Financial Times 14,797 by GAFF

A very entertaining puzzle from Gaff. I had written a much longer preamble than this one, but somehow lost it due to a technical glitch. As with most if not all Gaffles (Gaff-puzzles), there is a central theme. 1ac continues to elude me so any help here would be much appreciated.
 

This time it was Solomon Grundy, from the very popular rhyme of the same name. Each of what he did on the days are solutions to clues in the puzzle e.g. Born, Christened, Married, Fell ill etc.

I wonder if it was a deliberate touch in the grid, but Born and Died are at right angles to each other and co-located in the SE corner. Died is the answer to the last clue in the grid.
FF: 9 DD: 8
For those who are interested, the full rhyme is
Solomon Grundy,
Born on a Monday,
Christened on Tuesday,
Married on Wednesday,
Took ill on Thursday,
Grew worse on Friday,
Died on Saturday,
Buried on Sunday.
That was the end,
Of Solomon Grundy
Across
1  
One hopes we catch the last post (6)
 BUGLER seems to fit, but why?
4 PSYCHING
Frightening moan ruler hears (8)
Sounds like SIGH (moan) KING (ruler)
10  
See 31
11 PLATEAU
Stop improving eminent flat (7)
Double definition
12 TOWN
China maybe painted by revellers (4)
Cryptic clue – painting the town red, as revellers are wont to do. And of course, the ubiquitous Chinatown.
13 UNRAVELLED
Composer stuck inside without guidance fell apart (10)
RAVEL (Composer, Maurice) in UNLED (without guidance)
15 BURIED
Engrossed by retired spoon bender (6)
URI (spoon bender, Geller – Israeli illusionist) in BED (retired)
16, 8 SOLOMON GRUNDY
See preamble (7,6)
I got this in after a while without seeing the preamble as the blogging tool didnt pick it up. Only got confirmation once I managed to access the FT site.
19 FELL ILL
Sickened by amount of cloth in stuffing (4,3)
ELL (amount of cloth) in FILL (stuffing)
21 GENIAL
Amiable Ealing comedy (6)
Anagram of EALING
24 CHRISTENED
Entitled to revise third scene (10)
Anagram of THIRD SCENE
26 BORN
Smell sailors produced (4)
BO (Smell – Body Odour) RN (Sailors – Royal Navy)
28 MARRIED
United fix losing final in bad dream (7)
RIg (fix, without last character) in anagram of DREAM
29 UNIFORM
Whereat students model workwear (7)
UNI (whereat students) FORM (model)
30 SHRUGGED
Showed detachment of irregular Scottish extremists to the front (8)
SH (ScottisH extremists, first and last characters) RUGGED (irregular)
31, 10 A DAY IN THE LIFE
a-Ha definitely spelled the end for Sgt Pepper (1,3,2,3,4)
Anagram of AHA DEFINITELY, the final song of the Sgt Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club album
Down
1 BATHTUBS
Places wherein corporate purging bubbles over (8)
 Cryptic clue, Corporate here refers to stomach. [Thanks Gaufrid]
2 GREW WORSE
Sickened by what unsuccessful Chelsea exhibitor did (4,5)
 Perhaps referring to the Chelsea Flower Exhibition, where someone might have been unsuccessful in growing floral specimens.
3 EPIC
Classic digital photo? (4)
E (digital – electronic) PIC (photo)
5 SOPRANO
High tone bounced back in sonar positioning (7)
Hidden, reversed in ‘sONAR POSitioning’
6 CHAPERONED
Hope dancer is poorly supervised (10)
Anagram of HOPE DANCER
7 IDEAL
Perfect scampi served alongside sea gull tails (5)
Tails i.e. last character of ‘scampI serveD alongsidE seA gulL’
8  
See 16
9 PENNY
Money spent on throne (5)
Cryptic clue, throne refers to the loo where you might spend a penny. [Thanks Gaufrid]
14 DECLASSING
Lowering of status caused by dent on the outside of Merc (10)
DING (dent) around E-CLASS (Mercedes Benz, luxury class between C and S)
17 OLIGOPOLY
The power companies have in the market (9)
cryptic / not-so-cryptic clue?
18 CLANSMAN
Part of family, last two leave Mcannally’s drunk (8)
Anagram of MCANNALlyS (i.e. without LY, the last two characters)
20 LIE IDLE
Be unused to make-believe turn over (3,4)
LIE (make-believe) IDLE (turn over, as in a car engine)
22 SCAMPS
Con more words out of rogues (6)
SCAM (con) PS (more words, post script)
23 NEXUS
Link to previous partner revealed in newspaper retraction (5)
EX (previous partner) in NUS (newspaper – SUN, reversed)
25 RARER
Less frequent back-up regime admitted at first (5)
R (Regime, at first) in RAER (back – REAR, up – reversed)
27 DIED
Stopped working and took action to conserve energy (4)
DID (took action) around E (energy)
*anagram

12 comments on “Financial Times 14,797 by GAFF”

  1. Thanks Gaff and Turbolegs.

    1ac: A bugler would play the last post, so possibly could be hoping that others would hear (catch) it, but I would love to see a better explanation than this.

  2. Thanks Gaff and Turbolegs,

    This was great fun.

    I thought “corporate” referred to the body in the bath, not its corporation.

    I have BUGLES at 1 ac – perhaps a cd related to The Last Post?

    DAY IN THE LIFE could allude to the theme too.

  3. Thanks PG@1 and Muffy@2.

    For 1ac, while the last post seems to fit, not sure about the first part of the clue though. Like PG, I wonder if there are better explanations for this. Hopefully, Gaff will stop by to enlighten us if all else fails.

    Muffy, I did observe the same as you ref 31,10 and had included it as part of my first attempt on the preamble which didnt go through (Specifically, seven such days in ..)

    I thought 14ac was quite neat.

    CHeers

  4. A ‘cryptic’ crossword should be purely that. A heavily themed crossword is, in my book a ‘craptic’. One with a predominance of proper nouns is a GK. Setters should stick to established principles.

  5. Gaff is unique: all his puzzles are one-offs of a sort, and unlike the general run. A lot of us embrace them avidly (though sometimes with not a little trepidation), but he is not your bag, at least the FT puzzles say who the setter is, so you can go elsewhere.

  6. Wagonman@5: FT puzzles are not actually labelled “Cryptic”. They are just “Crossword”, except for the Saturday “Polymath”, which is printed in addition to the prize crossword, still not labelled “Cryptic”. There is a reasonable expectation that there will be a mixture of standard cryptic puzzles and specials.

  7. Yes 1ac is BUGLER as per Pelham@1, and, like him, I wish there were a better explanation, i.e. I wish it were a better clue! Sometimes you look at a clue too hard and convince yourself it’s better than it is,

    ‘Purser hoping we catch the last post’ might have done the trick.

    Thanks to Turbolegs for the blog.

  8. Even I, not familiar with the nursery rhyme (for obvious reasons), had no problem finding SOLOMON GRUNDY. However, I must admit that this name was still fresh in my mind after the latest posts for Imogen’s (Guardian) puzzle spoke of him.
    I had to google to see all the links – clever.
    BTW, why is 19ac “feel ill” and not “took ill”?

    I failed on a few clues in the NW which were actually all kind of cryptic definitions (1ac, 1d and 9d (although I was pretty sure that it had to “penny”).
    In 1ac, just like calypso, I was very much focused on “the last post” meaning T. After all, it is something that Gaff liked to apply in previous puzzles. How wrong I was. But no 1ac anyway for me anyway as there was no 1d for me either.

    Meanwhile I do not understand what Wagonman @5 is pointing at.
    This is just a themed crossword as there are so many themed crosswords. With only Solomon Grundy as a proper noun today.

    And: “Setters should stick to established principles”?
    Why is that?
    In fact, Gaff did nothing outrageous today – he can do! 🙂 – yes, I liked this puzzle.

    Many thanks to setter & turbolegs.

  9. Thanks Gaff and Turbolegs

    Another catch up puzzle whilst on holidays … and a pretty enjoyable one at that, with a few minor niggles with the cryptic definition clues!

    Although BUGLER was one of the last in, I thought that BATHTUBS was a weaker clue – am still having trouble understanding how a bathtub is where a ‘corporate (stomach) purges bubbles over’. TOWN was marginally better, but still not to the normal standard by Gaff.

    Thought that it was extremely clever work to think of the theme … and then to include each day’s event into the grid without generating any obscure words to support them.

    DAY IN THE LIFE was a nice touch to it.

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