Clues are presented in alphabetical order of their
solutions, which may assist solvers in placing them in the grid wherever they
will fit.
Jigsaw |
All across entries begin with A, all down
entries with D
A setters' blog featuring the combined efforts of Eclipse and Logogriph under the hybrid pseudonym Eclogue
Appearing on the Indian 1ACross blog April 2021
One, Two ... |
Seven across entries contain triple
letters that spell TRIPLES
Feedback:-
Back to the Future |
This puzzle celebrates the “one hit wonders”, ZAGER & EVANS (the unclued entries) who topped the UK singles chart in 1968 with “In the Year 2525” (hence, back to the future). Solvers were required to highlight the central bars which read 2525.
I found a few of the
13-letter down answers early on which helped me get started with filling the
grid, but it took me a little while to realise that the 5-letter down entries
didn't end in the bottom row. I also made a little trouble for myself by
entering INTERNAL ANGLE (not in Chambers). |
An enjoyable puzzle
about this strange one-hit wonder. It took quite a while to spot the 'central
thematic material' after filling the grid - neatly concealed by Eclogue! |
I'd never heard of
any of this (I assume that puts me in the majority) but it was clear enough
what to do. Highlighting bars isn't easy in a small submission grid; hope the
marking is suitably lenient. |
Zager & Evans
jumped out pretty quickly. Good Lord. 51 years ago! I used to like that
track. == Does not seem like a
B puzzle to me, though that may be because it has a very obvious theme that I
have missed or am not familiar with. I solved all the clues, and searched for
plausible themes with EVANS and LAGER, or reversals involving KNAVE and JAGER
or REGAL. Seeing nothing sensible in the central area, I highlighted the
central column and gave my best guess for the unclued entries. |
I must have been a
bit slow because the endgame for this puzzle took longer than the solve. I
didn't enter the horizontal bars down the middle of the grid in case words
appeared. Of course, no words appeared, so once I had entered the bars, the
penny dropped and I remembered the song. |
I find the absence
of wordlengths makes a clue much harder to solve. Slow to start, therefore,
but 1a and the four 13-letter words eventually locked everything into place.
Then plain sailing to the end except for the unclued words and the theme.
EVANS seems likely, or is it KNAVE (BACKwards) and maybe REGAL. Can't make
any sense of the central letters. But stare at the grid long enough and 2525
eventually becomes so obvious that one wonders how one could possibly have
missed it for so long. Google does the rest. |
A very nice puzzle
about the role of bars in a piece of music. |
Oh dear - we
remembered this! Fell into place quite easily once we realised that a lot of
the down answers were the full length of the grid. |
Clever to use the
bars themselves as thematic objects! I'd never seen that before. Thanks for
the puzzle. |
One-hit wonders
Zager and Evans required some recollecting..... |
Very enjoyable
puzzle - a song I remember hearing in my youth. I’m hoping the reference to
“central thematic material” means just the bar pattern and that I’ve not
missed anything else! |
One of two really
neat B-grades this month. It took me an awfully long time to spot the 2525… |
Filling the grid
wasn’t too hard but I then spent most of the month trying to work out what to
highlight before the penny dropped with an almighty clang. Cleverly done,
even if I should have got there sooner. |
Although only a B
grade, this took me a long time in sorting out the end game. I spent ages
listening to that bloody song, hoping to find something that was buried in
the grid. It might have been helpful to specify the number of cells involved
and to make it clear that the thematic material was all part of a contiguous
whole. I did wonder about also highlighting the word "in" a couple
of rows above, but decided that it was included inside "decline". |
Ah, good old Google
- Evans was pretty obvious so typing in 26 -AGER's until, "Yes, of
course, I really meant ZAGER" did the trick. |
After much cold
solving I was stuck, until I used an anagram solver from the internet for 3
of the down clues (which I am ashamed to admit) and then everything fell into
place. Favourite clues: Stray remains... for MISGO and Understands that...
for REMINERALISES. |
Not quite as
fiendish as it first appeared, but it did show me just how much I depend on
answer lengths... Anyway, not too much grid-staring at the end, and I'll
always enjoy a puzzle which uses the bars in an imaginative way. Thanks,
Eclogue. |
I hadn't heard this
song before, and now I can't get it out of my head. That's a shame, because I
don't think the song is particularly great, but I can see why it was a huge
hit. If they didn't have those super melodramatic slow parts, I'd actually
really like it. Maybe I can leave those bits out when I sing it. |
This had a wonderful
PDM. I kept staring at the center column of letters, as well as the letters
around the center of the grid, but when I finally just pulled back a bit and
looked at the grid as a whole, there it was. Beautiful payoff. |
Looked like a very
tricky C grade at first glance but then saw GREENFINGERED and realised there
must be a whole host of long down answers and then it came together quite quickly. |
Another
straightforward fill followed by a bit of a struggle at the death. I did
manage to twig Zager and Evans but then spent ages carving the whole grid
into quarters ans trying to represent a number in each quarter. Of course the
various letter combos I tried made no sense. I finally remembered that I had
not added the grid lines to that central column and immediately realised what
was going to happen. A nice teaser, thank you |
Not often you see
six thirteen-letter words in a 13x9 grid! Such a cute construction. I was
originally reluctant to put the central bars in, thinking the middle column
might spell something out. When I did, it all fell into place. Very cute. (By
happy coincidence, this came out on the same day as Phi's '8x8' with another
numerical sixties song. They were fun to do together.) |