Q: Name a musical instrument, change the third letter to a different letter and double the last letter. The result will name a famous singer, in two words. Who is the singer and what is the instrument?First, here's a list of musical instruments courtesy of Wikipedia. I had to see it a couple of times before I found the answer. Hint, if you are young you may not know this singer... go ask your Mom or Dad.
Edit: My first hint was that the list contained the instrument, but as a singular noun. The second hint was to "The Mamas and the Papas".
A: MARACAS --> MAMA CASS
I expect most will solve this quickly, probably by tomorrow.
ReplyDeleteI hope my hint is not something that can give me a black eye. The instrument appears in the list Blain cited as it is usually used. Curiously, it does not appear that way in the dictionarys I usually consult, even as an an amplification.
ReplyDeleteI don't see any problem with your hint, except you left off an important last letter --> Blaine
ReplyDeleteBlaine: Is this singer also known as a director of adult films? Or does this puzzle have more than one answer?
ReplyDeleteNo adult films as far as I know. Blaine's hint should clue you in. I almost choked when I read it.
ReplyDelete- Other Ben
Was hanging out with both my parents and my girl's parents this week. Normally we'd play cards, but just to shake things up we tried this week's puzzle. Didn't take too long.
ReplyDeleteAnd, Plume, the answer is NOT Asia Carrera's former husband! :-)
The singer in question died right after a sold-out performance at the height of their solo career. Strangely, another equally famous (depending on one's tastes?) performer would die in the same flat about four years later. The second performer is someone more likely to have been familiar with the instrument in question...
ReplyDeleteThere are subtle deceptions (or unintended misdirections?) in the clues Will offered.
As to whether this singer should be called famous... in their time they were considered a pretty big talent.
And the instrument in question have been around a lot longer than the person. Oh shoot, a typo...
Y'know, I think one could maybe get the idea from the tone and language of my last comment that I've been sucked into USA's House marathon...
ReplyDeleteI guess maybe you were hoping for a clue, but I don't wanna go where you wanna go right now, sorry.
Carl, last week's Puzzler was very difficult, but we won't get fooled again.
ReplyDeleteplummew, I came up with the exact same film director as you. If I figure out the real answer of the singer and the instrument, I'm going to send it into NPR and include the alternate answer of the director, just to see if Will accepts it.
ReplyDeleteIt's so chilly here in Chicago, but my pastor likes it that way.
ReplyDeleteI'll interject here that if you're looking for clues as to what type of instrument it is, don't do word-association with Chicago.
ReplyDeleteJust watched a House episode in which all but the last minute of the show was a series of hallucinations in the main character's head. House came to the conclusion that he needed to do something so extreme that it could never happen in the real world to snap himself out of it. That was interesting.
Wonder what it would be like to watch a marathon of I Love Lucy after not having watched that show for so long...
That show had some great moments, like the scene where Lucy and Harpo Marx recreated a classic Harpo routine involving a mirror. And those scenes at Desi's club? Great fun and good music. Lots of talent. Lots of instruments. Yep, good show.
I'm a bit confused as to the relationship between singers and porn directors.
ReplyDeleteAm I missing something here?
After all, you can also take the most famous *martial arts* film star of all time, remove the second and fourth letters of his first name, change the third letter of the resulting three-letter word, and then remove the last letter of his last name. You'll also find a musical instrument there, reading left to right.
But you could also just read a book or something. Or watch I Love Lucy.
- Other Ben
Ben, he probably knows you're gonna stay cold.
ReplyDeleteI heard Piere SD had a windchill of -39 this morning! Great way to start a Monday.
Blaine
ReplyDeleteI was going to add that last letter if the ladies were having trouble, but no need now.
Thank you Blaine for this wonderful website. It is so stimulating to read the posts on here. I find it so relaxing during my breaks from writing lectures.
ReplyDeleteGreat site, Blaine. Seaason's greetings, everyone. Ugh, too many Holiday parites, too many sweets. Is everyone getting fat?
ReplyDeleteSean, you gonna eat that sandwich?
ReplyDeleteNatasha, your link led me to the answer after reading Blaine's clue a few times. Thank you for sharing!!
ReplyDeleteGreat, Don.
ReplyDeleteHere's a bonus puzzle:
ReplyDeleteRearrange the letters in the name (first and last) of this week's singer to form a 3-word phrase meaning roughly "Reduced fossil-fuel law."
Phredp,
ReplyDeleteYour hint sounds good to me. In fact, it was all I hoped my hint on Sunday would be, but I couldn't guarantee that anyone would get it. Oh well, sometimes it just turns out that way.
Lorenzo,
ReplyDeleteAt first, I thought you were missing a letter in your puzzle. But I looked it up and you are exactly right.
What's interesting about the martial arts film star and the film director is that they are both derived from the SAME instrument.
ReplyDeleteI just figured out the singer! I read Carl's first clue about four times, looked at Natasha's list of instruments three times, and did several Internet searches before the answer finally came to me. You can make a strong argument that the intended answer is not the singer's real name, but more the nickname that they were better known by. Also, knowing the band that this singer was in before he/she went solo will help you immensely.
ReplyDeleteOkay Lorenzo, I'll see you and raise...
ReplyDeleteYou could also rearrange those letters to spell something that means "wavers" or "varies between extreme alternatives." Or even to spell what could happen if a well-known canine star sat too long on an airplane...
And if you throw into the mix the only vowel that's missing and anagram that, you get lots of fun stuff including the title of a classic album by arguably (?) the most famous of (British import) acts in the early history of rock and roll... except that the first word is actually a synonym of the word in the original album title...
Here's a fun link for you. It's probably the best one I've found so far. I used to use one that was a bit simpler, called Brendan's Online Anagram Generator, but it's not maintained anymore. Which is good because it forced me to find this one:
http://wordsmith.org/anagram/advanced.html
Carl,
ReplyDeleteThanks. I particularly liked the one about the bugs.
Another good anagram generator is called The Anagram Engine and can be found at easypeasy.org/anagrams.
The Anagram Engine is found with the extension .com, not .org
ReplyDeleteTry
http://www.easypeasy.com/anagrams/
As Don in Seattle can attest, it's really beginning to look a lot like Christmas here (but maybe he's visiting friends in Palm Springs or something...). Need to make some photographs of this snow.
ReplyDeleteI wonder if we've set some kind of record for most hours between posts here... except maybe for that time not so long ago when nobody could post for a couple days.
Anyone still struggling? Might it be time for the really blatant hints? Or should we wait for Monday mornin'? And Don, if you did go somewhere warm and sunny, all I can say is, how could you leave and not take me?
Oh my gosh, I'm so slow.
ReplyDeleteI've been reading all your hints for this week's puzzle and I couldn't figure it out until I read carl's.
And then Blaine's made sense.
I just have to tell you all that you're extremely smart, and I wish I could get the puzzle as fast as you.
~Samkizzle
This new puzzle looks vaguely familiar. Anyone hear the new puzzle?
ReplyDelete