Relative difficulty: Easy-Medium
Theme answers:
- ERR ON THE G-STRING (17A: Play a wrong note during a violin sonata?)
- CLEAN-HEIR ACT (28A: Little prince taking a bath?)
- TO AIR IS HUMAN (44A: "We all put things on TV sometimes?")
- EYRE TO THE THRONE (59A: Headline after Jane becomes queen?)
"Air on the G String", also known as "Air for G String" and "Celebrated Air", is August Wilhelmj's 1871 arrangement of the second movement of Johann Sebastian Bach's Orchestral Suite No. 3 in D major, BWV 1068.[1][2][3][4][5]
The arrangement differs from the original in that the part of the first violins is transposed down so that the entire piece can be played on just the violin's lowest string (the G string). In performance, that part is generally played by a single violin (instead of by the first violins as a group).
• • •
There were no real issues with the fill, and I liked seeing a couple of the longer answers. FARMER'S TAN was a colorful (!) surprise (10D: What wearing a shirt at the beach might get you), and MUSKETRY ... I don't know why I like it, I just do. I'm not even sure I knew it was a word. It's not called "The Three Guys Who Were Good at MUSKETRY," after all. But I just like the way the word looks / sounds, and it's at least slightly clever that they were able to cross-reference the clue to one third of the actual Musketeers (ATHOS). The short fill was unremarkable but largely unbothersome, which is just fine. Only a couple of pained faces. One for the O'ER / -EER crossing; I wouldn't allow these two crosswordese crutches to share the same grid, let alone have them crossing (also, if I see EER in the grid, I assume it's punctuated E'ER, which ... is pronounced "ayer" ... which kind of reads like static in this grid. Did it want to be the revealer, but then got demoted (and off-centered)? No. But that's what it looks like. The other pained face came at 37A: "Get out!" but only because I found myself in another one of those Kea/Loa situations where you have a letter and then two equally appropriate possibilities present themselves and you have No Way to know which is right without working the crosses. In this case, it was a Scat/SHOO situation. This is just a normal part of doing crosswords, but certain kealoas irk more than others (ALOT/ATON, for instance ... there are others ...)
Five things:
Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld
- 28D: Delegation (CONTINGENT) — I just realized that [Trick the fellow who needs a heart in 'The Wizard of Oz"?] would also "work."
- 1A: Titan of industry (CZAR) — Yes. Correct use of the "C" CZAR. Hail "C" CZAR!
- 67A: Mother of Helen of Troy (LEDA) — 30 years of reading / teaching about the Trojan War, still can't get Helen's mom straight. I wrote in LEIA and immediately thought "well that's the wrong Wars entirely..."
- 2D: Swordsman with a horse named Tornado (ZORRO) — If I knew this, I forgot. I kinda wanted this to be EL CID.
- 65D: First word of Sondheim's "Send in the Clowns" ("ISN'T") — the musical theater *and* the crossword world mourned the passing of a titan of wordplay this past weekend. Francis Heaney (one of my favorite constructors) put together a tribute puzzle, which you can download for free here. Treat yourself. Good day.
P.S. I guess PWN is still a gaming term ("to get the better of" or "dominate," stylized from a typo for "own"). Or else it's a ghost of gaming term and like so much ghost terminology still haunts the grid.
ReplyDeleteNo real hangups today. I did have herA before LEDA, but that only lasted a second or two. I do want to give a shout-out to our old friend ROOD at 4D, who (it seems to me) has been in hibernation for a while.
"Stripper's wardrobe malfunction?" could have been a great clue for 17A....
ReplyDelete@Rex wrote, "THEME: "ayer" (rhymes with 'mayor') swaps — words that sound like "ayer" are swapped for different words that also sound like "ayer," creating wackiness, I guess:"
ReplyDeleteWhere did that come from? Did he just make it up? Doesn't make much sense.
Oh, well, now, hello terrific Wednesday! A theme that made me laugh, tough areas, many splendid answers, sharp cluing, and some learning thrown in.
ReplyDeleteThat is, the play in the theme answers, especially the last three, was more than small-smile funny; lovely answers abounded, with FRIDA, DEIGN, ACRID, ROOD, MUSKETRY, and TROPE; there was wit in the clues for FELT, EYES, CLEFS, TINE and especially the world-class [Hey, for horses?] for NEIGH; and, finally, I learned where pizza came from and what a FARMER’S TAN is (after wondering who Farmer Stan is).
That is, now there’s a bounce in my step after conquering resistance, and I’m just plain feeling good after the lift from the humor and illumination. That’s a wow for a puzzle, and a debut, yet. Christopher, you’re on my look-for list, and thank you for this jewel!
Agree!! Loved this puzzle!!
DeleteRex wanted a method to the madness. There is one. The first and third "Ayers" are swapped and the second and fourth "Ayers" are swapped.
ReplyDeleteAny puzzle that has PWN in it ought to be disqualified for publication. Yes there really are people who live in some twilight zone where they are perpetually 13 but that doesn't make their slang crossworthy.
ReplyDeleteThat first themer could have been HAIRONAGSTRING for all I know. At least that would fit my opinion of this puerile collection of dad jokes supported by nails on a chalkboard fill.
People like to use the adjective Maleskan to describe how bad puzzles used to be. This puzzle is Shortzian and it's the epitome of how bad they've become.
At xwordinfo the constructor mentions that he's had a number of puzzles rejected before today's inauspicious debut. I shudder to think how bad those must have been.
AGREED pwn is idiotic fill
DeleteJust a little heads up. @Nancy has a bit of good news to report today... watch for it.
ReplyDeleteFARMERSTAN falls just east of Turkmenistan and north of Afghanistan.
ReplyDeleteThe Farmerstani are a proud and stoic people. Inherently peace-loving, they are nevertheless valorous and relentless when forced to action by the land wars that have historically roiled central Asia.
Punny homophones are fine midweek - this one is cute and well filled. Liked CONTINGENT and FARMERS TAN. Side eye to the center EER, MIR, MUG - and the cross referenced ISS. My wife is lip balm freak and gets her EOS in bulk packs at Costco - I see the pods everyday.
ReplyDeleteEnjoyable Wednesday solve.
@puzzlehoarder, you made me LOL. Love that attitude: confronting something I don't know, I think 'I should learn that.' You are appealingly discriminatory.
ReplyDeleteWell, when Rex brings out WACKY, it is not a good thing for constructors. While this may not be in my top 10, it definitely is a serviceable Wednesday. KYOTO is coincidental as am reading Tales from the Cafe by Toshikazu Kawaguchi, featuring a character named Kyoto.
Really appreciate the link to the Sondheim puzzle. Thanks so much.
Rabbit, rabbit.
@unknown 6:51 - switching 1 and 3 works but not 2 and 4. Doing that would put Eyre where air should be.
ReplyDeleteI do not agree with Rex on much of his rants on tightness of the theme, but I do on this one. Should have been air, air, err and heir, and this is replaced by ERR, HEIR, AIR and EYRE. While this is not horrible, having the two missing "air"s first creates a false sense of a pattern. I would be OK with this if the order of the answers had been different. Better yet, there could have been something for an answer like "Bronte's Jane Eyre" that replaced one of the first two theme answers.
Best clue of the puzzle was for FARMERS TAN, and that may have also been the best answer of the week so far. Short fill was better than average in my opinion.
Summary - good puzzle that could have been vey good with a tighter theme
PWN is weak. Wanted OWN for that. My wife gave me EOS. Otherwise OK.
ReplyDelete@Lewis. Maybe you could have just let @Nancy post when she posts without your introduction.
ReplyDeleteLewis and Nancy are stalwarts of this blog. That they have co-constructed a puzzle is happy news and it's fun for us blog friends to share in their excitement. Although I pretty much come here daily, there are times when I can't, or can't look in other than early. So, having the heads up is very welcome in this corner of puzzledom.
DeleteVery much on the easy side and a bit of a meh theme, but full of relatively fresh fill outside a few clangers, so I didn't mind that much. TROPE, DEMI Lovato, KYOTO clued for Nintendo... Would put decent money on Christopher Youngs being exactly my age.
ReplyDeleteWhen was the last time CAT was in the NYT puzzle?
ReplyDeleteAIR replaced by ERR.(1)
ReplyDeleteERR replaced by AIR.(3)
AIR replaced by HEIR.(2)
HEIR replaced by EYRE.(4)
Maybe the clue for (1) should be Wardrobe malfunction.
@Lewis - Here’s the site for any FARMER STAN.
ReplyDeleteWell well. After yesterday’s czunami/tsunami confusion we lead off with the mighty CZAR of industry. That made me smile. As opposed to going all NYT on the G STRING clue. I much prefer indies’ penchant for adult (i.e. juvenile) humor when the occasion arises. You just know that when BEQ has at it we’ll get an actual cluing guffaw.
@unknown 6:51 - Thanks for pointing out that the swap scheme is a-b-a-b. Would have been more appropriate, of course, if it had been a-b-b-a.
5D caused some confusion. Domestic species in the family Felidae might include ocelots and lynx and pumas, while the family CAT is domesticated but likely imported (at least I don’t recall that CATs were pets in the Americas before the arrival of Europeans). Managed to sort out that the clue was using that other meaning of “domestic” before the eyebrow arched too much.
@Barbara S late yesterday - P.O.O.H. - !!!!! Now I’m imagining @Anoa Bob whinnying as he counts them. 😂🤣😂
I am waiting for EOS to be clued as “Transactions of the American Geophysical Union” (https://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/journal/23249250).
ReplyDelete@Anon 7:44. Would you just knock it off.
ReplyDeleteI think Rex is really suffering from "Gotta write something" blues lately. I dont even know what he's talking about today. And how does "mayor" rhyme with "air" or "err" ?
Decent Wednesday, except for "pwn". Kinda like "gof".
@anon 637am
ReplyDeleteSorry. I missed your post somehow.
Thx Christopher, for this excellent Fri. puz (hi @Roo, I did it again)
ReplyDeleteTough+. Easily over 2x my normal Wednes. time.
In an alternate reality on this one.
Managed to get it right, altho DEMI / MEAN was semi-educated guess.
Nevertheless, as always, enjoyed the challenge! :)
@Barbara S. (7:25 PM yd) yw, and 👍 for 0 Sun.
Be sure to drink your Ovaltine … oops, I mean take your vitamins. lol
@TTrimble (9:03 PM yd) 👍 for your usual SB prowess!
Hands up for missing @Frantic.
@jae
Hoping to get on to Croce's 664 later today.
___
yd 0* / td 0
Peace ~ Compassion ~ Tolerance ~ Kindness to all 🕊
Lewis (6:48) expressed my feelings for the puzzle beautifully. Extraordinary piece of work.
ReplyDeleteWhere does Rex get "ayer"? Air, heir, err, and Eyre are all pronounced identically in one syllable.
My biggest obstacle was ERRONTHEGSTRING. I'm pretty ignorant about symphonic music. Is this piece well known? I see that it is a violin arrangement of something by Bach, using just the one string.
We all seem to be saying that PWN is hopelessly out of date. Really? I hadn't seen it before. Do a lot of us hang out at video arcades?
Here's your clue for the HDW (Hidden Diagonal Word) I like best in today's grid:
ReplyDeleteDip, informally (4 letters, answer below)
I dnf'ed on this one by not recognizing FRIDA's surname and carelessly going with ROOn instead of ROOD (4D). I liked the puzzle and the corny puns, although I wasn't familiar with the musical composition AIR ON THE G-STRING
After noticing a grid-spanning corner-to-corner diagonal strand yesterday for the first time, I see it happen again in the puzzle today ((NE to SW, as opposed to yesterday's NW to SE). Perhaps I simply wasn't paying attention to that phenomenon!
Answer to the HDW clue:
GUAC (begins with the G in MUG, 42A, and moves to the SE.)
After the fun interactions around diagonal words yesterday (RooMonster, Barbara S, Joe Bleaux), I'll be out of pocket for the next week and a half on a trip to see my son in Hamburg. But I shall return!
I think Rex has his finger on the pulse of this one - pretty standard fare with nothing terrible or truly outstanding. A theme that tries hard, but doesn’t really score; pushing the bounds on trivia (ATHENA crossing ATHOS, for example) and I thought it was interesting that Rex is a professor who teaches about the Trojan War and doesn’t remember LEDA; made up words (or in this case, really dated, stale slang) like PWN; as well as some clues and answers that really shine (FARMERS TAN for example).
ReplyDeleteIt might just be because they are just so recognizable, but it also seems like there is a 2021 “reunion of the familiar” taking place today - CZAR, OREO, ALEXA, TWA, IRAN, NAT, EWE and AHAB. They of course missed a golden opportunity to invite one of the true stalwarts of 2021 to the reunion party by not cluing 19D (TERI) as the Divine Ms. Garr ! ! !
Oops, (re: my previous post): just realized, couldn't be a Fri., as they're themeless; so, tough Thurs. I blame it on the booster. lol
ReplyDelete___
Peace ~ Compassion ~ Tolerance ~ Kindness to all 🕊
Agree with 🦖’s critique.🎯
ReplyDeleteAlso think it was fun and enjoyable.
🤗
Teri Hatcher is real and she's spectacular!
ReplyDeleteIn my accent at least, "mayor" and "mare" are not pronounced the same! That made the write-up a little bizarre to read. None of those are "ayer"s to me.
ReplyDelete@kitchef, 7:18am -- hysterical post. Thank you. You might enjoy the travel guide "Molvania," published in 2004 by Jetlag.
ReplyDeletePatrick Berry once clued G String as a "Minor suit?" That's how you use a question mark.
ReplyDeleteAnyway, DNF on Error The G String, helped along because I heard my son and his friends say, "Dude you owned him" and later "Due you PONED him" many times during their World of Warcraft years. Or so I thought. Fair game, there are people who think of Pwn as a thing. Looked it up, it was used by Alex Eaton-Salners about a year ago in the NYT. Nostalgic gamers walk among us. Pizza originated at a place in Little Italy called Roales. I accept that.
@Rex, There is no good version of Muskrat Love.
Hey All !
ReplyDeleteStrange one. Homophony. Is that the correct word? Or Homonymy. (Homophonic? Homonymic?)
Anyway, did figure them out. Saw no rhyme or reason as to the Themers, however.
And... Shenanigans! to PWN. Yes, I have seen it before in the NYTXW, but dang it, you expect me to remember it? Had oWN, naturally, and just couldn't see what I had wrong with NAoLES, even though I know pizza came from Italy. (Or did it. If I recall [there's that memory again], I read somewhere that's a myth? Help me out on this). So that was my one-letter DNF. SHOOt.
Also, ERR ON THE G STRING gets a mini-Shenanigans! to this non-art-opera-paint-broadway person. Did get it, but geez.
@kitshef
But have you ever seen the Farmerstani without shirts? Shudder.
@Tom T
Have a great vacation!
When I act rudely - ROOD. Har.
yd -4, should'ves 2
Three F's
RooMonster
DarrinV
The "announcement": That's just Lewis being chivalrous, gallant and sweet and letting me go first. We had agreed to give the blog a heads-up today, but how can such an early riser as Lewis wait for layabed, must-have-breakfast-and-coffee-first-me? Must be all that yoga. I'll get to today's puzzle in my next post. Right now, Lewis and I are letting you know that...
ReplyDeleteWe have co-constructed a puzzle that was just taken by the LA Times and will appear...sometime. Soon we hope, but who ever knows? We have confidence that you'll like it.
Lewis is a joy to work with with and we had a lot of fun working on it.
OK, if you don't know what an egg corn is (I don't), the theme of the puzzle may fly over your head. And you may compose a huge commentary that misses the point. So, I just interpreted the theme entries as entries with puns and enjoyed the puzzle. That there is another level confuses me. Oh well.
ReplyDeleteMath gent: Listen to the second movement of J. S. Bach's Third Overture (also called Orchestra Suite) which is readily accessible on You Tube. The orchestral arrangement by Leopold Stokowski is fairly famous but (in my opinion) anarcronistic. I think the name refers to an arrangement of the theme that can be played entirely on the lowest string of the violin. But for what purpose?
Kitshef—lol!
ReplyDeleteOne of the hardest Wednesdays I've ever done. That's because the first themer was a pun on a phrase I never heard of in my life and, therefore, didn't provide the slightest clue as to what I'd be looking for in the other theme answers.
ReplyDeleteWill someone please tell me what the bleep PWN means? And how it relates to that very peculiar clue?
To round things out, I've never heard of a FARMER'S TAN.
Everything else was pretty nifty. And if, say, EYRE TO THE THRONE had been first, this would have been a much easier puzzle. I liked it -- though I did suffer more than I'm used to suffering on a Wednesday.
@nancy
DeleteCheck this out at about 1:13
https://youtu.be/uWu4aynBK7E
@Nancy, @Lewis, Congrats! Something to really look forward to.
ReplyDeleteFarmerstan. @kitshef, @Zÿ 🤣~ Forgot to mentioned that it reminded me of that famous New Yorker cover https://www.rickmeyerowitz.com/rick-maira/new-yorkistan/.
@Barbara from yesterday, yes on Liras.
Never heard of pwn. Other than that only problem was sort for sift. I thought it was a good Wednesday puzzle.
ReplyDelete@southsideJohnny: I guess your definition of “trivia” is different from mine (“pushing the bounds on trivia (ATHENA crossing ATHOS, for example”). Classic literature is not trivia in my book (see what I did there?) The Odyssey and Three Musketeers are not trivia.
ReplyDeleteTrivia is unimportant stuff like EOS and…well, that’s the only one I found, and it’s a shame the EOS clue didn’t continue the mini-Greek theme. DEMI (not in my wheelhouse) crossing EYRE (another classic) was a bigger stretch for me.
EOS is super well known so that didn't bug me at all. Plus, it's the sort of clue that many younger women would know, but ERRONTHEGSTRING was totally lost on me. And PWN.
ReplyDeletePWN isn’t fair game 🤬
ReplyDeleteAlthough the comment about "Air On The G String" mentions violin, the YouTube example is a cello, which also has. G string. However, watching it played on a violin shows more clearly how the player uses only the G string (the cello's G string is the third, not the fourth and most visible string as a violin's is).
ReplyDeleteSee for yourself: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CLk8OILr72U
@ Mary McCarty: Trivia is unimportant stuff like the daily comments here. Don't any of us have better things to do?
ReplyDeleteOther than that 24 across which is as comprehensible as “imaginary numbers” (maybe @Mathgent could explain?), today’s @Lewis response says it all. And the tease of a grid tag teamed by @Nancy with @Lewis to look forward to seeing soon! Wow! That makes my WED.
ReplyDelete@x nope—one joy of retirement is doing nothing—even when it takes all day. If you crave productive, read a good book? My modest suggestion is Crosstalk by Connie Willis.
ReplyDeleteI bet many of you who haven't heard of Air on the G String have heard Air on the G String.
ReplyDelete@x, Nope.
ReplyDeleteA debut is always exciting but this one is not going to go on my list of favorites. Three out of the four themers made perfect sense but 17A was a total unknown so that entire top section was a struggle.
ReplyDeleteOREO O’s did not pass the breakfast test for me. I hate the cookie so can’t even imagine how disgusting a cereal must be. And TWA I know but PWN?? Please.
Nice nod to Steven Sondheim though and one of the most beautiful pieces of music ever written.
@Pwn Naysayers, A PhD neuroscientist, PhD materials engineer, and two aerospace engineers (one with an MS) who years ago wore out my family room furniture and ate me out of house and home while gaming would all get a kick out of seeing Pwn in the NYT puzzle. I love that red faced emoji @New Boy but I still think it's fair game. On the other hand, I admit that one generation's slang is always idiocy to the generations that came before it.
ReplyDeleteA treat. ERR ON A G-STRING made me laugh and put me in a fine mood to discover the other remade phrases. And I liked the nod to the classics, whether in music with Bach or literature with Pope and Bronte in the theme answers, and ATHOS, ATHENA, LEDA, and AHAB among the supporting cast.
ReplyDeleteHelp from previous puzzles: PWN. Do-overs: TORn, evenS before IRONS. No idea: EOS.
Congrats Lewis and Nancy, I can't wait to see what delights await!
ReplyDelete@OffTheGrid, exactly. If anyone has listened to a "Baroque music to relax" playlist, or seen a wedding scene in a movie, they've heard Air on a G String. Considering "BRA" gets the creepy male gaze treatment when it shows up, not sure why we are looking for the underwear clue.
Rex at his worst in first paragraph, deciding he wants a pattern other than the one the constructor chose. Also the whole thing based on "ayer", which is 2 syllables, as opposed to air, heir, eyre.
On a related note, it was really difficult to tell people I was watching "Mare of Easttown" a while back without them hearing "Mayor of Easttown". Terrific HBO(noGO) series.
Anyone reading this blog has seen PWN ranted about several times in the last couple of years. Fool me once...
Looking back at the puzzle for an original thought (hi, Z) I can't unsee toaIRISHuman.
I really hated this puzzle (sorry)
ReplyDeleteVery well-made WedPuz, with a WED in it, too boot. However …
ReplyDeleteM&A was totally head-scratchedly confused, right outta the rodeo chute, tryin desperately to decode that there first ERRONTHEGSTRING themer. Along these lines:
1. M&A figures it's a pun on some other original phrase … but what one?
2. M&A figures, since the puz's phrase references G-STRING in a musical way, the original phrase musta dealt with G-STRING as a wardrobe choice.
2.5. M&A knows little to nuthin about classical music.
3. M&A ergo assumes the original phrase could only have been HAIR ON THE G-STRING.
4. QED.
5. Wrong again, M&A breath.
staff weeject pick: PWN. M&A had OWN, there. Was kinda concerned about NAOLES, tho. [See point #5, above.]
Better PWN clue, that gives us dimmer folks a fightin chance: {Iold Uhe Eeed Uo??}.
Cool MUG clue. Could be potent inspiration for a runtpuz mug-mottos theme.
fave be-sparkled stuff: MUSKETRY. SNATCH. FARMERSTAN (@kitshef: har). NAOLES [As in: "M&A naoles the wrong answer again!"].
Thanx for yer comedy of hairs, Mr. Youngs dude. And congratz on yer fine debut.
Masked & Anonymo3Us
**gruntz**
Rex, thank you so much for the link to the Francis Heaney tribute puzzle. It was wonderfully clued, and I missed the extra bit that made it truly fantastic until I downloaded the answer grid. Every Sondheim fan should do this puzzle!
ReplyDeleteYou can call me an heirhead for wearing ErrJordans with my FARMERSTAN. But, by golly, since my dad is an Eyre-o-space CZAR, I’m air to his estate unless I suffer the slings and errows of outrageous fortune.
ReplyDeleteI liked the puzzle, and I always chuckle when I come across PWN. Maybe it’s silly, but we can always use a little of that.
Nice debut, Christopher Young.
@Barbara S late yesterday – your mention of FIGS reminded me of this Sondheim lyric from "A Little Night Music", in which the aging Mme. Armfeldt laments that romantic trysts have become too casual:
ReplyDelete♪ What once was a rare champagne is now just an amiable hock
What once was a villa —at least!— is "digs"
What once was a gown with train is now just a simple little frock
What once was a sumptuous feast is...figs
No! Not even figs—raisins!
Ah, liaisons... ♪
Sun's out in Brooklyn. And everybody loves the sunshine.
For some reason seeing both ARID and ACRID in the same puzzle tickled me. As did the crossing or ORAL and CORAL. I can't explain either one.
ReplyDeleteSure, I noticed the flaw in the theme pair-ups, but I loved it anyway. In this case, I think, coming close is better than nothing.
I seem to remember a year (or two?) ago a puzzle that clued OWN as dominating someone in a game; at that time, Rex asserted that PWN would have been better. But now it's dated. Sigh.
The trick to remembering Helen's mother is to remember that her father was a swan. There's quite a lot of art about the moment of her conception; this page has several examples.
Congratulations, @Nancy and @Lewis. I hope to see the puzzle soon!
My mom is in mid stage Alzheimers and I just spent a week visiting her. I brought my toy poodle, Lola. She asked me 20 (or more) times what the dog's name was. Every time I said Lola, she'd say: Whatever Lola wants, Lola gets.
ReplyDeleteI had no idea what that was from, but figured it was an actual famous phrase. I just had such a great moment doing the puzzle realizing that my mom got me an answer!!!
So fun. I've not finished the puzzle yet, but just wanted to post this. I'm struggling BTW.
Lovely story. Thanks.
DeleteFor the first time, ever, I too join the ranks of those who find OFL's kvetching just too, too.
ReplyDeleteCongrats to @Lewis and @Nancy! A crossword co-constructed by two of my favorite constructors? I’m sharpening my pencil. Can’t wait!
ReplyDeleteThe 'air' from ERR ON THE G STRING completely flew over my head, as I've always pronounced ERR, 'ur' (as in 'her'). Such a calming, beautiful piece of music: Air On The G String, J. S. Bach ~ Anastasiya Petryshak
ReplyDelete@jae
Croce's 664 was a fun and fairly challenging solve. Dnfed, as I was ousted at 49D (careless blunder). See you next Mon. :)
___
Peace ~ Compassion ~ Tolerance ~ Kindness to all 🕊
Rex’s opening paragraph about what’s wrong with the theme reads like a monologue from a Monty Python skit. Imagine what John Cleese could do with this.
ReplyDeleteI do agree that these “eggcorns” don’t quite work TOGETHER as a theme, but I did like CLEAN HEIR ACT and EYRE TO THE THRONE. The worst of the themers is TO AIR IS HUMAN with its tortured clue.
One of the problems with posting late morning is that all of the G STRING jokes get taken. However, it’s not too late to express appreciation to @Kitshef’s for your description of FARMER STAN and the Farmerstani people. You forgot to mention that their horses have become so negative that they only say NAY.
Yes to the clue for MUG. No to the existence of PWN in any crossword grid.
Congrats to @Nancy and @Lewis on striking gold in California.
PWN?!?
ReplyDeleteThat aside, thank you, Rex, for the link to the Sondheim puzzle. I don't really know if it was any good or not (tribute puzzles of course tend to be rushed), but it was a joy and a delight and I loved doing it.
Easy. Smooth but I’m with @Rex on the jarringly inconsistent theme. I kept trying to make sense of it and finally realized it didn’t make sense. That said, liked it.
ReplyDeleteFARMERSTAN is the home of the worst welfare suckers on the planet. Of course, they think they deserve it; and no one else does.
ReplyDeleteWhere I come from (the home of the M-W dict.) ERR is AIR. Every time.
Congratulations @Nancy and @Lewis on your upcoming LAT puzzle.
ReplyDeleteGol (grin out loud) to @Jerry S's Seinfeld reference.
I'll share my hope here that @LMS's conspicuous absence is because she's writing a book of intimate insights and observations about life in these here interesting times.
I started to join @JD in assigning the pizza source to rAoLES but I knew 24A could be PWN or oWN and saw the opportunity to change it when the LES fell in. (Didn't know the Bach piece so the first pun sailed over my head.)
ReplyDeleteMy Oaty O's held up the west central and my head-scratching choice of giving hawks sharp EarS made a little mess in the SW but nothing I couldn't fix.
CONTINGENT - the noun and adjective definitions don't seem to be related. Strange.
Christopher Youngs, congratulations on the debut and nice job.
@Nancy and @Lewis, I look forward to seeing your LA Times puzzle, congratulations!
My favorite posts this morning.
ReplyDeleteLewis (6:49)
kitshef (7:18)
TJS (8:14)
Jerry S (9:11)
Joe Dipinto (12:08)
The theme. Well, I thought it was cute despite the arguable lack of focus. I appreciated that the two instances of “air” that were replaced in the answers had completely different meanings: Air on a G String being a tune, and Clean Air Act referring to the air we breathe. To me, that helped justify its duplication in the base phrases. The most absolutely nonsensical clue/answer resulted in TOAIRISHUMAN (“We all put things on TV sometimes” – huh, what can that mean??) and furthermore features a DOOK that brings to mind the Emerald Isle (hi, @burtonkd, @Joseph Michael). But all in all I enjoyed the solve and found it about medium in difficulty.
ReplyDeleteI liked all the musical references: CLEFS, DEMI Lovato, LOLA (from “Damn Yankees”), the musical RENT, OER (from the anthem), TONE (clued as “timbre”), SOLOED, ARIAS, ISNT (from “Send in the Clowns”) and, of course, the disguised Air ON THE G STRING. I once sang “Send in the Clowns” at a show-off-your-talents-and-we-promise-to-applaud party, held at the home of some friends. I thought it was a decent performance (although Broadway has not come calling) and there wasn’t a dry eye in the place (but that could have been due to the exceptionally spicy jalapeño dip).
@Rob (8:04)
My husband’s right with you on EOS (or would be, if he read the blog). He’s published in that journal about the history of sea ice in the Arctic.
yd -2 [it’s just too humiliating to share what I missed :-(]
td 0 [annoyed that BIBB (lettuce) wasn’t allowed]
We always called it a FARMER TAN, no possessive, in my family. Looks wrong as I write it out, but FARMER’S TAN sounds very wrong to my ear.
ReplyDeleteNot a gamer, but my kids were, and I always thought that the word PWN was funny. Still do, I am surprised so many haven't run into it. I also have been known to say W00T.
ReplyDeleteYounger son played violin so the tune was familiar though it took me a while to realize the answer wasn't ERROr...
I really liked the puzzle and loved the way the pairs were flipped and Rex is of course wrong about how you pronounce AIR/ERR HEIR/EYRE.
I was hoping that OFL or some of you smart cookies in the commentariat would help me with the clue for 44 Across "We all put things on TV sometimes?". Huh? At first I was thinking along the lines of physically setting something---maybe a family photo---on top of the TV but the answer TO AIR... belies that interpretation. I certainly have never AIRed anything on TV. Haven't even tried to. Am I the only one? All the rest of yous have actually AIRed something on TV? Really? Any links to your broadcasts?
ReplyDeleteAnd then I find out for the past half century or so I was thinking that EYRE rhymes with EYER. And this got reinforced when it crossed 53D EYES.
Between the TV AIRing and mispronouncing EYRE, this puzz pretty much PWNed me. And I'm not even a noob!
A kitshef 7:18 and egsfor...12:02 lol thanks for the chuckles
ReplyDeleteFun puzzle, Eyre to the throne ws my fave. Tho I am familiar with classical music it struggled with 17A. finally it rang a bell.
Agree with Lewis about the cleverness in clues for clefs, tines, and neigh. Made the puzzle more fun.
Everyone arguing about the pronunciation of ayer, mayor, and the rest need to settle your differences over a beer, or rather IPA: ɛər. Though, I'm pretty sure IPA in the crossword upsets Rex.
ReplyDeleteDon't get me started on the pronunciation of pwn.
@JonP (1:20) I had that same thought. It sounded wrong to me too.
ReplyDelete@Anonymous (12:48) I know you’re being sarcastic but just curious. Are you referring to farmers in particular as welfare suckers?
Back from celebrating the birthday of my Good Old Best Friend, which involved going back and forth across Lake Champlain on a ferry. Always fun. When he retired I stole a John Prine tune and wrote him a little tribute which started
ReplyDeleteFar away up north of here
There's a guy still in my rearview mirror
Now THAT'S how to stretch a rhyme.
Reading through OFL's rants as he constantly used "ayer" as his equivalent made me smile. It's a Spanish word meaning "yesterday" and is pronounced eye-AIR, which is how a saw it. No rhyme there.
I remember learning FAMERSTAN here in NH, which if you have seen one on display, is perfect. PWN was so dumb the first time I heard it that I couldn't forget it.
Thought this was a fine Wednesday, even if wrasslin' with clues was required for a couple of answers. Congrats to CY on a nice debut and please Continue Your efforts in a similar vein.
And further congrats to @Lewis and @Nancy. Looking forward to more fun. You honor us with your presence.
@Rex is Wrongers - Merriam-Webster agrees with Rex. Again, let me suggest that before asserting something is “wrong,” spend 42 seconds with Uncle Google. This also explains @burtonkd’s difficulty with Mare of Eastown specifically.
ReplyDeletePWN appeared once before and caused much consternation then, too.
@burtonkd - Rereading Dahlgren and this was the type of G STRING referenced in the chapter I was reading last night. I guess it was still appealing to the male gaze. **Link is NSFW** (so we know @frantic sloth will now click on it. Sorry about that)
@Whatesername:
ReplyDeleteAbsolutementy: they suck up $20,000,000,000 each and every year from the regular Farm Bill alone. They, and the farm state delegations, keep vewy, vewy quiet about it all while bitching about Welfare Queens in Big Cities. It's not as if they're secretly bringing in barceros and paying them under the table. And vote for the radical Right Wing pols that so want to take us back to 1829. It's not as if food prices here are lower for all the welfare they get. All that $20,000,000,000+ comes from Blue State cities, after all.
Wow, Barbara -- There's such a thing as a "show-off-your-talents-and-we-promise-to-applaud-party"? Is that a real promise that the "talented" one can absolutely count on? When's the next party? Am I invited?
ReplyDelete@Anonymous (2:34) I suspected that was the case but just wanted to make certain before I commented further. That’s a whole lot of words you said there and claims I won’t bother to dispute but I will say in the future please don’t make them with your mouth full. I dare say I know far more farmers than you have ever met in your lifetime and I can say “absolutementy” they are among some of the hardest working human beings on this earth. And that is a “vewy, vewy” good thing - for you that is - and for every single one of us.
ReplyDeleteIf you don’t like the policies put into effect, then go after the politicians. And by the way, I’m no fan of the right wing but those farm delegations and red state representatives are there to work for their constituents. What do you expect them to do? Increase benefits for the big blue cities? Argue all you want about the cause and effect but don’t blame the farmers as a demographic for reaping the benefits of legislation designed solely to provide them with benefits.
Welfare suckers? Again, please don’t say that with your mouth full of the food brought to you by the sweat of the American Farmer. Surely you can see what a mean spirited and totally uncalled for comment that was. Or maybe you’re one of those people who thinks you don’t need farmers because you can get everything you need at the grocery store.
I too miss LMS, who could possibly remind us about the old saying in linguistics that says you can tell where someone comes from who pronounces "Mary, Merry and Marry" all the same way. In my kinda Britspeak they're very different. And I agree with Bocamp about "err" as "Ur."
ReplyDeleteSunday 0, td -4
Pwn or pwned is derived from l337 speak meaning own or owned. Google it. Or Google leet. It’s legit and I got pwn right away from this obvious and easy clue. Is been around since the 90s. Original from hackers who pwned someone, meaning they had control of their computer. Later it was used in gaming, meaning to completely dominate your opponent. Welcome to this century lol.
ReplyDelete@Joe D (12:08 PM)
ReplyDeleteThanks for reminding me of that song "Liaisons." So many brilliant rhymes: raisins and liaisons, of course, and also
🎶 At the palace of the Duke of Ferrara
I acquired some position
Plus a tiny Titian. 🎶
@Nancy (4:59 PM)
A lovely couple used to throw those parties every year in February, in the doldrumy depths of winter, to cheer everybody up. Often they chose a theme for the performance aspect of the evening, and the night I sang Sondheim it was "beautiful music in poetry or song" or some such. Alas, he died and she moved away and the Chinook Parties are no more. (They were named after the Chinook winds of western Canada -- and also the U.S.? -- which bring a foretaste of warmth and spring.)
@Anoa
ReplyDeleteWe all put things on TV sometimes = To air is human just as: We all make mistakes sometimes = too err is human.
To air something to broadast something. And you know gossips. They can't wait to broadcast their tidbits and rumors.
For those who do not follow links. PWN comes from a misspelling of OWN (PWN) and means the same as own (with a bit of extra pizzazz) and is pronounced PONE. Strictly internet info. My gaming ended with Pong Tetrus and Space Invaders. Well I still do pinball if tat counts. So I have never heard a PWN in the wild. I like @jberg thought Rex was favorably disposed to PWN but in the @Z link I did not notice that he mentioned it. And to those who were solving then you have seen it once before. And to gamers it probably feels dated.
never commented this late before, but I was tied up on a beach-and-booze-cruise. (I know y'all hate me, but thats OK.)
ReplyDeleteNo @z, I don't give a flyin' fandango what Merriam or Webster says, I have been speaking this language for seventy years and none of the theme phrases contain a word that rhymes with "mayor". Do you talk that way ?
@Joe, thanks for the Sondheim lyrics. I gotta get to that puzzle so I can appreciate Rex again.
That "Err on the g string" just makes me miss John X more than ever. The mind boggles.
@mathgent, Haven't made a fave list ever. Thanks.
@Whatsernmae:
ReplyDeleteIncrease benefits for the big blue cities?
Be careful there. For decades both the left and right have confirmed that Damn Gummint dollars flow from Blue States to Red States in prodigious amounts. Just as a reminder: The Great State of Texas (Red as the river) begged, begged I say, to be part of the Union for the simple fact: it was BANKRUPT. Same as the rest of the Red States today. Don't educate. Don't vaccinate. And so forth. Just what we need: the United States of the Confederacy. :)
Farming isn't what it was in 1829
ReplyDelete"We now have equipment that can plant 500 acres in a normal day. And it isn't difficult to find producers who farm 1,000 acres and still have a full-time, salaried job."
and
"Using the overall group's five-year average net return of $7.75/acre for corn (including government payments), Weness found it would take 7,797 acres of corn to support the family. However, using the five-year average net return per acre for the top 20% of $57.57, it would have taken only 1,050 acres. Using the same approach for soybeans, he found it would take the producer with average management 4,082 acres to support his family, while the top managers could have accomplished it on 977 acres.'
Now, that's way back when in 2003: https://www.farmprogress.com/are-1000-acres-part-time-work and written by a farm-prejudiced site. It's worse, or better depending on one's point of view, now.
Moreover, if the 'family farmers' really paid attention, they'd have, long ago, gotten rid of the pols who either refuse to disrupt, or actively encourage, the corporate agri-business takeover of said family farms. But said farmers are too easily co-opted by the cry of 'Traditional Values', which amounts to 'I ain't no city folk'.
Not that anyone will credit it, but teeVee like The Science Channel occasionally dips its toe into rural automation issues. One particular episode sticks in my lower brain stem. The farmer, fat and happy, sits in his tractor/machine and doesn't even have to steer to stay in the rows and not crush the planting: the machine is steered by GPS!! How many farmers do we need in that reality? And does it require any unique skill? S/he is told what to plant, how much of it, what (and how much) chemical to put on the field (by either the State Ag Agent or the local chemical distributor) and so on. How many farmers contract to harvest their crops? Let's go see... same source, go have a read: https://www.farmprogress.com/grains/cost-benefit-getting-wheat-custom-harvested
Now, we do need to discriminate between staples farming, i.e. mechanically harvested (wheat, corn, soy, etc.), and truck farming (fruits and veggies) which is mostly handpicked. One of these days, those brainiacs in the Big Cities will hybridize all plants to be mechanically harvestable, and no one will ever live in rural counties. Well except for the robots to maintain the machines. Just so ya know: last time anyone counted, 97% of the USofA is classified as rural but only 19% of USofA citizens live there. And these are the knuckleheads who, nearly, run the US Senate. Talk about Minority Report.
Ooohh. Ya gotta read this one. https://www.npr.org/sections/thesalt/2019/12/31/790261705/farmers-got-billions-from-taxpayers-in-2019-and-hardly-anyone-objected
"For one thing, it's an enormous amount of money, more than the final cost of bailing out the auto industry during the financial crisis of 2008. The auto industry bailout was fiercely debated in Congress. Yet the USDA created this new program out of thin air; it decided that an old law authorizing a USDA program called the Commodity Credit Corp. already gave it the authority to spend this money."
Yeah. Thank the Blue States, why doncha?
If you pronounce 'err' to rhyme with 'fur', it doesn't work very well.
ReplyDeleteoh! Christine Lavin! that's a nice treat
ReplyDeleteIndeed. I still have that CD!
ReplyDelete@Z - I followed your link and mayor is listed as 2 syllables, with a 2nd one syllable pronunciation alternative given(that does rhyme with heir, air, err), Ayer is only PPP by itself. Otherwise, I'll continue to be a nay-sayer.
ReplyDeleteAnd since when do all the non-statisticians here know what regress to the mean means? It is not regressing to your reptile mind. Surprising, innit?
ReplyDeleteThis was an outstanding Wednesday puzzle and the theme was great fun. I had no idea why PWN, my last entry, gave me the happy sound, but it’s always extra points when I see something new.
ReplyDeleteI had to stop in when I heard that Nancy and Lewis have collaborated to say congratulations and what a delight their creation will be to solve!
Anyone else initially do OFF for 42D?
ReplyDeleteAgain my newspaper ERRed by giving credit to the wrong constructor. Mine lists Byron Walden not Christopher Youngs.Rex is absolutely right about this clunker. The editor is to blame. Again he’s giving the green light to novice constructors without doing his job of properly editing them before he runs them.
ReplyDeleteYou're going to put a letter-add-on in a THEMER?!? And how many of us might know that that's a real title? Tens. Gimme a break. Bogey.
ReplyDeleteLooked a couple of (silly) mistakes up, so...
ReplyDeleteJust wasn't thinking. Guess I need to get one of those MUGs - coffee anyone?
Diana, Lady-in-Waiting for Starbucks
ROOD CAT
ReplyDeleteEWE know, TOAIRIS a HUMAN thing,
but what THE FARMER'S UNABLE TO catch
ISN'T CONTINGENT on TERI's GSTRING,
but it was FELT when he tried THE SNATCH.
--- FRIDA LEDA TROPE
@thefogman, my paper too. I guess TOAIRISHUMAN...
ReplyDeleteThat tribute puzzle from Francis Heaney was wonderful. Lots of great memories, and another nice way to remember a "titan of wordplay". Needed a treat today.
ReplyDeleteThis WED. puzzle is pretty tough, but also (f)AIR, and setting up ERR, HEIR, and especially Jane EYRE.
ReplyDeleteBeyond Jane, there are a variety of prominent ladies : FRIDA, ATHENA, TERI, LOLA, UMA, DEMI, LEDA, and ALEXA, the “Voice with an Echo".
Overall, the constructor provided something to CHEW on. I ended up chewing on oWN instead of PWN, which eluded me, leading to NAoLES instead of NAPLES.
Ack !
My paper in Vancouver, BC had the wrong constructor name too. I think this is the third time in the last couple of months. One was a Sunday puzzle for which they used a constructor and puzzle name they had used on another Sunday puzzle several months ago. Thanks to the people who mentioned that. I was wondering if it was the local people or if the puzzle arrive to them with the wrong credits. Or since the paper belongs to the Postmedia Network, I suppose it could still be an error on the part of the paper, even while appearing in different cities.
ReplyDelete