Inquisitor 1307: Storm Front by Jambazi

Preamble: Sixteen cells in the completed grid, forming three interconnected straight lines, spell out a work (without its definite articles) and its format. Each clue contains a superfluous word: taken in order, the initial letters of these words spell out instructions which solvers must follow to reveal a representation of the work. One answer is in Collins but not other standard references.

This crossword for me was a series of happy events. As he did for his first puzzle, Jambazi contacted me a few months ago to see if I thought his puzzle idea was a goer before sitting down to write the clues. On Saturday October 26th I met the man, himself at John Henderson’s birthday bash in Sheffield. There he told me that he expected to have it published on November 9th and I calculated that that would be my blogging week.

So I came to solve this puzzle with a fair idea what was in store. Nevertheless, I tend to sit and do these puzzles with my daughter, elmac, as she learns how to tackle their fiendishness and, apart from letting on that I had a fair idea what the letters would spell, I told her no more about it.

Eventually elmac realized that the extra letters were beginning to form BLANK … FLOYD … RAINBOW and she had her first unassisted PDM. She asked, “is it anything to do with Pink Floyd’s album, you know, the one with the prism on it where it’s almost all black?”

First letters of extra words spelt, for the across clues: BLANK OUT FLOYD’S WORK, LP AND RAY and the down clues spelt out: COLOUR RAINBOW, BLACKEN REST which was slightly changed from the message Jambazi sent with his original idea. So, indeed we can find in the grid, Floyd’s work “the one with the prism on it”, more commonly known as (THE) DARK SIDE OF (THE) MOON and LP in the grid running through f4, g5, h6, i7, j8, i8, h8, g8, f8, e8, d8, c8, b8, c7, d6, e5, forming a triangle (or prism) shape. The RAY comes in from the left hand side a6, b6, c6 and exits the prism as IRIS i6, j6, k6, l6. At this point I did notice that the word RAIN was also there in a bow shape (i5, j5, k6, k7) I wonder if anyone else spotted that and whether it would have been accepted as the answer.Dark_Side_of_the_MoonIQ1307

The incoming RAY and the outline of the triangle DARK SIDE OF MOON LP have to be left blank (white) whilst the exiting IRIS has to be coloured like a rainbow. All other squares have to be blackened given a pictorial representation of the original album cover, which I’ve tried to represent in the enclosed animated GIF. I sincerely hope that Boreas is impressed. 😉 The original cover shows the ray coming in at angle and exiting at an angle but I guess that was just too hard to simulate in a crossword grid.

I really enjoyed the puzzle though I’m a trifle worried about Jambazi’s references to prostitutes and sex and his embarrassing discharge at 28d 🙂

Across
No.
Clue
Entry
Extra word
Letter
Wordplay
1 Chambers, when backed, put out Scottish book SMOOR BOOK
B ROOMS (chambers; rev: backed)
5 Prostitute’s shoes scattered across lovers’ street HOSTESS LOVERS
L
SHOES (anag: scattered) containing STreet
12 Standard of the Inquisitor’s advanced cryptic primarily close to the Listener PAROTIC ADVANCED
A
PAR (standard)+Of The Inquisitor Cryptic (primarily)
14 Quietly enthusiastic about National horse PINTO NATIONAL
N
P (quietly)+IN TO (enthusiastic about)
15 Keep account active and clear for tick? ACARID KEEP
K
ACcount+Active+RID (clear)
16 Oilmen Bobby and JR ultimately rule oil company in recession ROSSER OILMEN
O
jR (ultimately)+ESSO (oil company; rev: in recession)+Rule
Not sure that this clue is constructed correctly, or have I misinterpreted it??)
17 Motor part indirectly used: in bits, it’s gone to be fixed by chief CYLINDER HEAD USED
U
INDiRECtLY (minus IT; anag: fixed)+HEAD (chief)
18 TV hit Friends returns SLAP TV
T
PALS (friends; rev: returns)
19 Financial worry – end of Greece’s currency EAT FINANCIAL
F
greecE (end of)+AT (currency of Laos)
20 Lady’s rear beaten? That’s unusual RARE LADY’S
L
REAR (anag: beaten)
21 Only fish in river? Indeed RAY ONLY
O
River+AY (indeed)
23 Young maverick is one cutting both sides LONER YOUNG
Y
ONE inside L+R (both sides: Left and Right)
25 Controller of disruptive pupil – one term for teacher to reflect IRIS DISRUPTIVE
D
I (one)+SIR (term for teacher; rev: to reflect)
26 Several at one time, since it’s detailed by partners SENS SEVERAL
S
SEx (it; tail missing)+NS (partners at bridge)
29 Stray in Glasgow, worryingly – foreign car right to turn around TRAIK WORRYINGLY
W
KIA (foreign car)+RT (right) (rev: to turn around)
33 Same amount of orange and fruit halved ANA ORANGE
O
ANAnas (fruit; halved)
35 Jock’s tip off at the beginning breaks prostitute ring TOOM RING
R
Off (at the beginning) inside TOM (prostitute)
36 Conservationists know opponent FOE KNOW
K
(double def) Friends Of the Earth
37 Finished off hit on legendary record DISC LEGENDARY
L
DISCover (hit on) minus OVER (finished)
39 Urn and plain headstone sadly 5dn UNDER ONE’S HAT PLAIN
P
(def: HIDDEN; 5 down) URN AND HEADSTONE (anag: sadly)
40 Amazing tiny thing – beer-can device getting revolutionary head MIDGET AMAZING
A
wIDGET (beer can device; head: W is turned: revolutionary giving M)
41 Blame nobody, caught off guard ENSURE NOBODY
N
cENSURE (blame) minus Caught
42 Drink port parents left to crack open PALMA DRINK
D
Left inside PA+MA (parents)
43 Liberal’s one recording LITERAL RECORDING
R
LIBERAL is a LITERAL (misprint of a letter in a word) of LITERAL
44 Addict smuggled drug in wound SNEAKED ADDICT
A
E (drug) inside SNAKED (wound)
45 Murphy’s yobs mug Yankee PRATY YOBS
Y
PRAT (mug)+Yankee

 

Down
No.
Clue
Entry
Extra word
Letter
Wordplay
1 Club bar I hit six times during this? SPACER CLUB
C
The SPACER (space bar) was hit 6 times to type this 7-word clue
2 Stores in US – computers, 150 orders to be collected MACYS ORDERS
O
MACS (computers) containing Y (150)
3 36ac alternatively? In a way that’s not written legibly ORALLY LEGIBLY
L
(def: (foe OR) FRIEND; 36 across) ALLY
4 Animal enclosure open? Rounds up wild sheep OORIAL OPEN
O
LAIR (animal enclosure)+OO (rounds) (rev: up)
5 Cryptic unusually hard, retreat to absorb papers HIDDEN UNUSUALLY
U
Hard+DEN (retreat) containing ID (papers)
6 Coverage is very good experimenting with these rubber sheaths OCREAE RUBBER
R
OCREAE if anagrammatized with Very Good would give COVERAGE
7 Wear raincoat from small suitcase in Sydney? SPORT RAINCOAT
R
Small+PORT (Australian suitcase)
8 First month in Israel? Abroad British head off to get drunk TISHRI ABROAD
A
bRITISH (head off; anag: to get drunk)
9 Dry up in literature, some men search internet ENSEAR INTERNET
I
mEN SEARch (hidden: some)
10 Hard part of a fat doorman’s night ending after kinky topless parties STEARIN NIGHT
N
doormaN (ending) following pARTIES (topless; anag: kinky)
11 Daughter’s back covered in ulcers – marks from prolonged fever? SORDES BACK
B
Daughter inside SORES (ulcers)
This is in Collins Dictionary: www.collinsdictionary.com/dictionary/english/sordes
13 Poor and badly impotent old me having to withdraw TINPOT OLD
O
ImPOTeNT (anag: badly; minus ME)
22 Eternal wealth”: a timeless description of Cameron’s class AEONIAN WEALTH
W
A+EtONIAN (minus Time; (David) Cameron is an ETONIAN)
24 Beaming broadcast: tip off of WMD RIDENT BROADCAST
B
tRIDENT (Weapon of Mass Destruction; tip off)
26 Looker gets out legs STUMPS LOOKER
L
(double def)
27 Curious over current in Amazon river’s head NODDLE AMAZON
A
ODD (curious) replaces I (current) in NiLE (river)
28 Discharge convict – it’s a wrap for end of movie in film studios SMEGMA CONVICT
C
SA (it; sex appeal) around MGM (film studios) containing moviE (end of)
30 King John mostly with men having been served up grub ROOTLE KING
K
ELTOn (john; mostly)+OR (men; other ranks) (rev: served up)
31 Elegiac poem’s last word male left around end AENEID ELEGIAC
E
AmEN (last word; minus Male)+DIE (end; rev: around)
32 “Superman character is to protect earth”, Krypton welcomes opening negotiations KISSER NEGOTIATIONS
N
Superman (presumably the S on his shirt) inside IS + Earth all inside KRypton
33 Starts from anabolic steroids, Ben running a fast time ASHURA RUNNING
R
Anabolic Steroids (starts from)+(ben) HUR+A
34 Absence of a central column in all sections – even the box is empty ASTELY EVEN
E
All Sections+TElLY (box; empty)
36 Nut shipped from France to Kenya FREAK SHIPPED
S
FRance+EAK (Kenya IVR)
38 Auto Trader’s rate essentially an old estimate CARAT TRADER’S
T
CAR (auto)+rATe (essentially)

27 comments on “Inquisitor 1307: Storm Front by Jambazi”

  1. A grid with only 4 unches which I feel detracted from the puzzle somewhat. Having said that, although the top half was a relatively quick fill, the bottom was much trickier due to some obscure words and clever clueing. Overall an enjoyable puzzle on a theme of which I am very fond – thanks Jambazi. However, it would have made the denouement easier if the preamble had advised the use of pencil!

    My main gripe has nothing to do with this puzzle per se but that the extra column-inches that IQ obtained when relocated from the magazine have been taken away – prohibiting Nimrod’s entertaining and informative vignettes and (I would imagine) making it hard to actually accommodate some puzzles in the space provided.

    The powers that be at the Indy obviously prefer to allocate a whole page to the weather and pad it out with arty-farty and unnecessary sketches than to give IQ a fair crack of the whip.

  2. Enjoyable puzzle and good blog – I’d wondered how the rainbow would work! One thing to add is that the title ‘storm front’ refers to the sleeve’s designer, Storm Thorgerson, who died earlier this year.

    I managed to complete 99% of this myself, but needed parental input to help me over the line with a couple of missing letters. Which then ended up being blacked out of course.

  3. Enjoyable puzzle, although I guessed the theme before solving a clue, thanks to the title. Fans of this puzzle would also appreciate the very similar Listener 4051, Joint Wisdom by Rok.

  4. An amazingly constructed grid – very few bars and we can only see 2 unchecked cells. However we didn’t think it detracted from the puzzle.

    Thankfully we saw the possibility of FLOYD fairly early on and being of a certain age we knew what we were looking for!

    Thanks Tom W for explaining the title – we forgot to look at it – probably due to our relief at having completed the puzzle.

    Thanks also to kenmac and Jambazi.

  5. Enjoyed this one. Good crossword and excellent blog! I filled the grid in, then crayoned over it in black, leaving the letters visible. I loved the RAY and IRIS references, despite the slightly misshapen prism and dodgy optics!

    Regarding 16A, I think it is OK if read as RR (JR ultimately rule) with ESSO in, giving RESSOR. Then recession = reverse the whole thing.

  6. I enjoyed this too.
    I thought there might be a wider Floyd theme to be unearthed, with references to wealth (Money) and sheep (Animals) but think it was probably taxing enough getting the DSOTM album cover in place ! Rarely listen to it these days but still remember the wonder of it all on first hearing back in 6th form ….happy days.

    Thanks to Jambazi and kenmac

  7. Very enjoyable puzzle.

    Unlike some others, I didn’t spot the theme till comparatively late on.

    Many thanks to J and k.

  8. Thanks to kenmac for the superb blog.

    Early in April 2013, I had an idea of doing a puzzle based on the Dark Side of the Moon album cover. Prior to this, I’d only ever written one barred-grid puzzle (IQ 1257 Cover Version) — designing such grids feels a bit alien to me, hence, the paucity of unchecked cells in this grid. Anyway, I spent ages trying to fill grids (including efforts at a 13×13) and just as I was about to give in, I managed to get something that I thought was ok. I decided that before I spend hours writing clues I needed to check whether the idea was publishable. I emailed John Henderson to ask whether getting solvers to submit a completed grid in which the answers could not be read due to shading of the grid was permitted in an IQ puzzle. He replied that he didn’t have a problem with this, so, on the 15th April, I emailed kenmac to see whether he thought my grid and rough idea were decent enough for an IQ puzzle. He told me that my original instruction, formed using initial letters from superfluous words in clues, was too vague and he kindly gave me some very useful pointers to improve it. By an unfortunate coincidence, on 18th April, I found out via the Guardian website that Storm Thorgerson, the creator of the famous DSotM album cover (amongst others) had sadly passed away so I decided that this puzzle was going to become a tribute to the man. I wrote some clues and in early May sent the puzzle to Lato to test solve; at this point, I didn’t have a title for the puzzle. Lato gave me some invaluable advice to improve some clues and in the meantime I’d settled on the title Storm Front (I did toy with the idea of Storm Cover amongst others). I sent it to John H for consideration. John and his team seemed to like it and they suggested a few improvements to some clues.

    On the whole, I’m quite proud of this puzzle and I’d like to thank everyone who helped me along the way.

    For the record, the parsing of ROSSER is:

    (J)R + rev(R + ESSO). As an aside, an earlier version of this clue relied on knowing that JR stands for Jon Ross which is a bit esoteric.

    Hi of Hihoba @ 8: I don’t like this as “fodder recession” isn’t grammatically correct: the parsing needs to take the form “fodder in recession”.

    Thanks for all your comments.

    Neil/Tramp/Jambazi

  9. Beautiful beautiful puzzle. As with ‘Cover Version’ this got me re-playing vinyl. I was at Wembley for the 1974 concert, banging my head and being sick from too much Hirondelle. I didn’t find it particularly easy, but ‘floyd’ became apparent quite early on.
    Amazing pictorial blog, Kenmac. And thank you to Jambazi for your contribution to my favourite crossword series.

  10. Very enjoyable stuff. I was looking forward to sending a picture of the completed grid to a friend, but then completely messed it up by blacking out part of the prism. And then realising I own no coloured crayons!

    Agree on the gripes about the new location in the paper. What’s with the needless inches of white space at the top?!

  11. Thanks to kenmac for the blog (I’m sure he’ll fix the inverted rainbow) and to Jambazi for a very enjoyable puzzle — I’m glad that my New Year present to myself of a £10 set of 12 ‘high quality colour pencils with soft lead’ proved so useful here.

    I agree with chesley‘s gripe @1 regarding the squeezed space, and with Ali‘s comment @13 that usage of the white space at the top could free all the bottom half of the page for these puzzles.

    And a nod to Tom W @2 for clearing up the meaning of the title, which had eluded me.

    I couldn’t help wondering which fruit Jambazi had in mind for ANA = “fruit halved” at 33a: ANAnas or banANA.

    PS Bertandjoyce @2: there are 4 unches as chesley says (not 2) – row 1 col 5 & row 4 col 1, + symmetry.

  12. I endorse Jambazi’s opening comment @ 11.

    I have only been doing the Inq for a few years but I have never come across one that required such a graphic treatment of the completed grid
    So, it will be very interesting to see if the printed solution is as clearly explanatory as kenmac’s.
    (will it require 2 grids?)

  13. I take full responsibility for the upside-down rainbow (I should have paid more attention in school) and it will be the same in the official solution in the paper; which will use two grids but the solution is very squashed due to lack of space.

  14. Thanks HolyGhost – how did we miss the other two? We must have still been half asleep which probably explains why we normally solve crosswords last thing at night!

    Thanks Jambazi for the story behind the puzzle.

  15. Jambazi at #11. Sorry I don’t follow your reference to “fodder”. I didn’t mention the word!! My solution is substantially the same as yours!

  16. This is probably my all time favourite album, so the PDM when ‘FLOYD’ appeared in the extra letters was very satisfying. I spent ages cutting out little triangles of coloured paper…I hope the judges take artistic effort into account!

    I enjoyed ‘Cover Version’ too…I think the next time I see a Jambazi IQ, I’ll have a flick through my CD collection before starting…it might save a bit of time.

    I don’t know how others would rate this on the JH scale, but I found it relatively straightforward (but no less enjoyable for that). After last weeks utter defeat, I needed to restore my confidence, and this puzzle was just right for helping me do it.

    Thanks to Jambazi and Kenmac.

  17. Hi @8 & @18: the ‘fodder’ in your parsing of 16a is “RESSOR” (ESSO “in” [J]R Rule) and “recession” indicates the reversal.

    Jambazi‘s point @11 is that this is ungrammatical because “recession” is a noun, and what is needed is an adverb (or adverbial phrase or clause) such as “in recession”. Hence the ‘fodder’ in his parsing is “ESSOR” (ESSO Rule) and that’s what is “in recession”, which was my reading too.

  18. Hi @ 8 & @18: sorry for the confusion with the word “fodder“. When discussing parsings, people often talk of anagram(fodder) so I just used that.

    HolyGhost@20 is right: “recession” is a noun and can’t mean, in my view, “reverse the whole thing”, as you state. Furthermore, for your parsing to work, I would have had to use “A B in” meaning “B in A” and I don’t think that’s a clear enough instruction: “A B cuts”, for example, would be ok but not “A B in”. Others might disagree.

  19. I have just opened my Saturday Indy to find that the printed solution tells me nothing at all! I had already completed the Xword (great fun) but failed completely to spot the theme – not a fan of Pink Floyd, I’m afraid – and hoped to be enlightened this morning. Not a thing.

    Indy – it just isn’t good enough.

  20. To add to my comments (#22) – the winners aren’t published either. As that was promised 2 weeks ago, am I in a position to sue the paper?!!

  21. The winners are printed as usual in my copy (including a familiar name), along with a perfectly satisfactory elucidation.

  22. A bit late in the day (literally & figuratively), I note that the published grid also has RED at the bottom, unlike the album cover itself.

  23. Belatedly, I have just had another look at my old vinyl of DSOTM which has an opening double cover. On the front, red is at the top, which is scientifically correct. However, the rainbow continues across the open spread inside, finally emerging on the back. Here it diverges slightly before re-entering an inverted prism and leaving as a single ray (not scientifically correct but artistically acceptable!). So, if you reorientate the back cover to match the crossword grid, red is now at the bottom. Perhaps Kenmac was looking at the back when he did his blog.

  24. I don’t imagine anyone’s still looking in but at #16 Jambazi took full responsibility for the inverted rainbow. I have to agree with him because, having seen his version of the completed grid, I unashamedly took a copy of his rainbow into my animated GIF.

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