Independent 8,991 by Hob (Saturday Prize Puzzle, 08/08/15)

Goodness me, an absolute scorcher of a puzzle from Hob this week.

I’ve struggled a bit with this setter’s work in the past, but that wasn’t exactly the case here. There was a lot of interlinking between clues (along with some red herrings), which can sometimes make it difficult to get a foothold in a puzzle, but things did seem to fall into place quite smoothly.

The theme was based around 10 across musicians, and plenty of them. I spotted:

  • Primal Scream
  • Deacon Blue
  • Lulu
  • Travis
  • Lonnie Donegan
  • Texas
  • Simple Minds
  • Donovan

Lanarkshire’s Midge Ure puts in an appearance too, and there’s an indirect reference to Jack Bruce of (The) Cream, also from Lanarkshire. The histrogeography of Scotland is beyond my ken but that’s near Glasgow, I think.

You’ve also got a handful of non-Scots musicians like Prince, Sting, Blur and goodness knows who else.

Not that you really needed to know a great deal about all this modern music (It’s just noise isn’t it? What’s the point if you can’t hear the words?) to solve this one, but it did help.

A baffling query about 3 down remains. The internet tells me Argon is number 18 in the periodic table, rather than 17. What am I missing? I also can’t quite explain 28 down/TEXAS.

Across
1/4 PRIMAL SCREAM Therapeutic release from Prince: one big hit, backed by ’60s group (6,6)
PR + I + SLAM< + CREAM.
9 STUN “Short dwarf” shock (4)
STUN[t].
10 GLASWEGIAN Scot going on vacation around Wales upset a fellow countryman? (10)
(WALES* in G[oin]G) + IAN.
11/19 DEACON BLUE Clergyman taking care of unhappy group (6,4)
(C/O in DEAN) + BLUE.
13 SHORT CUT Quick way to get to number 1? (5,3)
Two definitions. A “Number 1” is a short haircut, referring to the attachment on the clippers.
15 HYDRANGEA Called into Greater Manchester town with a flowering shrub (9)
(RANG in HYDE) + A.
20 DUNE Film of a Parisian (4)
DUNE. A film from 1984 directed by David Lynch, the internet tells me.
21 STRAPPADO Torture to start with, private parts getting rejected at a party (9)
(P[rivate] + PARTS)< + A DO.
26 ANAPHORA A short sleep at hotel, or before a part of the Eucharist (8)
A NAP + H + OR + A.
27 SITING Policeman covering one location (6)
I in STING. Sting being one Gordon Sumner, not an officer of the law but rather a member of the band The Police.
29 AGGRANDIZE Exaggerate unusually daring gaze (10)
(DARING GAZE)*.
31 XAVI Footballer‘s acceleration during 16 (4)
A in XVI. No doubt there’ll be grumbles that a World Cup-winning footballer with 133 international caps is too obscure, but if you can find a better clue for X?V?, I think we’d all like to hear it.
32 NUTMEG Head girl gets kick between her legs? (6)
NUT + MEG.
33 ORISON Confiteor is one’s prayer (6)
Hidden in [confite]OR IS ON[e].
Down
1 POTTERY The Queen’s crazy about baked goods (7)
ER in POTTY.
2 IONIC Sort of column written by 10 taking 13 (5)
10 + NIC[k].
3 ARGON 17 Mar? Going topless, drink up (5)
[m]AR + NOG<. See preamble.
5 COWBOY Sort of builder‘s bum primarily seen in women only, extremely firm on top (6)
CO + (B[um] in (W + O[nl]Y)).
6 EGG Cooked breakfast for one? Good (3)
EG + G.
7 MEASURE Tip from Midge Ure about each second bar of music (7)
(EA + S) in (M[idge] + URE).
8 LASSIE Young female dog (6)
Two definitions.
12 OVA 6s done, we’re told (3)
Homophone of “over”.
14 TULIP Clue about Lulu stripping? It’s a bloomer (5)
[l]UL[u] in TIP.
16 RUN-UP Quickly make an approach (3-2)
Two definitions, the latter a cricket reference.
17 GAS 13 for rabbit (3)
GAS[h].
18 AIR Warm and dry current in 3 (3)
I in Ar.
22 TRAVIS Sitarist Ravi Shankar’s group (6)
[sitaris]T RAVI S[hankar].
23 PSI Letter from broadband provider turned up (3)
ISP<.
24 DONOVAN Star wearing flower’s a hippie icon (7)
NOVA in the River DON.
25/20 LONNIE DONEGAN Musician playing online finished before mounting horse (6,7)
ONLINE* + DONE + NAG<.
27 SMEAR Blur start off Simple Minds’ No.1 on the organ (5)
S[imple] + M[inds] + EAR.
28 TEXAS Group of Scots, perhaps with back-up guitar (5)
There’s AXE< in there, but beyond that, I don’t quite follow this one. Good job you lot are here.
30 RAT Run away with heart of mystery shopper (3)
R + A + [mys]T[ery].

 

* = anagram; < = reversed; [] = removed; underlined = definition; Hover to expand abbreviations

 

10 comments on “Independent 8,991 by Hob (Saturday Prize Puzzle, 08/08/15)”

  1. Sil van den Hoek

    Thanks, Simon, and well done.
    I couldn’t quite finish the south east.

    Re 3d: Argon is a ‘gas’ (the solution to 17d).
    And TEXAS? Perhaps, it is a reversal of ‘axe’ inside TS (which is a part (‘group’) of Sco/ts.
    With the intention to write an &lit-ish clue.

  2. Muffyword

    I think TEXAS is taxes (scots) with the axe reversed inside. The definition is group, or possibly &lit.

  3. Sil van den Hoek

    I think you’re right, Muffyword.
    ‘Texas’ was one of the three I couldn’t get, together with ‘Xavi’ (thought of Rush) and poor old ‘Donovan’.

  4. gwep

    I thought TEXAS is perhaps ax< in set, ax being the American spelling that came up in a recent Indy cryptic.

  5. Polly

    I too was held up by the SE corner. Having come across Strat as a type of guitar but not axe I confidently entered TARTS for 28 down, thinking the Scots element had to do with tartans. I then went on to assume that 31 across was REVS, with Rev being short for Revie. That’ll teach me to write in solutions I haven’t fully parsed…

    Apart from that it was a highly satisfying puzzle. Thanks, Hob and Simon.

  6. Dormouse

    31ac and 28dn were the two I couldn’t get. I too thought of TARTS. XAVI I’ve never heard of, but I last went to a football match at the 1966 World Cup.


  7. I agree that this was a fine puzzle. I’m another who had a reversed “strat” at 28dn for ages, but because I couldn’t make 31ac work I thought about it some more and eventually biffed TEXAS from the theme, which led me to XAVI as my LOI. Well done to Muffyword for parsing TEXAS, although I’d like to think I might have seen it if Scots hadn’t been capitalised.

  8. Eric Wolff

    Help – why does “taxes” = “scots”? Got the answer but still can’t see why.


  9. Eric@8 – think noun, not verb. A scot is an old form of tax. The expression “getting off scot-free” originated as a description of people who did not pay the tax.

  10. The tortoise VM

    Another waste of ink in the i paper 2019,
    Ok for specialists in the Independent in 2015 a prize puzzle 2 boot.
    This is not the sort of puzzle to encourage new solvers or readers to a new paper,
    But as usual economics rule.

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