through sheer obstinacy, and taking all day, I managed to complete this. One of the hardest puzzles I’ve been able to complete (though some say it’s on the easier side for Imogen!), so very satisfying when the final letters (22a BRIO) fell into place. All parsed except 3d FOIL, 21d GOES BY

    Favourites maybe 23a HASTATE (for a great surface), 1d DISCOVERED CHECK (surface and satisfying pdm), 18d HARMONIC (for a great surface, and very satisfying definition — yes, I took the musical meaning)

    Held up a bit by initially having TANK at 25d instead of DUNK

  49. michelle

    I could not parse 3d apart from def = frustrate and could not work out how the def related to fencing.

    New for me: BOOGALOO = 1960s Latin music and dance genre popular in New York City; HASTATE; DISCOVERED CHECK.

  50. Chris Allen

    Chess mastery and biology required the complete….

  51. Hawa

    Just to add to the description of conic sections, parabolas (parabolae?) are the fourth type. It all depends how you cut the cone.

  52. R Srivatsan

    Just to say thanks for a polished puzzle and tight but generous blog!

  53. TomK

    Yes, I agree with others about 10a. Wouldn’t “One rascal that can beat 10″ be more succinct? Not sure what the word”nine” adds. I do think the word “one” is useful though for its wit, even though it could work without it.

  54. Raver

    For ‘FOIL’, as soon as I saw ‘Olympic event’ and ‘button’ I wrongly associated this with the Olympic scandal where Boris Onishchenko cheated by fencing with a switch in the grip of his weapon. He activated this switch to falsely register hits. As I said, I was wrong. The event was not the foil, but rather the epee, as one leg of the modern pentathlon.

    However that wrong reasoning led me to the right answer.

  55. Mandarin

    I found this totally impenetrable on Friday, when I was short of time anyway. Finally returning to it today (Tuesday) I was pleasantly surprised, after a bit of time and trouble, to be able to complete and fully parse it – a first for me with Imogen. Favourite was OKLAHOMA.

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