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Showing posts with label punk. Show all posts
Showing posts with label punk. Show all posts

June 24, 2012

Replacements - Safety Last (Twin/Tone 1981)

Replacements - Safety Last (Twin/Tone 1981)

The start...

In 1977 the rock music scene in Mpls./St. Paul, like a handful of other cities across the country, was erupting with bands. A couple of local guys, Paul Stark - an engineer/producer and a musician by the name of Chris Osgood, discussed starting a label to record some of these bands. They had already worked together on two audacious 45s by Chris' band The Suicide Commandos and were eager to take on a larger challenge. Looking for a third partner they approached Charley Hallman for both his enthusiasm and some necessary financial assistance. Charley's day job was writing about sports for St. Paul's daily paper The Pioneer Press but he also moonlighted as a rock critic and wanted to dabble further in the music biz. As the three began to formalize plans The Commandos accepted a major label offer from Phonogram's Blank Records and Chris suggested that I take his place. Being manager at the record store Oar Folkjokeopus and deejaying at underground night spot The Longhorn I had a pretty clear view of what was happening. In January of 1978 Paul, Charley and I formed a partnership. The objective being to record the best bands in town. We decided on the name Twin/Tone Records.

Preceding Twin/Tone and the catalysts I'm about to spell out below the scene was primarily dominated by top forty cover bands and the white blues and folk of the West Bank. The group that bridged those scenes and the one about to begin was called Thumbs Up lead by Curt Almstead and Gary Rue. They were mostly a cover band too but not the standard commercial fare of the day. They were into the British Invasion, the American Pop spawned by it and the creme de' la creme' of classic Rhythm & Blues.

And, for starters, there were four things that made Twin/Tone possible:

  1. Band: The Suicide Commandos
  2. Record store: Oar Folkjokeopus
  3. Music journalist: Andy Schwartz
  4. Live venue: Jay's Longhorn

To me, Chris Osgood (leader of The Commandos) is probably the most important rock person in Twin Cities music history. He was a catalyst and he invented something; he made it cool to be a rocker AND a smart guy. And that's what he bred, directly or indirectly. Paul Westerberg, Steve Almaas, Gary Louris, Steve Kramer, Chan Poling, Mark Freeman, Danny Murphy, Dave Pirner, Grant Hart, Bob Mould and countless others.The band was ahead of it's time with original material in a fast and furious (and often funny) style. When the 1st Ramones record came out we all thought "Cool, someone else is doing what The Commandos are doing!" They literally cut a path where there hadn't been one before and toured nationally when tour stops were few and far between. "New York, Cleveland, Denver and Los Angeles was about it" says bassist/singer Steve Almaas. "Cleveland because of Pere Ubu and Denver because of the original Wax Trax Record Store." I think local musicians today who've never even heard The Suicide Commandos owe them a great debt.

Oar Folkjokeopus was much more than just a record store - even if I do say so myself (I helped run the joint from '72 - '83). Record collector Vern Sanden bought what was already one of the best stores in town, North Country Music, and changed the name to reflect his obsession with the cool and obscure (Oar was a solo album by Alexander Spence -original Jefferson Airplane drummer/Moby Grape founder, guitarist and Folkjokeopus was an album by eccentric British folk singer Roy Harper). Vern allowed it to become a clubhouse for musical misfits of all kinds. The ad in the yellow pages read "Rock 'N' Roll Headquarters For The Midwest" and that was no exaggeration. It was the first store in the area (we used to have people regularly driving up from Chicago for instance) to stock an eclectic inventory of hard to find imports and domestic indie labels well in advance of the punk rock explosion of '76-'77. But the store didn't just cater to the underground. There was a broad selection from the fifties to the commercial fare of the day. We even moved a lot of disco records in our day! It was a hang for diehards like Steve Almaas and Ernie Batson. Gary Louris, Dave Pirner and Marty Keller. Tony Glover and Bob Stinson. Can't resist an anecdote here: little known fact - Bob was a voracious reader of all things rock and could often be found sitting on the bench in the window on 26th Street absorbing magazines and biographies in his singular way. After reading an interview with Little Richard in the NME he remarked to me that he hadn't known rock 'n' roll began "in a gay camp." When I looked at the story myself Richard was quoted as saying that a lot of rock 'n' roll's mannerisms and theatricality had stemmed from gay camp. Bob's brain just worked differently from anyone else I'd ever known. It was always a blast to have him around. Anyway, the store was more than just a hangout. The bookers from The Longhorn and later Duffy's and 1st Avenue/7th Street Entry rarely booked a show without bouncing it off someone at Oar Folk. How many people could they expect? How much should they charge? Who would be a compatible opening act? Should they do more than one night? I'll never forget in 1979 Hartley Frank (who took over the club after the former owner went to jail!) calling me one day at the store saying he had been offered a band from England he thought he'd heard us raving about called The Only Ones and, sensing they were "big, " he had tentatively asked for two nights. Selfishly I told him that yes we absolutely had to have them more than one night when one would've easily been sufficient. Luckily, the core audience of a hundred or so were happy to pay to see them both nights so the club didn't do too badly! And, the importance of the location of the store cannot be underestimated - the corner of 26th and Lyndale in south Minneapolis. Now legendary bar The CC Club was kitty corner. Vegetarian restaurant The Mudpie was next door. Everybody lived in the 'hood. I know people even moved there to be part of it. It was once referred to as "the Haight-Ashbury of The Twin Cities. " We used to joke that if a bomb was dropped on that corner it would've wiped out 90% of the local music scene!

Seth Andrew Schwartz (Andy), was from NY, went to school in Beloit, Wisconsin and ended up living in Mpls from fall of '72 to fall of '77. He was the first of many visionary local journalists. He wrote the first serious dissertation on The Commandos, had the first Ramones record before ANYBODY and was a walking encyclopedia of music present and past. He worked the counter at Oar Folk from '75 - '77 and sang and played guitar with excellent cover band Rockola. Andy went on to found The New York Rocker magazine and currently works at Epic Records as a Director Of Editorial Services.

The spot for live music was downtown on Hennepin and Fifth Street underneath a parking garage. It opened in 1977 and was called Jay's Longhorn run by one Jay Berine. It probably held 250 comfortably and there was core of 50 -75 people who came nearly every night for the first year or more. The first National act as I recall was Mink Deville but the list is endless; The B52s, Pere Ubu, Charlie Burton and Rock Therapy, Talking Heads, Blondie, The Boomtown Rats, The Police, Richard Hell And The Voidoids, The Dead Boys, Rockpile, Elvis Costello, The Buzzcocks, The Only Ones, The Stranglers, Shoes, and (Fred Smith's) Sonic's Rendezvous Band. The top of the local pops was split between The Suicide Commandos, Flamingo and Curt Almstead.

- to be continued...

TRACKS MP3 Sample
Let's Talk About It (sample)
Baby Blue Rock (sample)
Red Rocket (sample)
Mad At You (sample)
Completely Sweet (sample)
Morse Code (sample)
The One You Love (sample)
Struck By love (sample)
Tough Luck Daddy (sample)
I'm A Cat Alright (sample)
5-10-15 Hours (sample)
Anyone But You (sample)
I've Got Love (sample)
Rhythm It Up (sample)


Sheerfilth06
Produced by Paul Stark and Safety Last
Basics and mixing with Paul Stark via the Stark/Mudge Mobile Unit
Overdubs with Steve Fjelstad at Blackberry Way
Mastered by Howie Weinberg at Masterdisk

Rusty Jones
Gary Louris
Lianne Smith
Jimmy T


Released by Twin/Tone Records September 12, 1983. The project sold 1,300 vinyl copies and is "out of print."


 logo - Twin/Tone Records


last updated - June 2011

 

Between 1977 and 1994, Twin/Tone Records released over 300 records. The first project to be released on the Twin/Tone label was a nine song 7" EP (on red vinyl) by The Suburbs in April of 1978. The last project to be released on the Twin/Tone label was a live Suburbs CD released in November of 1994. During this time we worked with over 100 bands and 11 indie labels. We helped over 25 of the bands go on to major labels. We currently do not sign any bands, nor release any new projects.

Today the label is in "moth balls," finding the traditional physical CD market very unfriendly to indie labels, we wait for the alternative that digital delivery promises (hopefuly sooner than later)... Meanwhile, we have licensed some of our bigger projects (The Replacements, Soul Asylum, Ween, The Jayhawks...) to Restless Records which is owned by Ryko/ Warner Brothers. Many of our titles are available via the iTunes store or as custom burned CDs. We are making catalog items on a weekly basis.

Click on "iTunes" (left column) to see what is available in the Apple store

Click on "Vinyl" (left column) to see what original vinyl pressings are still available

At this site, browse around and visit some of the musical history made by this Minneapolis label over the past 25 years. Most of this site is being added to (under construction), the materials needed to place on the pages are in many cases long gone and it takes time to track them down.


Safety Last


project mini Safety Last
released: 1982
Twin/Tone Records - TTR 8124
(vinyl)

project mini Struck By Love
released: 1983
Twin/Tone Records - TTR 8334
(vinyl)

Mini of Project

Safety Last
Struck By Love
Twin/Tone Records
TRG 8334 (1983)

(custom burned CD available)

 

Uploaded by on Feb 22, 2010

During the first week of September 1981, Twin/Tone took the mobile recording unit and rented a bunch of video gear and recorded 15 bands live (five nights) at the 7th Street Entry in Minneapolis... These movies are from the show on September 5th. The band had released "Sorry Ma..." earlier in the year and were already working on future projects. These clips are presented as they were recorded live... in set order and very much with the tuning that troubled the night. The Replacements were the middle band of three (Husker Du closed the show) and played two 25 minute sets.

Part 2 - - Kids Don't Follow - D.E.A.D. - Love You Till Friday - Raised In The City - Shutup

 


Part 3 - - Johnny's Gonna Die - Kick Your Door Down - Dope Smokin Moron


Part 4 - - Skip It - Maybelline - I Hate Music - Stuck In The Middle


Part 5 - - Otto - I'm In Trouble - Don't Ask Why - Customer


Part 6 - - Rattlesnake - Slow Down - Hey Good Lookin'


Replacements - Safety Last (Twin/Tone 1981) The start... In 1977 the rock music scene in Mpls./St. Paul, like a handful of other cities across the country, was erupting with bands. A couple of local guys, Paul Stark - an engineer/producer and a musician by the name of Chris Osgood , discussed starti ... » See Ya at » What Gets Me Hot

June 1, 2012

STAY SICK!

 [STAY SICK!]

Anyone who likes low budget exploitation film, trash films and juvenile Delinquent film, familiar to a lot of American directors, actors and producers. But there are very few who know that in Denmark we actually even had our own equivalent of Ed Wood. An instructor who briefly lit up an otherwise so puritanical and left overlarge Danish film scene with a film that paid homage to all the 13 deadly sins, only to disappear into oblivion again. But now it will be over. STAY SICK! MAGAZINE dazzles now for the first time ever up the story of Poul Nyrup Rasmussen. The man who made the most amazing Danish film ever: STONE BROKEN "HEROES"! So bring your leather jacket and put a garage rock record on the phonograph. This is yum important!

 

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ELEMENTARY BASIC KNOWLEDGE

Front page of this issue of STAY SICK! are taken from the movie STONE BROKEN "HEROES" and the article you now have started to read about the film's director. It should be no secret that yours truly is pretty excited about both STONE BROKEN "HEROES", the film's director, his other films and on the whole story about these films. Well let us get started for Sean! Næhh hey, wait a minute! Before we start, there is something important, basic fundamental knowledge, we must learn first, otherwise it will not work. Ha? Elementary basics? Now what is that? An article about a film director and fucking some old butts movie, you're not learning to read! No, you do not, but I will probably think that there is good reason to do anyway. Like most kids have tried to play chess for example, without having learned the rules and although they probably had a lot of fun as long as it lasted, so there can be no argument about that now once more rewarding when you first learned the rules. And although there might not even have rules when you have read an article in a snotty underground booklet about some old movie, it helps it feels to have a few things in place.


Psychotronic FILM CULTURE

Logo text on the front of STAY SICK! is every time: "Devil's Sea sole psykotroniske film magazine" (OK, this time it is slightly modified, but that does not so much in this context!). What you need booklet you know, the term "psychotronic". "Psychotronic" is my own Danish translation of the U.S. "psychotronic", a term invented by Michael Weldon, editor of PSYCHOTRONIC VIDEO; the leaf, which soon for many years at the nearest has been regarded as a bible for fans of obscure films. But what is true psychotronic films? According to Michael Weldons own definition, it might be all sorts of movies, but they must have some psychotronic elements in it: People belonging to the fantastic genres, ie. film which is something that is beyond the ordinary, such as science fiction movies, horror movies, gunk-fu movies, superhero movies, etc. are psykotroniske film. Moreover, films that have achieved cult status, is also psykotroniske (unless they're too popular, even though such CASABLANCA is both a good movie and cult films, I will not argue that it is psychotronic, there is the known, but then on the other hand, the course, with Peter Lorre as clearly defined as "psychotronic" so it is naturally debatable!). And films that maybe are common enough, but trying to live that they have dismantled rock musicians or failed god bold sternness with, which often do not have a concept of play (drama). Many of the stars from blaxploitationfilmene was former U.S. Humboldt players such as Jim Brown and Fred Williamson (whose nickname "The Hammer" came from the football field where he used to hammer his opponents down!) [Not thereby said that even those two do not can act in movies (Williamson are overwhelmingly, Brown, however, has always been somewhat "stiff" in it!), but it was the only thing I could think of right now]. Also movies with people who either had been or were later politicians are psykotroniske; eg Ronald Reagan's old movies can be found in Weldons releases (which, incidentally, includes not only the magazine but also the two important encyclopedias THE PSYCHOTRONIC Encyclopaedia of FILM and THE PSYCHOTRONIC VIDEO GUIDE). Any movie with O.J. Simpson's psychotronic (not that it so that something worthwhile purposes.) Almost all films about rock play's life and (with others in the role of rock legends - filamentary pigeons mostly not in this context) because Hollywood's version of rock stars' lives are almost always hysterical misery / laughable.
Another genre that clearly achieves the status of "psychotronic" is bad keystroke film, ie. film within the aforementioned genres, which is also so bad they're good - that movie is so bad that this in itself makes them "just enjoy"! Thus, of course not to say that any movie that is bad is also good, no, no, there are plenty of movies that just are bad and do not have anything quite useful in itself, for example those police academy movies are something argt shit without equal - even if Christopher Lee was at one time. There are good bad typing, but that is also plenty of bad typing, which is just bad! I remember once when I had something extremely boring work on a ferry, a work colleague one day during a coffee break said to me that he thought Star Wars was the best sci-if movies ever made. I mentioned then that there are plenty of old sci-fi movie that is quite entertaining, for example all those from the 50s, which in reality more or less were all communist scare film (ie, they were acting on the Most of evil aliens who solely was out to gain control over / kill the righteous and God-fearing Americans, but were in fact symbols of Communists). For that said my mate that he thought the movie was bad, because in the old days you could not figure out how to create special effects in Star Wars, and so it was not longer! That the old movie could have an entertainment value precisely because special effectiveness was poor (control panels that bend in when someone goes into them or aliens / mutants / dræberdyr which were made of paper mache), it occurred to him not enter and ... well, so it is enough that most people watch movies and TV, they overlook the element that something can be hard entertaining - even if it is something bad!
So when we here in STAY SICK! once in reference to a film as being good, even if the same film of the "regular" reviewers was shot down as rubbish, it's not necessarily because we do not know what is good quality and not, but because our definition of what is good and not good is quite another. "Real" reviewers in newspapers, movies, magazines and television programs often do not give a damn idea of ​​how to deal with bad typing movie (which, by some called trash film) an, they understand it simply does not and therefore plays a secure card and calls the product poor. But this is now what: we fans of obscure films are surrounded by cultural illiterate and therefore there is so much more reason why you should be glad of your STAY SICK!
Ok, so I think we have turned the most basic rules lay ... and lets get started!


ED WOOD

Some years ago I was in Valhalla. No, I was not dead and had met Thor and Odin, but had a trip to the cinema "Valhalla" (in Melbourne) to see Tim Burton's then-new movie ED WOOD, which had its premiere. To see ED WOOD on a huge screen is an experience that everyone gets the chance, should spend on themselves. Great, I just say! Well, most of them have obviously seen the film, but otherwise is it about film director Ed Wood jr. Which 1950'erns USA laboriously began making his own films outside the big studios in Hollywood. With little money and (especially) eager but not very trained "actors", he made movies, he believed in; film which he believed had made. Hm, or maybe he made them, just because he honestly and sincerely believed that he was the next new master instructor. Like all the rockabilly cats, in the wake of Elvis (when he went in leather jacket and was raw) fully convinced thought they were the next "Elvis," the next big rockabilly hope. Often it was only for one or two single plates and then they disappeared again. The press would quickly call them failures, but if you find the old syvtommere (ie, single plates) forward (which is not hard since the happy American Tim Warren publishes them on the sampler LPs (1) down in Hamburg on Crypt Records) so you can often hear singers who did something totally crazy game that should have been a hit if otherwise there had been any justice, but who were not. And the same with many filmmakers, people who made movies with great entertainment value, well, maybe not because they were especially good, but because they had some bad key value, which meant that they still deserve their fame. Ed Wood was fortunately his place in the sun because of Tim Burton's films, and hurray for that. But it was not all equally. Some remained "famous" within the genre that they made movies, but never reached out to a large audience. There is hardly any horror movie fans who have not heard of Dario Argento, Mario Bava and Lucio Fulci, but try to ask people, even film freaks who look "normal" films, whether they know some of these directors and ten out of ten will say No. In a recent issue of Euroman they made a list of the most important Italian films, and guess yourself if you had mentioned Argento, Bava, or any other Italian genre film director. The answer is obviously no. Finally, there is also the genre filmmakers who disappear into oblivion. Would Ed Wood had achieved his fame outside kultfilmfankredse and constituencies who likes psykotroniske movie if Burton had not made the film about him? Hardly. There are certainly many crooked and "bad" filmmakers who deserve to be discovered, but who do not get it.


ED WOODS DANISH Cousin

Ok, dear reader, at long last, we are approaching the core of this article: the subject! The thing is, that we are a couple of pieces that have long been aware of a filmmaker who once long ago made some totally psykotroniske beads. Movies that had it all: "actors" who played (so that even Ed Wood would have been proud), foolishly executed fights, drunkenness, fornication, naked girls, youth crime, profanity and anything else a heart that burns for psykotroniske film, desires - and it all even added fantastic surf music. And so I have incidentally never seen (except in the title on the cover and in the introduction!) That he really was a Dane! His name was Poul Nyrup Rasmussen and made his film back in the sixties, mark well before the hippies ruined everything with their bare toes, social realism film and jingle-janglemusik. But while Poul Nyrup film contains all the right things to make him a cult favorite, so he has remained out of oblivion. Unfortunately there is no Tim Burton, who discovered him ... but so is his masterpiece, STONE BROEN "HEROES", turn on the cover of this issue of STAY SICK! - And it's probably almost as good!
Telling various American film directors story is mostly not very difficult: you'll just find some reference books, biographies and magazines about him back and voila, you can easily and quickly write a long dissertation on him. Unfortunately it is not so easy with Poul Nyrup Rasmussen. The thing is that when he was active in the '60s, he and his film well enough some publicity in the newspapers, but it was not very positive publicity. Rasmussen was actually not very welcome by the press (and which we shall enter later, he still to this day do not!) And when his career ended, there was apparently not really someone who felt the need to nedfælle his story. And therefore the information I could dig up, was very sparse. Most dates from newspaper accounts from the middle sixties, which were photocopied and reprinted in a film program sometime in the 80s in connection with the Video International released the film on video. Sorry took V.I. it is not very important to write when the various newspaper articles were from or what newspapers, so when in the following article refers to "an article", then it is what led to them. I've also got some info from Heine Sørensen, who over the years have heard a lot through the big city jungle drums and finally I have quizzed the female owner of Video Net in Korsor, who also provide information, not least because she grew up in Villa Vennely!


THE UNKNOWN DENMARK: 1960!

To give a proper view of a mostly unknown filmmaker, one must necessarily also tell about the time and place which provides the framework for the events.
In the early 60s had been in Denmark, only the state radio, ie. Danmarks Radio. Back then it meant a single TV channel, which is almost exclusively sent in the evening, and two radio channels P1 and P2. Attitude of both DR as in government was that the Danes for all the world could not fordummes. This meant that most came from the United States never really came to Denmark and who did, did so in a roundabout way, for example, the part of the new rock music, which reached the country, made it as cover versions that had been translated into Danish and was sung by Otto Brandenburg and whoever else was at that time. In any case, the part of the music, which reached a larger audience and get the charts. Plates with Elvis and contemporary artists, one could not buy in the U.S., but you had to go to Sweden if you wanted to get hold of it. You think the almost, it's a lie, but now that Elvis' records could not be bought in Denmark, so there was once a singer who began calling themselves "Melvis"! Sweden was always far ahead of Denmark when it came to pop culture, and it is really still there. In Sweden, as in the U.S. also had two public radio stations, but it got quite quickly a music channel, P3, who played pop / rock music (called "music radio"). But even that would have been in Denmark, the attitude was that American pop music was just something silly teenagers and there was actually some who were indignant that one at all could find to discuss whether we should have a popular music channel. It was then in place to Jørgen Mylius had two weekly music programs of 20 minutes with the title: "Pop music between homework" (a title which I borrowed in the last issue!). Again made sure to have your index finger promotion, it was hardly a coincidence that the music should be heard between homework! But there was obviously someone who wanted to hear the new toner. The only problem was that you could not organize an alternative radio station inside the Denmark, since the DR had a monopoly on radio and television or a privately owned radio would be closed by the cops immediately. The solution was then that some smart people slammed a radio together on a ship (yes, it is referred to always as a ship, but it was probably just a fishing boat) and then was sent pop music to Copenhagen and parts of Zealand from a locality outside Danish waters. Authorities called the course the station for a pirate radio, but really it was probably not true (without, however, I know) because the radio did not do anything illegal, as it was outside the Danish waters. But Who knows.


FRIENDS ON THE RADIO

As most know, so called Radio Radio Mercur and it was here that Poul Nyrup Rasmussen worked as a soundman in the early 60s. He also worked at another radio called DCR and (apparently) also was on a ship. In a newspaper article published eight days before the Prime Minister's first film had premiered in 1963 it is mentioned that Rasmussen was 29 years old at the time and after many long hours of calculation I have come to the conclusion that he therefore must have been born in 1934. He was a trained sound engineer and worked on Laterna Film, Danish Film Compagni and Saga Film, before he came to Radio Mercur. Rasmussen also had previously worked as a factory worker, salesman, handyman, other small jobs and he was actually also a skilled saddler! At the two stations, he met some other radio people: Preben Ploug, who was a technician at Mercur and DCR, and Preben "Basse" Nicolajsen who was a carpenter on the ships, Take Røpke, who was also engineer and Donald Dahlerup, who was speaker and reporter. These "friends" would later become important in Poul Nyrup Rasmussen's career. The case was the fact that he had long gone and messed with scripts and had felt like making your own films. As mentioned, he had been a sound engineer at various studios, he had such helped to make fellow soldiers, GIRL AND PRESS PHOTOGRAPHER, THE RICH WIDOW. The film, which they had talked about making should be about some friends from the other side of the track, that is from the "wrong" side of town, ie. from Nørrebro / Vesterbro environment rather than a Hellerup-environment! (As was mentioned in a newspaper article). After working together on Radio Mercur and DCR a while they parted: Poul Nyrup Rasmussen and Heritage Røpke went into the movie business (this info I have from a newspaper article and what it was the two did in the movie business was not mentioned), Anders Dahlerup came in at DR's radio, and Preben Ploug and Preben "Basse" Nicolajsen took a while abroad (it is unknown what they were doing there). They met from time to time and talked about the movie, and when they had money problems in place - by Rasmussen took a lot of locks, etc. (see the interview with him after the article), they went running. The roles were partially occupied by them and also had gotten hold of such Poul "Crown Prince" Martin (who was to become one of the solid players in the 3 out of 4 movies that were made), Anette Post, a dancer, later revue actress in Soweto, and a 15-year-old teenage girl named Marianne Thames, who won the role after it had launched a competition to BT, where there were 500 girls who volunteered. Together with Anette Post and instructor Solveig Ersgaardø formed Nyrup film company Penguin Films that would produce the film. Check also the interview with Poul Nyrup Rasmussen, reproduced here at one of the sides including about his thoughts about the film's budget.


BETWEEN FRIENDS

Working titles of the film was "Friends," "Love Between Friends" and "The Crown Prince and his friends." The final title was, however, simply BETWEEN FRIENDS. The film is basically about a guy who comes out of jail and meets his old buddies again. Together they make a crib, keeping a wild binge with naked girls and cool surf music, and there is also a crazy car chase, a murder and a woman is beaten down. In other words, a truly psychotronic gem. One newspaper described the conditions in the film played out in a leather jacket environment and this is what one must keep in mind when you read this "thesis" about the film, although there are listed all the things with naked ladies and half pornographic scenes, so these were so much just ingredients in a Danish juvenile Delinquent films (films about youth roots). In the film, contributes also a Danish garage rock / surf band (which was then called 'barbed wire music "- probably because the sound was so extremely" ragged "compared to what else was donated to Denmark with Liva Weel, Otto Brandenburg, Grethe Ingemann, etc.) called Weedons (2). In Rasmussen's other films also starred early 60s garage rock bands (more on them later). And let me emphasize again: we are talking about the early 1960s here, not something with something hippie-shit!
I talked earlier about radio / television monopoly conditions in Denmark in the early 60s, but there were also other problems that today are so far away that most probably do not even recognize that they exist. Most people know that Denmark was the first country to release pornography in 1970 (hm, or was it '71?) And we "tits" us (ha ha) probably a little of that we were / are other more puritanical country and we take for granted that Denmark has always been a pioneer in terms of the free sex in the media and entertainment. But actually it was quite different then in the early and mid 60s. Abroad, it was considered that perhaps godtnok Scandinavia (that in this context means Sweden and Denmark, but definitely not Norway / Finland!) To be freer in terms of sexual excesses. But unlike later compared, it was in the countries south of the film with a more "risqué" content could be displayed. Actually made the Penguin Film two versions of BETWEEN FRIENDS, namely a dimmed version of the domestic Scandinavian market and an uncut version for overseas. That is just the opposite of what the situation was later.
As Poul Nyrup Rasmussen said in the interview, which you can read after this article, then came the movie cost approx. DKK 350,000 to make and if not paid off home, so he had to work as a sound engineer again, but since he is already the following year came with a sequel, so he must have earned enough in the movie to continue. DKK 350,000 was also approx. half of what an ordinary film cost at the time. The cast was also no pay for the movie, but would share the eventual profits, and borrowed to various locations such as gas station, tavern, cottage, etc., so also here to save money.
Although BETWEEN FRIENDS today do not even look so sexually challenging like a soft porn program on RTL, so the film was back in 1963, the strongest they had ever seen in Denmark; actually said Harry Olsen, director of the company, the European Film A / S which would distribute it in Denmark, the film revels in nasty scenes and you refused to believe that even a strong beklippet version would have no chance to escape the censorship! Way to go! And a Swedish landlord named David Goldstein, who made himself into "the kind of movie," promptly secured the rights to distribute the film outside Scandinavia, after he had not even seen it, but only lurked some stills from it. Previously, the same Goldstein had success with another exploitation film; Norwegian GIRL LINE (which I do not know about). The article that I have this record from, reproduced also Goldstein expected to make a new fortune by sending BETWEEN FRIENDS, inter alia, South America. It's probably totally impossible to figure out, but it would be fun to know about the movie also saw actually came to America and how it went. Can anyone older South Americans remember it? And they have in that case lived a whole life with an idea of ​​how a Danish youth is based on BETWEEN FRIENDS? The film was also shown in Sweden under the title TONÅRSSYNDARE (translated: "Teenage sinners"!). Another thing I noticed when reading through the many articles from back then is that these films were often mentioned (negatively) as "speculative film"! Whether it was the U.S. "exploitation film (s)" had been translated or whether the phrase was a mere Danish invention do not know. But even though the Danish film in general, then in the early '60s, then was not particularly sexually challenging, so did Northern and thus Danish girls some "erotic" reputation. In the introduction to an article in Ekstrabladet Tuesday 4th June 1963 wrote a Ambrolauri in the introduction: "There are still filmmakers who live high and beautiful to deliver movies on Nordic girls' alleged erotic escapades. A new Danish film," Between Friends "will be in demand in this market. Even before the film is finished, the first movie collector volunteered"
EXTRA LEAF was not the only ones who were outraged: in Berlingske Tidende, one could read Svend Kragh-Jacobsen writes: "It's not just the talentløseste, but also the dullest and worst Danish movie that is produced in many years - to shame for those who lends his name and canvas to the "!
Later in Ekatrabladet article comes journalist into that here they went and believed that "this speculation in the Nordic girls were about to be over phenomenon," but had to find that it was not yet (because BETWEEN FRIENDS came on the scene ) and the writer begins so disgusted to compare Rasmussen's film with another speculative films that some months earlier had been recorded in Stockholm, where (according to the journalist), an Italian film company had drunk girls full and was then filmed them (the story did not mention anything about what they in general had made during filming). In addition, include a film with Elke Sommer and Paul Newman, who played respectively a German sexpot character and a writer who goes to nudistmøder and have long conversations about "the Scandinavian girls erotic emancipation"! The journalist ends disgusted with: "It is not very pleasant myth sexorgier and girls erotic emancipation in Scandinavia live thus in the best velgåenhed." I have not seen the movie referenced and the title is not mentioned (please note that it was based on a "scandalous novel" called THE PRICE, so maybe the movie was called the same). The Italian film mentioned obviously not by name. If any readers know some of the film (and / or the Norwegian GIRL LINE), then the info on these will be welcomed with open arms). Although you can smile more than the lighter frigor journalist's outrage over the mentioned movies (OPTIONAL LEAF was apparently not quite as liberal as it was later when no one at least had and still has a hand 9-girl!) Then gives article yet also reason to wonder: Some of the other articles I've read (and draws on this article) refers to BETWEEN FRIENDS was the strongest films you have seen so far, but Extra Bladet reporter writes thus in June '63, that he went and thought that these speculative film was a closed chapter. There must therefore have been others who came earlier than June '63! What was that movie? Where have they gone and it's someone that you can possibly get to see today? Would they become cult films, if they were dug up? I wrote earlier in this article that Denmark in the early 1960s was like another country, and when you add these just mentioned questions, then you feel almost as if the period was not just another country but an unknown country in a completely different dimension. Unlike for example the U.S. where you have many film magazines and fanzines to dig that kind of psychotronic knowledge forward, there's not really anyone who has bothered to do it at home, let alone have bothered making the trouble to try to maintain just a roughly overview a past that no further away than it is in the same decade, which many of us are born in.


VILLA VENNELY

The following year made Poul Nyrup Rasmussen as its next film, which was titled VILLA VENNELY. Like BETWEEN FRIENDS was created for small money and amateurs in all roles and Basse was again. The only article I could find in which a budget for the film include the Swedish parade, where it is mentioned that it cost approx. 300,000 Swedish kronor to do (for comparison, that between friends, which cost 350,000 Dkr. In the Swedish newspaper was "translated" to 400,000 SEK.). STONE BROEN "HEROES" was estimated to have cost the 250,000 Skr. The recording was made in February and March '64. Once again the protagonists young people at odds with society, this time not petty criminals on the streets and taverns, but the staff at a call girl central. Rasmussen said in an interview with Parade, the film was half documentary. He actually went so far that he called it "a simple information film with a moral message"! My own guess is that this was an attempt to get some of the criticism of life. In Denmark (and Sweden arguably) had any films not only entertain. There should be real socialism and although we are currently seeing a lot of old folk comedies on DR and TV2 from the old days, movies with Dirch Passer, Helmut Oswald, Richard ... ehh, whatever it was, they were called at that time containing only fun and games, then you should not settle the wool over your eyes and think that they were praised by the press then. They did not actually, but they were popular! - So you could keep making them.
The story is pretty simple; head of call girl center, Boss, have parties every night of the "Villa Vennely" and invites men with thick characters boys, itching in the groin and an acidic havgasse home to come and enjoy life with booze, gambling, "noisy" music and willing girls. During the day before the evening's celebration provides Basse ("mother") for the girls. One of the girls have a drug problem, Basse fooling around and a religious spritter also appear. In this movie there is even more music than in Between Friends, as "barbed wire group" Danish Sharks (3) gives several numbers with and without vocalist Anette (4). In the role of Boss Erik seen Chris and the name you noticing! Erik Chris came namely to play the main role in any Danish film ever: the role of "Devil-John" in STONE BROEN "HEROES", but more on that later! Most of the movie takes place in "Villa Vennely" which was actually a house that was owned by Leif Jedig. Leif Jedig was in the '60 's photo lab, and later it was he who started the Video Net. According moyea FILM GUIDE: DANISH FILM FROM A TO Z, then shot and let him also in the early '60s striptease movies. In 1963 he settled in Mallorca, where he shot the film Mallorca SWEET LIFE (which gets mentioned later). Also according to movie wizard, it was Jedigs turnover of 3 million annually and he was therefore easily afford this huge villa. As the usual reader of this lifestyle magazine by, then STAY SICK! Editorial office address in butt town Slagelse. Slagelse is not far from the landfill Korsor and since a year ago opened a new branch of Video Net in Korsor, so did yours truly a gas mask on and went out against this sewer of a city. Although not a place most of all reminiscent of "The Cursed Earth" in the comic Judge Dredd, can keep a collector of old, dirty video cassettes away.

  [STAY SICK! ] Anyone who likes low budget exploitation film, trash films and juvenile Delinquent film, familiar to a lot of American directors, actors and producers. But there are very few who know that in Denmark we actually even had our own equivalent of Ed Wood. An instructor who briefly lit up ... » See Ya at » What Gets Me Hot

May 20, 2012

Bananarama Humpalot

Girl group with 1986 #1 hit / SAT 5-19-12 / 1977 Paul Davis hit / Poet credited with popularizing haiku / Humpalot Austin Powers villain / Bill who composed Gonna Fly Now / Snow Russell Brand's character / Comic strip that Chic Young abandoned to create Blondie /

Constructor: Patrick Berry

Relative difficulty: Medium


THEME: none

Word of the Day: Matsuo BASHO (44D: Poet credited with popularizing haiku) —

Matsuo Bashō (松尾 芭蕉?, 1644 – November 28, 1694), born Matsuo Kinsaku (松尾 金作?), thenMatsuo Chūemon Munefusa (松尾 忠右衛門 宗房?),[1][2] was the most famous poet of the Edo period inJapan. During his lifetime, Bashō was recognized for his works in the collaborative haikai no renga form; today, after centuries of commentary, he is recognized as a master of brief and clear haiku. His poetry is internationally renowned, and in Japan many of his poems are reproduced on monuments and traditional sites. (wikipedia)
• • •
Bondage8112
Docs-google-com_2010-7-27_19-52-scaled1000-scaled1000


This was "Easy," not "Medium," for me, but when I looked at the times at the NYT site, I saw that I was kind of an outlier in that regard. Times there look pretty normal for a Saturday. I was feeling this puzzle from the get-go. I dropped ARAL (10A: Asian sea name) and BANANARAMA (14A: Girl group with a 1986 #1 hit) about 2 seconds after I started the clock. "I GO CRAZY" was a ubiquitous radio hit *just* when I was beginning to listen to the radio (19A: 1977 Paul Davis hit that spent 25 weeks in the Top 40). I don't know the comic strip "DUMB DORA," but I know "Match Game," and they used that name in their fill-in-the-blank challenges a Lot (33D: Comic strip that Chic Young abandoned to create "Blondie"). Even BASHO came swimming up out of my memory banks with a few crosses. My grid shows no write-overs. CONTI (38A: Bill who composed "Gonna Fly Now") and the ALDOUS (40D: ___ Snow, Russell Brand's character in "Forgetting Sarah Marshall" and "Get Him to the Greek") were the only total mysteries to me, and they were crossed in such a way that they barely slowed me down. After a mostly painful, sloggy week, this was like a sunny path through clear mountain air. A short path, though; normally I would feel triumphant after slaying a Saturday puzzle in 7:25, but it's Patrick Berry, so ... ALDOUS aside (give me Huxley or give me death), I wish I'd gotten to spend a few more minutes with this one. Clean, crisp, fun. Please hold this puzzle up against Every Other Puzzle from this week to see the difference between clean, conscientious, professional grid-filling and "... meh, that'll do."

Oh, one more thing: this puzzle has no Es. None. Yeah, let that sink in. My friend Andrew pointed that out to me. He was like "*this* is what I pay the NYT money for," and I was like "yeah, this puzzle's really good," and he was like "did you notice...?" and I was all "what?" and then he goes: "it has no Es." And then there were five seconds of total awed silence. And then my brain exploded.

Rule #1 of puzzle construction: emulate Patrick Berry in all things. You will never be his equal, but the only honorable thing to do is die trying.

I love a puzzle with a lot of proper nouns — as long as they are drawn from a wiiiide range of fields (TV, movies, comics, poetry, music, opera, etc.). Almost everything here seemed either very well known (e.g. GARBO) (22D: Four-time Oscar nominee (never a winner) in the 1930s) or highly inferrable (e.g. IVANA Humpalot) (27A: ___ Humpalot, Austin Powers villain)—again, ALDOUS is the exception. There are nice pairings and juxtapositions all over the grid, from the AMIGOS having TACOS at the top to the SLIPPING ON and HANGING OUT at the bottom. "I GO CRAZY" fittingly runs through AMOR (10D: Topic for Catullus). Ooh, I noticed that I do have one almost imperceptible write-over. I had FLOP when the answer was FLIP (29D: Rapid turnover). Corazon AQUINO bailed me out there (actually, her assassinated husband, Benigno, is the person for whom the airport is named — he was actually assassinated *at* the airport in 1983 — but I know the name only because of her) (35A: Manila airport name).

Bullets:

  • 25A: "___ Time," 1952 million-selling Eddie Fisher hit ("ANY") — off the "A"; what else was it going to be? Eddie Fisher was Princess Leia's dad.
  • 43A: "Clamshell" computers of old (iBOOKS) — this and HANGING OUT took me way longer than they should've. I had the "i" and MACS wasn't long enough; then I just blanked until I got some crosses. 

  • 2D: Second Triumvirate member (ANTONY) — I'd like to think I'd've gotten this without crosses, but I'm not so sure. Anyway, I had crosses, so point moot.
  • 3D: David with a role for himself on TV (LARRY) — I have a certain young constructor friend who's *kind of* obsessed, so I've had occasion to think about this guy a fair amount lately, despite my never having seen even one completely episode of "Curb Your Enthusiasm." Nothing personal. Just haven't gotten around to it. I assume I will. Eventually.
Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

69 comments:

Anonymous 12:09 AM

If a pangram is narcissistic BS, why isn't a show-off everything-but-E then narcissism squared? It contributes nothing to the solving experience, as Rex has rightly pointed out so so many times. I want a constructor's best work without these stupid nonsense constraints. Rex, I'm surprised you let that go, given your pangram fatwa.

Kevin F.

jae 12:10 AM

Now this is what a Sat. should be!  Medium-tough for me with a fair amount of zip...BANANARAMA, IGOCRAZY, MALCOLMX, ALDOUS....

Unlike Rex I had lots of erasures.  The ones that caused major problems were: naSTY - GUSTY, TApas-TACOS, JumpSIN-JOINSIN.

Easiest was SE, the rest was tough.  It helped to know BANANARAMA especially when THEBANGLES wouldn't work.   I suspect NW would be close to undoable without knowing that group.

PB again sets the standard.

r.alphbunker 12:23 AM

I conjecture that Es are used a lot in pangrams so an everything but E puzzle with no crappy fill is truly remarkable. The only substandard fill in my puzzle was the IdANA that I ended up with because I didn't want to let go of dDAY. Had I seen IVANA I would have easily given up the d.

There are no Es in my CAPTCHAs either

r.alphbunker 12:24 AM

I conjecture that Es are used a lot in pangrams so an everything but E puzzle with no crappy fill is truly remarkable. The only substandard fill in my puzzle was the IdANA that I ended up with because I didn't want to let go of dDAY. Had I seen IVANA I would have easily given up the d.

There are no Es in my CAPTCHAs either

foodie 12:26 AM

To add to the Word of the Day--In my so-called blog (under my avatar, really a few random items I have posted intermittently), I have a short review of a little book I loved called "The Heart of Haiku", with this quote from the author, Jane Hirshfield:

"As with Dungeons and Dragons a few years ago, or Worlds of War and Second Life today, linked verse brought its practitioners into an interactive community that was continually and rapidly evolving. Hovering somewhere between art-form and competition, renga writing provided both a party and a playing field in which intelligence, knowledge, and ingenuity might be put to the test. Add to this mix some of street rap’s boundary-pushing language, and, finally, the video images of You-Tube. Now imagine the possibility that a “high art” form of very brief films might emerge from You-Tube, primarily out of one extraordinarily talented young film-maker’s creations and influence. In the realm of 17th-century Japanese haiku, that person was Basho."

Anonymous 2:06 AM

Too bad there's no E in the grid. It would have been a pangram.

andra carla michals 2:31 AM

wow wow wow.
LOVE Pangrams, love a no E puzzle!!!!!
Didn't notice...thank you, mysterious Andrew!
Tho I had some Es! altho not after I had to change FORDe to FORDS and celLS to JAILS (and charadE).

Sometimes I don't get @Rex's Berry worship, but tonight totally.
Actually mostly bec of the JQKZX-ness of it all!

MALCOLMX next to AQUARIUM! @Rex's head might have exploded, and I volunteer to pick up the pieces.

I was all set to be corrected and let the world know that CALICOCAT has the same number of letters of whatever 1A turned out to be!

So to get CALICOCAT and BANARAMA off the bat (uck, sports metaphor)
i'd have to rate this easy, but super super super enjoyable to JOIN(s)IN and be HANGINGOUT with this puzzle for as long as it lasted.

I had write overs of iloilO for AQUINO...which is funny, bec I just spent 4 days in LA with my oldest friend from college, the fabulous actress Amy AQUINO (who pronounces it the Italian way of AKWEENO).

Oh yes, and I had CHablis for CHIANTI. I really need to drink more...

There was a certain poetry (altho I didn't know BASHO) with GARBO crossing a game with "a few words".

GALOSH this was fun!

Karl 3:10 AM

I instantly slammed down CHAMELEON instead of CALICOCAT...that slowed me down in the NW. Other than that, a medium puzzle with high entertainment value and good cluing. Nice Saturday!

I skip M-W 4:22 AM

Excellent puzzle, even though, contra @jae, I didn't know bananarama, Paul Davis (boring song, I think)

syndy 4:51 AM

When the cluing makes you fire up a brain cell or two and then you go "YES" instead of "WTH?" that's what it's all about!definitely EASY for a PB saturday-but pure pleasure,give the man an "E" for excellent!

Anonymous 7:14 AM

Enjoyed the Malcolm X answer on his birthday. A lot of Proper nouns that require knowledge but still uniquely clued ones as well. Liked the cluing for organist and gongs but the same clue twice seems like I have been cheated out of one clue.

Anonymous 7:29 AM

Hated this puzzle! Hate all the proper nouns! And many weren't knowable from the crosses.
I must be the Anti-Rex!!!

Orpreas nimpoke (the iPad hates this capcha!)

Rex Parker 8:00 AM

PB has never made a pangram.

I consider this his "fuck you" to pangrams. Ten times harder to make and so smooth you don't even know the magnitude of the feat he's pulling off.

I'd love a pangram if the fill were fantastic. Please read that sentence again.

A decent pangram is possible in a themeless, much less so in a themed puzzle (where grid is already strained by thematic elements). Pangram isn't the problem, per se—unnecessary overreaching is. The vast majority of the time, pangram is a bridge too far. People's failure to understand this, over and over again, completely boggles my mind.

Find me the terrible fill and I'll criticize the stunt. The opening comment today is completely fatuous, and irrelevant, bec. the puzzle is beautifully filled. If i hadn't told you about the Es, you wouldn't have found anything "wrong" with it.

You may not do stunts. Only Patrick Berry may do stunts. This also applies to low word-count puzzles.

That is all.

Jp 8:05 AM

While I like Patrick Berry puzzles, this one had too many names in it for my taste.

dk 8:07 AM

�������� (4 Four Stars)

This one had me at PINITAS.

Putting down a cork floor today… gotta quit stalling and: Git er done!

Kids. Practice safe hurricane - wear a GALOSH!

Lend me your ears 8:40 AM

Since Lepidus and Octavian didn't fit, 2d had to be Antony.

Antony and Cleopatra > Act III, scene VI

OCTAVIUS CAESAR: Caesar: and that, having in Sicily
Sextus Pompeius spoil'd, we had not rated him
His part o' the isle: then does he say, he lent me
Some shipping unrestored: lastly, he frets
That Lepidus of the triumvirate
Should be deposed; and, being, that we detain
All his revenue.

Glimmerglass 8:42 AM

I thought this was a great puzzle before I came here to learn it has no E's. Now I'm in awe of it. I think making a pangram would be easy compared to eelessness. Hats off to PB. After the recent flap about SUCK in the NYT puzzle, I'm surprised there is no surprise about GOOSING and its clue.

orangeblossomspecial 8:51 AM

Wasn't that Rick Nelson introducing Paul Davis in @Rex's video?

evil doug 8:59 AM
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evil doug 9:04 AM

Terrific, just exquisite.

Misspelled 'chiante' and thus 'Conte'. Funny. Looking at chiante horizontally, it's obviously not right. But vertically? Didn't notice.

Went with D-Day. I've heard of V-E Day, and V-J Day, but near as I can recall I've never noted the term 'V-Day'. 'Ivana' would have made it obvious, but never checked it.

My squadron was part of the 463rd Military Airlift Wing---'MAW'. And our C-130's tail ramp opened up like a big trap.

Michael: Time to forgo the debate on pangrams, no e's, so forth. Maybe post it in your Q and A or the site sidebar. It's all been said. Drop it.

Amigos next to tacos. Madrid over pinatas. Nice!

Loved 'goosing'. What's the difference between a snake and a goose? A snake is an asp in the grass, and a goose is....

Evil
...a grasp in the ass!

Sir Hillary Bray 9:07 AM

This puzzle sucks - Patrick Berry used two cheater squares! Kidding, kidding - it was an absolute pleasure.

Are LILYPADS *by* the water, or are they actually *on* the water?

I am guessing that BASHO is the only direct link between Ian Fleming and Chevy Chase. Fleming's title "You Only Live Twice" is taken from a Basho haiku, and in "Caddyshack" Chevy Chase's Ty Webb quotes the "Zen philosopher Basho" in some non-sensical way when he is giving Danny Noonan life lessons while golfing barefoot. I think it was the line about a donut without a hole being a danish. NA-Nanana...

jberg 9:12 AM

So much to love -- many already mentioned, also MAD LIBS, HANGING OUT, many clever clues. I'll just make three points.

1. I would never have written in 46A, ORDINALS, without crosses with another constructor. Somehow knowing it was Mr. Berry let me feel that this was reasonable.

2. @Rex, I thought this was pointed right at you - not only having no Es but having every other letter! I thought it was a hilarious take on anti-pangram sentiment: "OK, I better leave out a letter so I won't be criticized. How about E?"

3. I was stuck in the NW, convinced 1A must be Chameleon, until I put in XMAS, thought "hmm - there's a Z, Q, X -- guess I'll check for a pangram." Since there were no Es in the rest of the puzzle, I figured that one must be wrong.

You could argue that ORO is a little obscure, but guessable (3-letter Spanish word starting with L or a vowel), and anyway who cares with this beautiful puzzle.

jackj 9:26 AM

This puzzle proved to be a fair fight, (looking back after it was over), but it sure didn’t look like it early on.

After skimming the clues over the entire grid, my first entry was a (tentatively) confident answer to 50 across, SLIPPINGON. When things began to make sense after that one, I chanced that I was on Patrick’s wavelength and entered answers like GUSTY, JAILS, PINATAS, GALOSH, XMAS (which made MALCOLMX a gimme), ARAL and BASTA for example, and it proved to be a good call.

With so many proper nouns to be dealt with, failure always seemed just a Natick away but when CAMILLA joined the grid, the rest of the difficulties at the top evaporated and it was a clean fill to the finish.

Seeing the GARBO, “never got an Oscar” cluing is reminiscent of the Red Buttons schtick that he milked at every Hollywood tribute roast when he would chide the honoree about all the truly deserving souls who “never got a dinner”.

Samples:

“Moses, who said to the Israelites, “Stop calling me Charlton!” “Never got a dinner!”

“Eve, who asked Adam, “Does this fig leaf make me look fat?” “Never got a dinner!”

Does it matter that there were no “E’s” in the puzzle? Didn’t seem to make a bit of difference, which is a compliment to Patrick’s unparalleled talent.

Campesite 9:38 AM

Perhaps this was Patrick Berry's paean to Gadsby, a book of 50,000 words without the letter E.

Mark

quilter1 10:03 AM

Wow, more medium-challenging for me because of all the names I didn't know, but the ones I did know helped a lot. I think my brain was still asleep because it took a long time to remember MADLIBS. First entry was SLIPPING ON. And I didn't notice the absence of E until coming here.

I always like Patrick's puzzles because he makes me work hard while smiling. Now to plant my flowerpots before it gets too hot.

Bob Kerfuffle 10:15 AM

Hadn't noticed the lipogram.

Thought I had finished correctly with just one write-over at 42 A, "CBer's place", had RIG before CAB; but see I was wrong at 28 D, had DDAY instead of VDAY (which I never heard of, but see it is legit.)

mac 10:36 AM

I hate those captchas.

Awesome, awesome puzzle, even more so after hearing there were no Es in it. The fact that so many of us didn't notice makes it perfect.

Had landing and patting for goosing, what a great word! Some areas of the puzzle were easy/medium, some names made it very hard. Got there in the end.

Anonymous 10:37 AM

Took forever to get started in this one, but then made slow, steady progress after getting FORDS/FINI. Would have helped in the NW if I'd been able to recall BANANARAMA sooner - I bought the Shocking Blue single of "Venus" and still have the Bananarama CD with that song.

Nice solve. Thanks to Mr. Berry.

Norm 10:54 AM

Found this much harder than Rex since some of his gimmes (like BANANARAMA and IGOCRAZY) were total mysteries to me, but everything was ultimately inferable. Much fun.

archaeoprof 11:03 AM

Loved every minute of it. SW was incredible.

Back in college a professor told me every white person should read the autobiography of MALCOLMX. It was good advice.

loren muse smith 11:06 AM

This was simply artful! I didn’t catch its final lacking link to form a pangram – truly proof of its artistry!!!

Lots of tricky spots – I had “grant” first for GARBO and “rig” and “Sharpton” for CAB and MALCOLM X.

Cluing for PINATAS, HANGINGOUT, and LILYPADS was oh, so slick.

Thank you, Patrick. This was nothing short of brilliant!

Mel Ott 11:07 AM

I'm with @Evil. Don't see how IVANA is "highly inferrable" if the obvious answer to 28D seems to be D-DAY. VE-DAY and VJ-DAY don't fit, and don't know from VDAY.

Pretty hard puzzle for me, partly because of all the proper names. Had to go to the SW to get a toehold.

I'm pretty sure Stop signs in France and Quebec say "ARRET" so that's what I wanted for 14D. Didn't get going in that corner until the Eddie Fisher song "ANY Time" emerged from the dregs of my memory.

lawprof 11:29 AM

What an enjoyable way to spend a Saturday morning! Probably my quickest Saturday ever, with three writeovers: arret/BASTA, cells/JAILS and (duh) mandella/MALCOLMX (thanks to anonymous @ 7:14 for pointing out that today is the latter's birthday). Didn't realize that this puzzle contained no e's until I came here. Does that mean I get a DNF?

Anonymous 11:33 AM

According to xwordinfo, this is the first time there has been a New York Times puzzle that had every letter except E. I can't tell how to find out on cruciverb if that's true for other publishers but either way, quite an accomplishment! I couldn't finish. Too many names I didn't know. But I still admire it.

Anonymous 11:39 AM

Abhor too many prop. nouns in grids, so did not warm to today's crossword. But still highly applaud it. Anybody who constructs a pangram lacking -s should win high praise.

Shamik 11:44 AM

Put me in the DDAY category because both crosses made sense that way...even if in error. Glad to see Bob Kerfuffle and Mel Ott agreed with me there!

It's been a busy month and have less puzzles looked at than in a long time...so my time yesterday was a devastating medium challenging and today's time was a little over half of the time I took to solve the Friday puzzle. Made this one an easy Saturday (except for IDANA).

Bravo, bravo, bravo on the E-less puzzle. A pangram can seem a forced exercise if not constructed well. An e-less puzzle...the force and effort had to be all on the part of the Patrick Berry because the majority of people probably never noticed.

In awe of this seamless construction.

Tita 11:44 AM

Liked this - ti was challenging for me, and sadly, a DNF, but still a satisfying almost-solve.

celLS-->JAILS, sororIty-->ACQUARIUs-->ACQUARIUM.

DNF was at @r.alph's IdANA/dDAY. Also careless error - put in oNe as the song title at 25A, which took my correct BASTA and made it BASTo....
But once I submitted and was told I had errors, they were all easy to fix.

In short, very happy to not have resorted to google, in spite of a write-over graph that was nearly solid orange and reds!

@Anon @ 2:60 - is that true?? Pangram-E? I find that hilarious and very cool...

@Foodie - thanks for that - most interesting!

@Rex - loved your "e"-dialogue, and your #1 Rule.

@dk - I put down a cork floor last fall - love it! Plus, it give those cork growers in Portugal alternate distribution channels, since wine corks are going the way of the Passenger Pigeon.

Masked and Anonymo5Us 11:54 AM

@31 -- MetaBerry would never use the F-bomb on other crossword folks. This grid was probably just his way of sayin' "I am a professional. Do not try this at home."

My goal in life is now to create a puz with nothing but E's in the grid. Should be pretty straightforward, except for the cluing. "I am a nitwit. Do not invite me into your home."

Fave fillins: GOOSING & BASHO. (Sounds like the old "Death or Boola" joke.)

Fave clue: "Touching bottom?" Need to pause here and do the ol' thUmbsUp. This clue is extra cool, cuz it describes what the answer word is doing, grid-wise. Har.

Cheerio 12:00 PM

This puzzle was easy with google, hard without. The southwest corner is nice.

JaxInL.A. 12:07 PM

I share in Rex's unswerving devotion to Mr. Berry's work. Erudite, tricky, fun, clever, mmm mmm good. I didn't think I would be able to solve this as I struggled to get a toehold. Finally googled for Ms. Humpalot and worked around from there, sometimes filling in only single letters, but it all felt fair in the end.

Did you know that Patrick Berry edits the weekly (more or less) puzzle for the Chronicle of Higher Education? He brings his talent and sensibility to all of the constructors he publishes there. I find them very rewarding. You can get the CHE puzzles for free on Fridays from Cruciverb.com.

loren muse smith 12:10 PM

@Masked and A - it's been done. I think it was a Sunday puzzle, and its title was "Eland." Gorski maybe? I'm pretty sure it was a female constructor.

Masked and Anonymous 12:16 PM

@loren: Har. Naa. You way overestimate my brilliance. I'm talkin' about theme answers that look like this: EEEEEEEEEEEEEEE. Shorter answers would be stuff like EEE and perhaps an occasional EEEEEEE.
Liz Gorski would want no part of being associated with it.

loren muse smith 12:29 PM

@M and A - Too funny! Just try to avoid the "wide shoe" crosswordese, EEE. Other than that, go for it!

Masked and Anonymous 12:46 PM

@loren- yep. Cluing will be a challenge. Feel free to chip in some suggestions. So far, all I got is:
"Text generated by a keyboard jam" (EEEEEEEEEEEEEEE)

@MetaBerry: I think you're amazing, dude. I think you did this sorta thing with everything else but U's, once. Please oh please Don't do that again.

Z 1:02 PM

@Shamik, Bob, and Mel - IVANA Humpalot wasn't inferrable? In a puzzle with "Touching bottom?" as a clue, no less. I think you need to spend more time with @DK and @Evil.

It took me quite awhile to gain a foothold. Got SLIPPING ON, then slowly but surely worked my way out from the SE. The NE gave me fits. Spelling ARAL A-s-A-L didn't help any. I thought ARAL too obvious for a Saturday on my first pass, then wrote that "s" for who knows what reason when I had AMAZONIA and LILYPADS. Looking at s--APART with an aria and a who knows what for the two crossing letters had me baffled.

Another fine puzzle.

John V 1:03 PM

Just a quick drop in so say, WOW. Played a bit more toward the challenging side for me, but PB puzzles are ALWAYS a ball.

Re: GOOSING, can't help wondering what we'd get if Lynn Lempel and PB co-constructed. Just wondering.

Anonymous 1:04 PM

@Mel OTT - IVANA Humpalot is much funnier than IDANA Humpalot by a factor of very funny to not funny at all, so it had to be IVANA

loren muse smith 1:09 PM

@M and A - "Eighty" EEEEEEEE?

Tita 1:18 PM

@Mel_Ott , ED, et al....
I made the IdANA/dDaY mistake, and while the latter is a perfectly good answer, IVANA should have been very inferable -- I knew that it had to be an aptonym, and IVANA Humpalot is definitely that.
I never saw more than 20 minutes of any of those movies, but knew it needed to be something to titter over.

@Loren @11:06 - vry clvr ...too bad your nam has an in it...

And let me say that my favorite clue/answer was MADLIBS! Oh the hours we kids whiled away, with our stash of standard "sure to be hilarious or dirty or both" words that we would plunk in to every blank.

@r.alph - my capcha is e-less too...is Berry a robot?

Tita 1:22 PM

@Z - not only that, but CAMILLA is most definitely getting a good GOOSING, as M&A inferred...!

(Darn - hit my limit - better go outside now and play...)

Anonymous 1:29 PM

You know, in one sense, this is a pangram. I really doubt that PB considers this puzzle as a thumb in the eye to pangrams but more likely as a challenge to do a puzzle without the most commonly used letter. But in going that route, he created his own pangram. Did he need to use every other letter? Regardless, the feat is remarkable and even more so by utilizing the rest of the alphabet.

This was not as easy for me as others because I'm uneducated, illiterate and boring....

JFC

600 1:41 PM

First, so I don't forget, I love this puzzle. The lack of E's took it up a couple of levels, but it was already amazing.

Hand up for The Bangles before BANANARAMA. Took me a long time to get over that.

@acme--You know Amy Aquinas TOO? I love her!!!

@Mel Ott and others--In case you haven't figured it out from the others above, I inferred IVANA, never having seen the movie, by saying "I vanna hump a lot" OUT LOUD. The pun makes it inferrable. I danna humpalot just doesn't get it.

@archaeoprof--Indeed! You made me remember 1970 when I was teaching in Ft. Lauderdale the year of integration (yes. Fourteen years after Brown vs., Ft. Lauderdale integrated.) Integration was accomplished in the 9th and 10th grades first. Juniors and seniors were allowed to stay in their home school. Me: 24, white, had known maybe two black people in my life. My class: 18, all black. Don't know how much experience they had had with white people, but not much. I obviously learned way more than those kids did that year, and the first--and I mean FIRST thing I did was read The Autobiography of Malcolm X. Then I read The Fire Next Time, Black Boy, Native Son, The Invisible Man . . . you get the point.

So this is a long way of saying yes, every white person should read The Autobiography, and thank you, @ archaeoprof, for bringing me back that memory.

joho 2:06 PM

It's all been said already, but I do have to chime in with my highest praise and admiration for the one and only Patrick Berry. Wow, what a puzzle!

@Glimmerglass, interesting how many "e's" there are in "eelessness!"

Bravo, Berry!

ANON B 3:38 PM

Rex:
One of my pet peeves, and from
an English professor,yet:
"He was like" and then "I was like".
What ever happened to "he said" and "I said"?

Numbers Guy 3:42 PM

one thing that hasnt been said is an important trait of PB puzzles that may not be as noticeable to the regular posters.

i rarely do fri-sat and on those occasions measure difficulty by how many words i get. have always done well with PB grids, even the 'die is cast' week, and today was the first saturday ive ever completed with no errors and no googling proper nouns. after scanning all the proper nouns i almost didnt start, but AQUINO is a gimme to anyone who worked in manila and then went c-clockwise with the only difficulty being uRAL instead of ARAL. i didnt know the proper nouns but all could be inferred with some crosses, like IVANA from the I and BANANARAMA from the MA.

my point is that i believe another quality of PB is that he makes good interesting puzzles, without cluing that insults your intelligence, accessible to people who arent professionals.

ANON B 3:47 PM

Rex:
When did "f--- y--" become permissible? I never noticed it before.

Mel Ott 4:26 PM

@600 Ah. Thank you. You're right - the pun makes it inferrable. Didn't get the pun, and I think you are also right that one may need to say it out loud to get it.

Anonymous 5:06 PM

ANON B (Nate?) - Rex adores Patrick Berry (just in case you hadn't noticed). He doesn't mind people saying mean things about himself but he takes offense when it’s aimed at Mr. Berry. Therefore, when Rex posted that comment I think he was slightly pissed off. Actually I thought the first comment was thought-provoking, deserving more than a terse dismissal, but apart from the pangram part I really don’t think of Mr. Berry as narcissistic. From his photo he looks like one of the nicest people you would ever meet and his puzzles are generally gems. His week-long puzzle about Caesar last year was an instant classic, deserving more than Will Shortz could ever pay him. So even if Mr. Berry has never done a pangram I think today’s puzzle proves he can and possibly he doesn’t want to, which might be what Rex was saying in his terse summation....

JFC

michael 5:10 PM

Great puzzle even before I found about the e-less pangram. Put me down for idana/dday though I know something wasn't right here.

michael 5:11 PM

"knew" not know. Because I make these kinds of careless mistakes, you can imagine how I feel about captcha...

miriam b 5:41 PM

Lovely puzzle. Things are chaotic around here because I'm gradually moving things back into the kitchen after having had the floor sanded and refinished. Three coats, and three+ days of cooking and eating-at-home withdrawal. But the puzzle lifted my spirits.

I leapt on the La Bohème aria because indeed, mi chiamano MIMI, at least all relatives and some friends do.

I have a dilute CALICOCAT, my polydactyl nut case.

I was feeling very comfortable until I encountered SO MANY pop references, but I finished the puzzle and am now prepared to continue making the kitchen habitable again.

miriam b 5:52 PM

My only nitpick: I too think of LILYPADS as being IN the water.

sanfranman59 6:13 PM

This week's relative difficulty ratings. See my 8/1/2009 post for an explanation. In a nutshell, the higher the ratio, the higher this week's median solve time is relative to the average for the corresponding day of the week.

All solvers (this week's median solve time, average for day of week, ratio, percentile, rating)

Mon 6:49, 6:50, 1.00, 54%, Medium
Tue 9:00, 8:52, 1.01, 63%, Medium-Challenging
Wed 11:09, 11:50, 0.94, 39%, Easy-Medium
Thu 21:11, 19:00, 1.12, 76%, Medium-Challenging
Fri 21:48, 24:46, 0.88, 29%, Easy-Medium
Sat 24:33, 29:28, 0.83, 15%, Easy

Top 100 solvers

Mon 3:49, 3:40, 1.04, 70%, Medium-Challenging
Tue 5:02, 4:35, 1.10, 80%, Challenging
Wed 6:04, 5:53, 1.03, 63%, Medium-Challenging
Thu 10:04, 9:22, 1.07, 70%, Medium-Challenging
Fri 10:34, 12:15, 0.86, 30%, Easy-Medium
Sat 13:16, 16:44, 0.79, 14%, Easy

Anonymous 6:16 PM

Vday inferable, but forced. There were two wars going, so VE Day and VJ Day. An important distinction.

Anonymous 6:25 PM

@Nate, @JFC - Jesus guys, for one paragraph of the write up Rex chose to depict a conversation as if it were between two teenagers. For his, and our, fun. It's called creative writing.

mac 6:43 PM

You can say many things about Rex, but he's an outstanding writer! Don't you get his humor??
What a puzzle this was.

EmilyPostInstitute 7:58 PM

Put @RP 8:00AM through the rudeness filter and got

Everything PB does is smooth. For example his Sept 27, 2009 puzzle was a pangram and nobody noticed it. In retrospect, what was remarkable about that puzzle was that it was a pangram in a puzzle with a **very** ambitious theme. I am sorry that I did not notice it at the time and am glad that I have a chance to acknowledge that now.

A Berry pangram shows that the pangram isn't the problem, per se—unnecessary overreaching is.
IMO, the vast majority of the time, pangram is a bridge too far.

Acm 9:40 PM

Totally agree that this is about makiNg a puzzle without an E, the most common letter and that he had to make it otherwise a pangram because it would muddy his feat to have one say, "this puzzle had no E, and no J or Q"...
That would totally undermine the premise of writing without an E....
So he had to use all the other letters, so hardly a thumbintheeye so there to the notion of pangrams...if anything a clever homage to them!

That and what @campesite 9:36 said about the great Gadsby!

Dirigonzo 10:11 AM

I started the puzzle after work yesterday and by bed-time I had it all done except the NW corner, atop which sat my tortieCAT, hiding everything below her. She still hadn't moved this morning so that section remained sadly white. Damn that cat.

Girl group with 1986 #1 hit / SAT 5-19-12 / 1977 Paul Davis hit / Poet credited with popularizing haiku / Humpalot Austin Powers villain / Bill who composed Gonna Fly Now / Snow Russell Brand's character / Comic strip that Chic Young abandoned to create Blondie / Constructor: Patrick Berry Relative ... » See Ya at » What Gets Me Hot