Onetime boxy Toyota / WED 6-28-23 / Saxophonist who pioneered modal jazz, to fans / Classic collection from the magazines Super Science Stories and Astounding Science Fiction / Fabric derived from wood pulp / Stereotypical shout-out on a jumbotron

Wednesday, June 28, 2023

Constructor: Matt Fuchs and Victor Sloan

Relative difficulty: Easy


THEME: animals in things — familiar phrases that involve animals being "in" things, represented visually by said animal crossing said thing:

Theme answers:
  • PARTRIDGE in a PEAR TREE (3D: With 14-Across, first (and last) gift of a seasonal song)
  • FROG in one's THROAT (10D: With 15-Across, cause of some hoarseness)
  • SNAKE  in the GRASS (30D: With 38-Across, hidden traitor)
  • ANTS in one's PANTS (35D: With 42-Across, source of restless anticipation)
  • BEE in one's BONNET (58D: With 62-Across, persistent little obsession)
  • CANARY in the COAL MINE (44D: With 59-Across, harbinger of danger) 
Word of the Day: modal jazz (43A: Saxophonist who pioneered modal jazz, to fans (TRANE)) —

In musical parlance, the word “mode” simply means “scale”; it is often used to describe a scale other than major or minor. Our present-day major and minor scales derive from the “modes” of medieval music, which in turn derive from the music of ancient Greece. Modes were used as a resource by some relatively modern classical composers like Debussy and Bartok, who felt the need to go beyond traditional major/minor tonality. In the 1950s, jazz musicians also began to work with modal approaches.

The term “modal jazz” refers to improvisational music that is organized in a scalar (“horizontal”) way rather than in a chordal (“vertical”) manner. By de-emphasizing the role of chords, a modal approach forces the improviser to create interest by other means: melody, rhythm, timbre, and emotion. A modal piece will generally use chords, but the chords will be more or less derived from the prevailing mode. [...] Miles Davis, always a trend-setter in jazz, utilized this approach in his composition “Milestones” (1958), on the album of the same name. The structure of this tune is AABBA. The A sections are based on the G dorian scale; the B sections are based on the A aeolian scale (see “The Classical Modes,” below).

His next album, Kind of Blue (1959), is the definitive example of modal jazz, and was a pivotal moment in the evolution of jazz. [...] 

The modal approach was pursued further in subsequent recordings by Miles and by other jazz artists. John Coltrane’s work in the 1960s with pianist McCoy Tyner advanced the modal concept in an intense, even spiritual direction (e.g., his albums My Favorite ThingsImpressionsA Love Supreme), and deeply affected the subsequent development of jazz. (Peter Spitzer, jazzstandards.com)

• • •

It does what it does, and then it keeps doing it. This seems like a clever concept, but it played really flat, and knowing the concept made all subsequent themers easy to uncover, and since the themers all ran in two directions, knowing the themers made whole sections of the puzzle easy to uncover. So it was a bit like a child's game, but instead of "What sound does the cow make?" or whatever, it was "What's the froggy in? What's the birdy in?" Etc. I cannot fault the execution–it's very theme-dense, and the fill holds up reasonably well under the circumstances. I also like, or at least don't mind at all, that the answers aren't perfectly symmetrical, or that the connecting words in the phrases are not all the same (i.e. "in a" "in the" "in one's"). The grid has been built specifically to isolate the themers into their own little sections, their own little habitats, and then each section has been carefully constructed around its themers. This is why you have such a segmented grid (those NE and SW corners are particularly dramatically cordoned off). So it's all very neat, but it was all very same-same, and ultimately very simple. I am impressed that they found enough animals in enough things in enough familiar phrases to make this one work out. A CAT in the CRADLE would've been remarkable (especially if you could've worked SILVER SPOON into the grid somewhere), and WOLF in SHEEP'S CLOTHING would've blown my mind. Maybe that's the issue I'm having—none of these animal phrases were big or bold. They were all very ordinary, with nothing rising to marquee-level material. [side note: I know CAT / CRADLE wouldn't have worked because of specific phrasing, just let me enjoy the song]


Was worried about the fill at first, especially with 1-Down being A-PAT (!?!), which is about as terrible a partial as I can imagine under any circumstances ever (1D: Pit-___). I also have no idea what ALPINISM is, but I'll take the puzzle's word for it that it's a mountain-climbing sport. Sounds like a lifestyle, like NUDISM, but OK, "sport," fine (now if NUDE ALPINISM is your thing ... well, respect). By the time I got to SPIT AT, I'd grimaced at least three times at the fill, and by UAR it was up to four. But grimacing mostly ceased after that. INSIDE MAN and GOES BROKE gave the puzzle some life, and the Alanis clue made me smile remembering the time in the mid-90s when NPR had an English professor on to talk about what, precisely, was—and was not—IRONIC about the putative examples of irony in the song "IRONIC." Oh my god, I just confirmed that this radio spot actually happened! I can't find a recording, but here's the description at NPR's site (The president of the MLA! 1997! I can remember exactly where I was standing in my girlfriend's kitchen when I heard this, LOL, memory is weird):


Weird to go to the boxy bygone car for an ordinary word like SCION. Maybe editors knew this was gonna play way, way too easy and they needed a speed bump or two. Four "AT"s today seems particularly bad (AT SEA AT LAST SPIT AT GRABS AT). Like ... that's a lot of "AT"s. Even if you don't care about two-letter words, that is a lot of "AT"s for a non-"AT"-themed puzzle. Yeesh. I don't know if I loved either EUROAREA or STYLE TIP, but I thought they were at least original- and inventive-seeming, so that's something (63A: Currency zone whose members include Finland and Malta + 65A: Advice on a fashion blog). 


Anything need explaining? The TAT clue was very clever, I thought (18A: Parlor decoration, for short) (a decoration you get on your body, not ... I don't know, a Tiffany lamp or decorative ashtray or something). Ooh, [Flat sign] definitely held me up for a few seconds for sure (TO LET). I was looking for a musical flat, or maybe a sign that your tire (tyre!) had a flat. I guess the "flat" part means that the phrase "TO LET" is primarily British (their version of "For Rent"). You can't argue with the clue at 45A: Noted seashell seller? SHE definitely does sell them. Down by the seashore, I hear. I've never seen her, but people talk about her a lot. See you tomorrow.

Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

[Follow Rex Parker on Twitter and Facebook]

107 comments:

JJK 6:08 AM  

The theme was cute and the puzzle mostly easy for me. But I’m sorry to say I had a Natick at AFTRA and TOLET. I couldn’t remember the collection of letters that is AFTRA and I somehow just could not parse TOLET, even though I was sure the clue had something to do with renting an apartment.

Bob Mills 6:10 AM  

Caught onto the trick quickly because PARTRIDGE was actually in PEARTREE. Knowing the trick helped me solve the puzzle in about 1/2 hour. That's how it should work...figure out the trick first.

The clue for TOLET was devious, but most of the cluing was straightforward. A liked the puzzle more than Rex Parker did.

Burghman 6:37 AM  

Still don’t understand the clue for TAT - is “parlor” another name for your body or a body part?

Burghman 6:39 AM  

Doh! “Tattoo parlor”. Literal seconds after typing my question.

Mark V 6:40 AM  

This got me as well!!

Wanderlust 6:42 AM  

I rushed through this one so fast I ended with not one, not two, but three errors. I kept fixing them and still not getting happy music. One was a silly typo, the second was SPIT on instead of SPIT AT, and the third was SwISSE instead of SUISSE. In both cases I was going so fast I didn’t check the crosses. Short holdup in the E Central area from having BULL before NYSE. I’m going to be whiny and say that WINY was the worst thing in the grid.

I cry foul on pit-APAT. Pitapat without a hyphen is one of those strange Spelling Bee words that shows up all the time because of its repetition of common letters (see also ratatat, callaloo and TATAMI). Hyphenated words are verboten in Spelling Bee, so the NYT needs to decide if it’s hyphenated or not.

I liked the theme fine - I got that they were “something” in “something” but didn’t notice that they were all animals. Again, I was going very fast. SNAKE in the GRASS is especially nice. An INSIDE MAN could be a 🐍 in the grass.

Rex, thanks for explaining the parlor decoration clue. I was thinking TAT might be another word for lace since it’s made by tatting, and parlors could have a lot of lace doilies. This is much better. Another good clue for TSA, though none will beat “wander around the airport” from a few months ago.

Nude ALPINISM is something I’d pay to see.

Anonymous 6:49 AM  

I enjoyed the subtle pro-union inclusion of sag-AFTRA, with their negotiations ongoing and the WGA still on strike. I’m a proud member of SAG-AFTRA so I appreciated the timeliness and (seeming) tip of the hat to these important unions.

Anonymous 6:52 AM  

The clue for SCION isn’t just bad, it’s wrong. Scion was not a onetime boxy Toyota, it was a brand owned by Toyota targeted to “youth”, just like Lexus is targeted towards luxury. There were multiple vehicles in its lineup and not all were boxy, only the xB (the actual name of the car, not Scion) was. The Scion tC for example was a coupe.

mathgent 7:00 AM  

The only information Rex provided today was the Wikipedia article on modal jazz. I think I understand some of it.

As for the rest. Babble, babble, babble.

I had trouble in the SW. A red wine ?ER??? had to be MERLOT. Hadn't heard of CERISE.

Enjoyed finding the six expressions.

SouthsideJohnny 7:08 AM  

Rex rated it easy, but it still had some head scratchers for me - ALPINISM and IROBOT were new to me - didn’t believe they would go with APAT as an answer, but they did (when will I ever learn?). Similarly, AFTRA, TOLET and ATSEA all jammed into that little NE section gave me fits. I also hesitated on AIOLI which is really an emulsification similar to mayonnaise, which I don’t think of as a sauce (in the sense of a finishing sauce, for example) - it’s close enough for CrossWorld, but still compounded my struggles with that NE section.

That is the first time I can remember seeing “disoriented” as a clue for AT SEA - but there it is, right in the dictionary. With all the times I have dropped AT SEA into a grid over the years, it seems like a bit of a statistical anomaly that I haven’t encountered what seems like it would be a pretty common clue for it by now.

smalltowndoc 7:13 AM  

Is a "CANARY in a COAL MINE" really a harbinger of danger? Shouldn’t it be a *Dead* CANARY in a COAL MINE?

FOR "Flat sign", I envisioned a STOP sign lying on the road covered with tire tracks.

Tom F 7:14 AM  

Yep fine.

kitshef 7:22 AM  

I normally start reading the across clues, and once I get something filled in I work the downs that cross it. On a normal Wednesday, that’s the first or second clue. Today, that was (for a Wednesday) absurdly hard. From 1A, we got:
- ALPINISM,
- AFTRA,
- A clue reading “see 3-down”,
- A clue reading “see 10-down”,
- A ‘?’ clue,
- AIOLIS,
- A clue for TAT that I didn’t understand even knowing the answer, or even after reading Rex, but needed to Google
- And, finally, a clue that is actually gettable for BOAST.

My Mondegreen for the Police song Canary in a Coal Mine was “Mary in a coma”.

Good puzzle.

Son Volt 7:34 AM  

Cute theme - stuff like A PAT, WINY, KOR etc gave an end result not commensurate.

I get it - Giant Steps, Supreme etc are iconic but try Carnegie Hall with Monk or my favorite TRANE record

Anonymous 7:35 AM  

ALPINISM??? Really???

Lewis 7:39 AM  

Oh, the theme was clever, and it was fun to try to guess what the theme answers were with little-to-no crosses. Not only fun, but when I was successful at it, it quickened the solve.

So, I liked that. But what I especially liked was that it seemed like there were more wordplay clues than usual for a Wednesday, including those smile-producing clues for TSA, TO LET, TAT, and IRS. What a lovely portent to the three trickiest cluing days of the week.

I also liked the symmetrical PuzzPair© of AT SEA and SWABS, not to mention the trio of three-letter palindromes – TAT, YAY, LOL.

Meta moment of the day: There is a fly in the ointment of using FLY IN THE OINTMENT as an answer in this puzzle, being that IN THE OINTMENT contains no letters of FLY.

What lovely pairing of constructors, one who has a tough time coming up with themes, (Matt, according to his XwordInfo notes), and the other, Victor, with a wealth of theme ideas (according to same). This joining bore sweet fruit, and may there be more forthcoming! Congratulations on your debut, Victor, happy birthday, Matt, and thank you both for a delectable outing!

andrew 7:42 AM  

Kind of easy if you know the phrases, which skew old timey.

One of my first summer jobs in high school was working for Schaper Toys, working the assembly line for ANTS in Your PANTS, Don’t Break The Ice, Don’t Blow Your Top, Don’t Spill The Beans (lots of DONT’S!) and the ever popular Cootie. Machine would mold the pieces, and I’d have to catch the components - say, the ice cubes - bag them as they came down the chute, seal the plastic bag and do it all over again 20 seconds later. Like an I Love Lucy episode - got better at it, but my early efforts were awful. I shudder to think how many sad kids there were under the Christmas PEARTREE when they didn’t have enough cubes to play.

On a separate note, an answer the constructors apparently considered was Pigs in a Blanket.

Which reminded me of this Martin Mull country western parody song from the ‘70s (shown here in all its early VHS low definition glory).

Pig in a Blanket

“And I just drank enough till she looked good to me!
and by the morning, I was sorry that I drank it!
Waking up where I did not intend to be
Between the sheets, with a Pig in a Blanket…

My friends said Roy, you’d be better off if you just go home and yank it,
But here I am, man and wife, with a Pig in a Blanket.”

Anonymous 7:45 AM  

The theme was cute and fun. More Monday kr Tuesday difficulty but that’s not the constructors decision. However... EURO ZONE is a thing. EURO AREA is not a thing. In the two decades plus that the Euro has been established as a common currency I have ONLY ever heard it referred to as the EURO ZONE. I’ve also never heard anyone refer to John Coltrane as TRANE. And if I want to show contempt to something, I spit ON it, not AT it.

maverick 7:48 AM  

Liked this one quite a bit. I think it was actually a shade on the tough side for us mere mortal solvers (17:05) for a Wednesday. Mostly due to cluing. Liked that the theme was pretty easy to suss out as that helped what might have otherwise been a pretty tough Wednesday. Though I didn't even realize it was all animals! I just thought things in things while I was working through it. Maybe realizing this would have made it easier.

Agree there were no super marque answers, but didn't mind it two much and thought partridge and canary crosses were approaching it.

I feel like we've gotten a few of these tougher Wednesdays recently that take me a little work, but are still very doable. I really like them as they are kinda at the sweet spot for where I'm at as a solver. Soon this will be Saturday, I hope. :)

Dr.A 8:07 AM  

I love Olga Tokarczuk so much but am very glad they didn’t ask for her last name!

Anonymous 8:19 AM  

I liked this one more than Rex… more fun than the usual ho-hum Wednesday.

Did anyone mention that the themers were “animal crossings” … which is kind of a theme within a theme? Very clever

GAC 8:19 AM  

Very clever puzzle, and very entertaining. Got the theme at PARTRIDGE.

Mr. Grumpypants 8:29 AM  

The canary keels over before it dies and before humans would be affected, so, yes, that was accurate. Easy puzzle but still entertaining.

bocamp 8:45 AM  

Thx, Matt & Victor, a 'hole in one'; well played! 😊

Easy-med.

Pretty much on the right wavelength today.

Fun trip! :)
___
Enjoyed Gorski's New Yorker Mon., altho a one cell dnf at the cross of the 'protagonist' and the 'singer'. Otherwise, an unusually easy Mon.
___
Peace 🕊 🇺🇦 ~ Compassion ~ Tolerance ~ Kindness, Freudenfreude, Serendipity & a DAP to all 👊 🙏

Joaquin 8:45 AM  

I hated this puzzle for a few minutes as I was put off by the cross-referenced cluing. Then the light went off and I thought, "Wow! This is a very cool puzzle." Wound up loving it.

Taylor Slow 8:50 AM  

Well, it took me longer than it probably should have to get the theme, because the first clue I filled in was PARTRIDGE, and then tried to fit IN A PEAR TREE into the corresponding across. Didn't have either 1D or 2D to show me the error of my ways, so I was trying to grasp some kind of Thursday-level wackiness, because I *knew* PARTRIDGE was right. And BTW, agree that the clue for APAT was, not to put too fine a point on it, just awful.

It was ANTS/PANTS that revealed the trick--because there was no way in the world that there could be a rebus or anything similar for "in your." I loved the AHA! moment on this one.

And I really liked the puzzle overall. INSIDE MAN, TO LET, TAT, SHE--all cleverly clued. Nice to see TRANE. Agree with @SouthsideJohnny: I don't think of either mayonnaise or AIOLI as a "sauce." More a spread.

As for 28D, it's the second day of being blanketed in Canadian fire smoke here in the Great Lakes, and today is actually worse than yesterday. How we likin' the 21st century so far?

Taylor Slow 8:54 AM  

Hey, @Trentiel and @Burtonkd and @stephanie!

I didn't get to read your responses to my question about the ACLU on yesterday's blog until late last night. I did respond, but late late late.
So in case you missed it, here's what I said to you all yesterday:
Thanks for the discussion. I did see some mentions of hesitancy in the California chapter, but there was more info related to what the ACLU eventually *did* do. But given all that, I agree: Of all the possible ways to clue ACLU, this was probably one of the most inaccurate. Thanks for the education, all!

MarkK 8:54 AM  

Mr. Shortz, if you're lurking, can you please ease up on the use of TSA? Third time in a week and 14th time in 2023.

RooMonster 9:11 AM  

Hey All !
Neat theme. Sure beats seeing "in the", "in one's", or "in a" repeated several times. Nice fill, considering all the theme they had to work around.

The NW/SE make up for Rex's closed off corners. Lots of openness, there. Tough to have stacked 8's with a crossing theme of two answers each.

Nice WedsPuz, Matt and Victor. Since it's Hump Day, how about CAMEL in a TV AD? Har, thought not. 😁

STYLE TIP: No man-bun!

One F
RooMonster
DarrinV

egsforbreakfast 9:15 AM  

After finally spying an open subway seat after standing for 14 stops, I GRABSAT before any of the other straphangers could make a move.

BTW, @Rex, ALPINISM isn’t a “mountain climbing sport.” It is mountaineering. Just like sexism isn’t a sex for sport.

I felt like a pig in shit while solving this one. Nice work, Matt Fuchs and Victor Sloan. And congrats, Victor, on the debut.

Anonymous 9:20 AM  

I thought TAT referred to needlework method for making a decorative doily for the parlor. lol

Gary Jugert 9:21 AM  

Not so Wednesday, eh? Sometimes "IN A" sometimes "IN THE" could be "IN MY" ... who can say.

Challenging but fun.

ALPINISM: Leave it to outdoorsy types to come up with some bloated term for a walk in the woods with a picnic basket, a bottle of wine, and a $20 hunk of cheese.

I had BULL instead of NYSE because it was a way better landmark.

Ug: UAR/TATAMIS. I guess this is the price of a FROG in the THROAT. WINY is a fake looking word. AT SEA & AT LAST & GRABS AT & SPIT AT & A PAT & TAT, how 'bout that?

Uniclues:

1 Pick a fight with the guy who says.
2 The last few coins drop out of the hole.
3 What grampa did when he put on his regular clothes.
4 One requiring any old tree.
5 Vacuum cleaner tries to get the cat's tail.
6 Patch depicting an iron.
7 Die on the Matterhorn.
8 Woman offers to remove her dress for a fee.

1 SPIT AT SIMON
2 PANTS GOES BROKE (~)
3 SMOTE STYLE TIP
4 ECONOPARTRIDGE (~)
5 IROBOT GRABS AT
6 IRONIC SEW ON (~)
7 GO OUT SUISSE (~)
8 MINISKIRT TO LET (~)

Barbara S. 9:22 AM  

Happy National Insurance Awareness Day. (What a boring day. But if you’re not already, get covered!)

Under normal circumstances, I pretty much hate referential clues like these (hi, @Joaquin!). I usually sit there staring, realizing that I can’t make sense of either the clue/answer I’m on or the one being referred to. Duh, me. But when I realized this was the theme of the whole puzzle, I kinda got into it. And when I noticed it was animal expressions, I liked it even more.

But I started with an error that made an early one, FROG/THROAT, hard to see. I made one of those blunders in which, being Canadian, I called something by the name used in Canada. To wit, AcTRA (Alliance of Canadian Cinema, Television and Radio Artists) instead of AFTRA (American Federation of Television and Radio Artists). Fortunately, that was easily corrected and I was away.

I didn’t know that AIOLI is always served cold, only that it’s garlicky. I’ve always thought RAYON’s being a wood product is an amusing curiosity. Love Carly SIMON! In the early days, I thought “You’re So Vain” was about Mick Jagger (that “watched yourself gavotte” line seems so apt), but I gather she’s revealed that it was mostly inspired by Warren Beatty, although she’s hinted that she had other people in mind, too. This is the first and only time I’ve seen the unfortunate word WINY. Speaking of things oenological, CERISE had me fooled: I thought for sure [Fruity red] was wine and with _ER___ in place, I merrily popped in mERlot. (hi, @mathgent.) [Comes down] was a great clue for RAINS. (And, man, it’s really coming down out there, even as I type.) I’m a fan of both “rubbernecks” and GAWKS. And I was glad to see AMOEBA spelled right, which you don’t always find in crossword puzzles.

[With all one’s heart] is an interesting clue for MADLY. I think if I were to clue it, I’d focus on lack of thought or rationality. The word makes me think of the movie, Truly, MADLY, Deeply, starring Juliet Stevenson and the late, great Alan Rickman. It’s about bereavement, among other things, and affected me truly, madly and deeply at the time. Such a sweet theme: a dead lover, who comes back as a ghost, helping his partner to get over his loss and move on with life and love.

[SB: yd -2, after a couple of 0 days, so boo. Missed these two. I really should have gotten the word in blue, but the word in red: huh? Isn’t it redundant? Do people actually use it?]

Sir Hillary 9:25 AM  

Decent enough puzzle, but Rex is right that there's a lack of sparkle. To me, the music was the best part.

When "IRONIC" was big, I remember reading various pieces on what was and wasn't really irony. Rain on your wedding day? Black fly in your chardonnay? Nah, those are just bummers. Winning the lottery and dying the next day? Definitely getting closer.

When I think of modal jazz, I think of Miles, but I guess TRANE did push it further. Love them both.

Sting could write some fun rhymes when he shed his pretension:
First to fall over when the atmosphere is less than perfect.
Your sensibilities are shaken by the slightest defect.

Chorus:
You live your life like a CANARY in a COALMINE.
You get so dizzy even walking in a straight line.
You say you want to spend the winter in Firenza.
You're so afraid to catch a dose of influenza.

[Repeat chorus]
Now if I tell you that you suffer from delusions.
You pay your analyst to reach the same conclusions.

[Repeat chorus]

In Rioja recently, we noticed that there were often rose bushes planted at the end of each row of grapevines. We asked why and were told that today they are just decorative. But back in the day, they were used to determine if there was disease in the soil, because they would show the effects well before the vines would, and the growers could take action. When my wife said, "Oh like a CANARY in a COALMINE," our lovely Spanish guide had no idea what that idiom meant.

Bob Knuts 9:26 AM  

I think the clue should have been "Pallor decoration, for short".

Glen Laker 9:29 AM  

Just because you couldn’t figure out the answer “To Let”, does not make this a Natick. A Natick is a crossing of two proper names that you either know or you don’t, especially with letters that are difficult to infer. So AFTRA qualifies, but ToLet does not. May have been a tough, even unfair cross, but not a Natick.

Liveprof 9:37 AM  

Yes, Sir Hillary (9:25).

I wish I had heard that NPR spot Rex cited on the irony in Morissette's song. Here are ten examples from the song.

(1) An old man turned ninety-eight
He won the lottery and died the next day
(2) It's a black fly in your Chardonnay
(3) It's a death row pardon two minutes too late

(4) It's like rain on your wedding day
(5) It's a free ride when you've already paid
(6) It's the good advice that you just didn't take

(7) A traffic jam when you're already late
(8) A "No Smoking" sign on your cigarette break
(9) It's like ten thousand spoons when all you need is a knife
(10) It's meeting the man of my dreams
And then meeting his beautiful wife

I don't see why (2) and (4) are ironic. Same with (7) and (10). Aren't some of them just bad luck?

Barbara S. 9:38 AM  

I forgot to ask about something that puzzled me. 53D: How is ICES the answer to [Clinches]?

Gary Jugert 9:40 AM  

@Barbara S. 9:22 AM
Nice to see you back.

bocamp 9:49 AM  

@Barbara S. (9:38 AM)

That last minute goal pretty much 'ICEd' the game! 🥅
___Peace 🕊 🇺🇦 ~ Compassion ~ Tolerance ~ Kindness, Freudenfreude, Serendipity & a DAP to all 👊 🙏

burtonkd 9:50 AM  

@Burghman - been there; something about the act of phrasing something or typing it out clarifies everything!

A quick google search tells me Nude Hiking day was exactly one week ago.

@Glen Laker, that is one of my peeves, too.

I had a good time with this one, didn't realize they were all animals until I came here...gotta run. Have a great day all!

Beezer 9:58 AM  

I felt like @Joaquin when I had my first “cross-reference clue because I usually don’t like that type. This was a time I’m glad I work on the NYT app because I could look at both the across and down (close together). Cute and fun puzzle that was in my wheelhouse!

@mathgent…today the “clue flagman” directed you to the wrong runway at 44 A! Nothing is said about wine. CERISE is a deep red and coincidentally means cherry in French.

@Southside…IROBOT was made into a movie with Will Smith. Pretty good sci-fi movie.

Kate Esq 10:04 AM  

Very easy for me - after a slight misdirect at one down (bull) I got Partridge in the Pear Tree right away and then it was off to the races. Finished in under 10 minutes, but the cluing was clever enough and the theme held together well enough that I didn’t feel dissatisfied.

Nancy 10:08 AM  

Oh, yes -- it was all going to be so easy -- until I confidently wrote in mERlot for the "fruity red" and my whole middle-east went haywire.

So now I have M--LSKIRT for the "Little attire". Is there someone named Little who wears a MAIL SKIRT? A MALL SKIRT? A MOLL SKIRT?

And what's the mA---- in the CO-L-INE?

You can see my dilemma. Nothing in that section looked possible and yet what could a "fruity red" be other than mERlot?

By the time I finally changed mERlot to CERISE, all of you, just like Elvis the other day, had already left the building.

Liked this puzzle. But I'm sure glad I don't time myself.

Whatsername 10:17 AM  

Not a fan of cross-reference clues so I groaned a little at the first themer but it turned out to be quite fun. Points off for the AT duplicate and some of the trivia was challenging - I ROBOT and TATAMIS were unfamiliar - but the crosses were fair for the most part. One of the more entertaining Wednesdays I can recall in a while. Congratulations to Victor on the debut.

@Barbara S: I always thought the Carly SIMON song was written with James Taylor in mind and didn’t even know Mick Jagger was ever in the picture. Interesting. By the way, would you please send some of that RAIN down to the Midwestern U.S. We’re starting to get a little parched and triple digit temps the next few days are not going to help matters any.

Menidia 10:26 AM  

Fun puzzle with two STEM clues!!

@prob_rick 10:26 AM  

This puzzle was more annoying than North Carolina politics. I am going to take my YORKIPOO and go to the EUROAREA and drink WINY tasting CERISE while listening to 'TRANE. I really like their air conditioners, and the son Drops Jupiter.

Anonymous 10:32 AM  

Refers to the color cherry red, not wine.

Anonymous 10:34 AM  

Wonder how constructors managed before the TSA existed!

Ride the Reading 10:39 AM  

Poor clue IMO for Scion - Scion was a Toyota brand. The models starting with x were the boxy ones, especially the xB. But there curvy models as well, such as the FR-S.

Flat sign - good clue - finally had to get it from crosses. For a long time thought it was some piece of musical knowledge that I was unable to summon.

Bought Miles Davis' "Milestone" on SACD recently, but haven't listened yet. One night last week, had the Temple classical/jazz station on, volume low - thought it was raining outside, but turned out to be castanets on a song from Davis' "Sketches of Spain."

Anonymous 10:42 AM  

Much Jagger sings backup on the song…uncredited.

other David 10:51 AM  

Fine Wednesday puzzle. Partridge in a pear tree made the schtick obvious, perhaps a bit too much so. But it was pretty nice and a bit of fun.

Being of a certain age, when I was a child only sailors and outlaw bikers had tattoos, so for me the tat in the parlor was, obviously, a doily on the table in the parlor.

I have a problem with "the Eurozone" being called the "Euroarea" and being clued with "zone". That's just wrong on so many levels.

I'm also of an age to know that nobody called John Coltrane "trane" (at least no any hip body) and nobody would think "Kor" stands for "Korea," but I long ago made peace (sort of) with all the fake abbreviations and nicknames one finds in crossword puzzles. I guess it's just too hard to create a puzzle without making stuff up for the fill.

Whatsername 10:51 AM  
This comment has been removed by the author.
pabloinnh 10:54 AM  

Still baking in Orlando. OK if you can make it from AC to the pool. Home Saturday.

This was a good time but I miss my printed version. The cross-referencing is even more annoying on a screen.

The Spanish term for mountaineering is "alpinismo". Very helpful.

@Andrew-I know that Martin Mull song but for reasons that may be obvious I do not sing it in public. I think my favorite from that particular album is "Bun and Run" (it's not dinner, its' just fun).

Easy Wednesday with a nice theme. Mighty Speedy and Very Smooth, so thanks to MS and VS for all the fun.

Sorry I couldn't comment yesterday as I could have pointed with pride to my own personal mustache, which I've had since 1969. A classic.

Ride the Reading 11:01 AM  

Meant "Milestones," not "Milestone." Drat.

Rachel 11:05 AM  

I had a hard time with this one, especially by Wednesday standards. My cat woke me up at 5am by biting my nose, and I’m not a great solver when I’m tired and grumpy. That said, “Flights” by Olga Tokarczuk was sitting on my bedside table, and it’s always fun to be reading something by an author whose name turns up in the crossword. Almost offsets the nose bite.

CT2Napa 11:19 AM  

If you have a problem with "EURO AREA" try this:

Euro area

Glen Laker 11:21 AM  

Maybe if we continue to highlight misuses of Natick, Rex will clarify for everyone. Or, I could get a life.

Anonymous 11:21 AM  

Not sure if that was from Fernwood tonight or what. I used to love Mull and Fred Willard on that show.

jb129 11:29 AM  

I liked this a lot even though it took me forever (or so it seemed) to get canary/coal mine.

Is this a first for "gawks?"

jb129 11:40 AM  

I always thought You're So Vain was about Warren Beatty with Mick Jagger in the background (unusual for him).

He (Warren) certainly "married up" since then.

Anonymous 11:42 AM  

As a student of the beautiful Spanish language, always to hear from @pabloinnh about Spanish terms and cognates. Perhaps he will tell us the difference between alpinismo and montañismo .

jae 11:42 AM  

Easy-medium. Solid and mostly smooth iteration of a familiar theme, liked it.

Did not know OLGA and ALPINISM.

Alice Pollard 11:44 AM  

I never liked the Alanis Morrisette song. Seems to me she needed a good dictionary before writing it

Masked and Anonymous 11:54 AM  

INSIDEMAN in a MINISKIRT was definitely my fave themer. Close second: ROBOT in RAYON.
Caught onto PARTRIDGE in a PEARTREE PDQ, but didn't quite connect with it bein a themer, right away. Decided to keep an open mind, and not leap into conspiracy theory mode too early. But FROG in the THROAT pretty much sealed the indictment.
Cool theme mcguffin. thUmbsUp.

staff weeject pick: KOR. Not an xwordabbreve U see everyday. Don't see it in the Official M&A Help Desk Dictionary much at all, either. Kinda cool that U can generate KOR+EA, if U execute a little runt-roll downward, tho.

A scatterin of no-knows, but nuthin too debtri-mental to the solvequest nanoseconds.
some fave stuff included: INSIDEMAN/MINISKIRT. SPITAT [fave AT-ter today, other than the followin dealie].
APAT in a TAT … har

Thanx for gangin up on us, Fuchs & Sloan dudes. And lotsa congratz to Victor Sloan on his half-debut.

Masked & AnonymoUUs

p.s. @RP: Are U startin to have real long two-way conversations, while alone with yer cats, yet? (Could be a sign.)


**gruntz**

burtonkd 11:59 AM  

@Glen, it is on the home page every day. I guess it doesn't technically need to be two proper nouns, but still shouldn't be for whenever somebody just doesn't know something...

"Anyway, NATICK— the more obscure name in that crossing(with NCWYETH)—became shorthand for an unguessable cross, especially where the cross involves two proper nouns, neither of which is exceedingly well known."

burtonkd 12:00 PM  

Hiking = alpinisme en francais

jberg 12:02 PM  

I liked the theme, and hadn't even noticed that they were all animals; now I like it even better. The only thing I didn't much like was TATAMIS. Dictionary.com allows it as a second choice, but no one would ever say it. "My room is really big? "How big?" "Three mats." Never "three tatamis."

I've never claimed to be hip, but I've certainly heard TRANE a lot, and not just for the air-conditioner brand. Here's an example.

I grew up reading Astounding, including the Asimov robot stories, which gave us the word "robotics" and the name of the company that makes the Roomba.

No problem with CERISE because I had the R and second E from crosses. And I got TAT entirely from crosses, so I hadn't noticed it until I came here. But here's a tip: if it's a three-letter answer, and the clue mentions either "parlor" or "ink," it's TAT.

Philosophical question of the day: what if the INSIDE AN is female?

Anonymous 12:25 PM  

I totally agree with your canary comment!

Anonymous 12:41 PM  

I thought for certain that Rex was going to hate it that one has to keep referring to another clue. I know I did.

Newboy 1:03 PM  

Yep, gotta agree with Rex today. Cute idea, but IRONICally not much joy? TO LET was last fill & a major problem here.

GILL I. 1:07 PM  

I'm not particularly fond of follow the bouncing ball type puzzle. We all have our own personal peccadilloes don't we.
I put my quirks aside and just did what I was told. It actually amused me. I thought we were going to have IN A type fun. Then, because I am what I am, I went hunting a bit for INA Garten. No, we have a couple of in one's and in the.
I puzzled my way down to the CANARY in the COAL MINE and got a bit sad. Why in the world would coal miners take such a beautiful little bird, who sings her heart out, into a dark, dank place to inhale fumes from the devil. Why not a rat? If the CANARY inhales dust and dies, do all the coal miners leave the dust behind? Are there still coal mines around? Do they still carry a canary?
I finished. I had one trouble spot. AIOLI (of all things). I make it about once a week. Very fresh eggs only, just a little fresh garlic, good olive oil and a dab of dijon. It's bodacious. I kept thinking maybe a pesto or something. And, of course AIOLI is always served Cole.
this SMOTE me like a Wed. should. Fun stuff, sad stuff, and wondering what it would feel like to have a BEE in my BONNET or ANTS in my PANTS.

Teedmn 1:19 PM  

IN A [PEAR] TREE was where I went for 14A and rejoiced that we were getting a rebus puzzle on a Wednesday. The IRS jarred me out of that particular misapprehension, sigh. At least that realization allowed me to fill in 1D - before that, I had thought of Pit bull or Pit cairn (too long) - just ignore that pesky hyphen in the clue.

50A's clue got my vote for best of the day, a WICK being a "Match point?".

Nice job, BROs and congratulations, Victor, on your debut!

Joe Dipinto 1:37 PM  

That's supposed to be a partridge "in a" pear tree? It's more like a partridge being stabbed through the head by an errant Bosc branch. It's a pear tree in a partridge!

I really don't think single-letter intersections suggest one thing being "in" the other thing, so for me this was kind of a dud.

Trivia: I can sing the three horn solos on the Miles Davis cut "Milestones" (originally called "Miles") – see Rex's link above. I always did Cannonball Adderley's solo an octave lower because it sounded better vocally. Unfortunately I now have to do the same with Miles's solo as I can no longer reach the higher notes. John Coltrane's solo I manage at exact pitch.

Anonymous 1:47 PM  

I still don't totally get "to let." Doesn't the owner let and the other person rent or lease? It just seems awkward to post a sign saying "this property is available for me to let to you."

okanaganer 2:01 PM  

Before I got the theme, I saw FROG THROAT and thought: that's a great name for that problem!

If you Google images of SCION cars, most of them don't look the least bit boxy, so that clue seems odd.

Barbara S, welcome back!

[spelling Bee: Tues 0, my last word this palindromic 5er. (Barbara S, your word sounds like a British thing to me; y'know what we call "yard" they call "garden".) There were a lot of compound words!]

CDilly52 2:09 PM  

So relieved to see that I am not the only one who found this one tough in spots. The easy part for me was the theme concept. I liked the consistency and that all the things “in” something were animals. Noticing that in fact made the CANARY in the COAL MINE easy to get.

Much of the rest of the puzzle gave me fits though. For all the enjoyment I got whooshing through yesterday’s, I had the opposite experience today. I felt as if I were jogging along nicely and relaxed and suddenly tripped over a pothole in the sidewalk. I was watching a replay of NWSL game so that took its toll on my attention.

Overall a nicely constructed puzzle with a very well executed theme.

dgd 3:02 PM  

I have seen Trane in print many times over the decades so it is in the language. Also it might have been more common nickname among Black jazz musicians and fans than among whites. I have learned that just because I and people I know never heard something doesn’t mean it’s wrong.
I do agree Euro area sounds odd to my ears, but it wouldn’t surprise me if it is used. Close enough for crosswords, maybe.

Anonymous 3:07 PM  

Southeast corner killed me…..

JJK 3:36 PM  

Well I stand corrected on the true meaning of “Natick”, thank you! So 9A/ 11D was just a cross I could not guess, woe is me.

burtonkd 4:44 PM  

Thanks JJK for being gracious; I felt like it was piling on senselessly after posting a 2nd time.

@Joe Pinto - weren't we all going to get together for an open mic night at some point; can't wait to hear your Miles!

Anonymous 5:13 PM  

Yes, but tatting uses a shuttle, but not a needle for making doilies and the like.

Photomatte 5:55 PM  

Fairly easy today, with two glaring errors: there's no S for the plural of TATAMI (that'd be like saying deers or elks), and when you display utter contempt for someone or something, you SPITON them/it. Other than those two constructor and/or editor errors, I liked the theme of the puzzle quite a bit.

Glen Laker 6:02 PM  

Ok, but no cross is literally “unguessable”, assuming we’re talking about a single letter per square.

Anonymous 6:03 PM  

You get a tattoo in a tattoo parlor,

SharonAK 6:11 PM  

@Masked&anonymous 11:54 Loved your "INSIDEMAN in a MINISKIRt and ROBOT in RAYON.

Thanks for the chuckle

Enjoyed the puzzle. Loved starting with pitapatat. Liked the sound, put a smiley face by the clue.
Alsoa smiey by 45.A for its clearness (Isolve on paper with a pencil in my hand

Thrasymachus 6:44 PM  

Isn’t it ironic that an interview with the president of the MLA, one of the world’s most used style guides, mistitles the song it’s meant to criticize for its linguistic imprecision?

Weezie 6:45 PM  

Way late to the party as I got in a hike this morning. Chiming in just to say that I genuinely was surprised that ALPINISM is a niche term, though clearly it is. Maybe because I watch every documentary I can get my hands on about mountaineers, or because my uncle was a mountaineering guide until he got trapped in an avalanche on Denali. They survived, having spent 4 days in a snow cave before being rescued. But during that time they were assumed lost, and my aunt made my uncle promise to give it up.

Anyway, @Gary I‘m assuming you jest, but it’s anything but a walk in the woods with some cheese in tow, lol. Check out the docs on or by Alex Honnold or other free climbers, or the truly jaw-dropping 14 Peaks, “Fearless Nepali mountaineer Nimsdai Purja embarks on a seemingly impossible quest to summit all 14 of the world's 8,000-meter peaks in seven months.”

All that to say, it’s used a lot, the word, but clearly in a tiny niche. Always appreciate the different perspectives that this blog helps me to learn about.

Joe Dipinto 7:17 PM  

@burtonkd – well we've broached the possibility of a little NYC get-together in the past, but I don't know if it was for an open mic night. (Anyway, my voice is kind of hoarse right now, as I found out when I tried to sing the solos earlier.)

On an unrelated note, I love the three letters to the Times today regarding "Andy Warhol and 'Fair Use' in Art".

Anonymous 8:47 PM  

Anonymous 6:52am The clue that a SCION was a boxy Toyota does not at all imply that all Scions were boxy. The clue is fine.

Anonymous 8:51 PM  

@Anonymous 8:19 AM - very astute!

Anonymous 9:13 PM  

Happy Kine and the Mirthmakers!

jcal 9:50 PM  

Back in the 1950s there was a group of NY college students (mostly) who were avid rock climbers. They were called the Vulgarians. One of the things they liked to do was do difficult climbs in the nude. (There are lots of photos). Hence Nudist Alpinists.

Anonymous 10:59 PM  

It’s a sports term: “with only 14 seconds left in the game, Steph Curry’s three-pointer iced [clinched] it for the Warriors.

Anonymous 12:18 AM  

Just as notes or, like Eddie Henderson - vocalese?

Anonymous 2:33 PM  

Depends on your...uh...perspective@

Made in Japan 7:56 PM  

Like jberg and photomatte, I wasn't a fan of the "S" at the end of TATAMI, though it wasn't as bad as a puzzle from some years back that treated SUMOS as though it was a way of referring to sumo wrestlers.

Anonymous 2:22 PM  

The words pig and blanket share no common letters. I doubt the constructors “apparently considered” it for long.

Anonymous 2:26 PM  

Yes, but a canary that does not keep over and/or die is not an omen. Quite the opposite. So a canary is not an omen, a dying or dead one is.

Anonymous 11:27 AM  

A borderline acceptable puzzle. But these are new constructors so WS is giving them a break I guess. That’s fine but maybe the editor could do a little editing to improve the finished product before it goes to print.

spacecraft 11:29 AM  

Nice, easy theme, no revealer required, elegantly simple. Fill also above average, only EUROAREA seems strained. Solid birdie.

Wordle bogey, but for a word with a repeated letter--and one that hasn't been in use since biblical times--I'm calling it a par.

Burma Shave 12:15 PM  

MINE ATLAST

LEIA wore A MINISKIRT
TO GOOUT in SIMON's van,
"BRO, your STYLE, no PANTS or shirt,
you MAE BEE my INSIDEMAN."

--- GENE KENT

rondo 12:39 PM  

A puz for the IN crowd. A former co-worker told of working at Target in his youth and there would be quite a stir (maybe an ado) whenever the new Carly SIMON album arrived. Yeah baby.
Noticed: GRABSAT SPATAT ATSEA ATLAST; ONEI IROBOT; GOOUT GOESBROKE.
Happy belated bdays to @spacey and @D,LIW. Many more!
Wordle par. Yeah, biblical.
BTW, I'm still the reigning Rookie of the Year of MN Xwords. Had my tee shirt on yesterday: "do it in ink"

Anonymous 4:31 PM  

The trouble with the gimmick is the words that tie together the two crossing words are not the same all the way through. It’s a PARTRIDGE in a PEARTREE. A FROG in my THROAT. A SNAKE in the GRASS. A CANARY in the COALMINE. And a BEE in your BONNET. Can’t understand why this one got the okay from the editor.

Anonymous 4:43 PM  

@Anonymous 1:47pm:
America: for rent
Great Britain: to let

Anonymous 5:23 PM  

Whenever I hear the car brand Scion, I always picture the very boxy first generation xB, also known as an xBox, but among aficionados called a Toaster. My friend still has one, and I've met a couple who has had 4 of them.

Diana, LIW 8:03 PM  

A little CANARY helped me finish up in the SE.

Thanks to @Spacey and @Rondo for the b-day wishes.

And I, too, wear the "do it in ink" t-shirt - to the gym.

Diana, Lady-in-Waiting for Crosswords

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