Tag Archives: Creed

O The Virtues: ORIGINAL VETIVER by CREED (2004) + SIGNORICCI by NINA RICCI (1976)

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A bright winter’s morning. The bathroom of a stately home.

On the washbasin lies a pristine bar of soap. It is the most perfect soap imaginable; a hard, impenetrable, triple-milled yellow soap; the clean, heart-clearing brightness of bergamot, and the finest essences of neroli married to a light, fresh note of cool, purified vetiver grass planted down, somewhere beneath the surfaces, in its fragrant, pounded centre.

A vetiver, then, of spanking immaculateness and spruceness; a perfect accoutrement to the face-splashing morning ritual: a scent that very reeks, almost, of trust.

 

Until you smell Signoricci that is, when the artificial, clammed together, and somewhat hysterical brightness of Creed’s Original Vetiver is exposed……

 

 

Signoricci, one of the few key masculines from a house that, in its heyday, produced some of the most delicate and exquisite feminine florals ever created, predates Creed’s scent by thirty years and is of a similar soap-cleansed theme; citrus (lemon, verbena, lime), over delicate cologne-steeped vetiver, but in this long regretted perfume the effect is incredibly refined.

I first smelled it at my friend Federico’s apartment in Rome one October afternoon, standing there alone as it was on his wooden bookshelf in his room, and I remember how immediately blown away I was by its deceptively simple beauty; a beautiful conception of masculinity that is almost impossible to imagine now in today’s world of hard-hitting woods, spices and designer-bearded synthetics.

Beginning with perhaps the most piercing, yet simultaneously gentle and perfect citrus top note I know of, the vetiver, cedar and sandalwood heart of this composition is then revealed gently and gradually;  an accord of almost heartbreaking cleanliness: a perfection and purity of soul.

Its perfection notwithstanding, if there can be any criticism of Signoricci it is just that: this perfume is possibly too perfect; a saintly, flawlessly scrupled man who seems too good, almost, to be true.

 

 

 

 

 

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A hint of leather: CUIR OTTOMAN by Parfum D’Empire (2006)+ SPANISH LEATHER by Geo F Trumper (1902)+ ROYAL ENGLISH LEATHER by Creed (1781)

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CUIR OTTOMAN / PARFUM D’EMPIRE

As sensual and smooth as brand new suede, this is a great leather.  The beginning, freshly raw and animalic, might be offputting for some, like just-skinned hides being dried in the sun. But this uninhibited, free introduction is then tamed: with gentle woods, iris, and a proud, clean leather that dries down to a superb, suave, finish.

SPANISH LEATHER / GEO F TRUMPER

Antique teddy. Brideshead. Anthony Andrews.

Soft, soapy; gentle. Leather. Hints of sensuality. A touch half-hearted, perhaps, although my friend’s daughter proclaimed, upon smelling it in the shop,  that ‘it does, really, smell exactly like Spain and the air there!’

ROYAL ENGLISH LEATHER/ CREED

Diffusive, warm and powdery; a heliotropic, gorgeous, air-filling suede caress. A scent that thoroughly envelops you in elegance yet is totally seductive.

If you like L’Heure Bleue but can’t quite take all the marzipan,  Royal English Leather makes a beautiful, distinctive,  alternative.

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Some roses for winter.

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Nitobe Inazo, author of the classic (if highly supercilious) tome on Japan, Bushido, may consider the Japanese superior with their love for the evanescent samurai fleetingness of the cherry blossom flower, symbolizing the stoic warriors’ (masochistic) desire to sacrifice their lives at the drop of a hat, while the gaijin, or westerner, ‘selfishly’ favours the rose, clinging with every last drop of its life to the stem even when dead……

Well, it is my favourite flower, and I imagine that I also will be clinging at my last, thorny and desperate, rather than plunging a sword into my gut and ripping out my innards, all for the sake of appearances and some dull and pointless idea of honour. The code of the samurai is much more nuanced and spiritual than this, I realize, but you get my drift. I have never quite forgiven Nitobe for the disdain he shows the non-Japanese in that book, and the rose is an emblem I therefore adhere to more passionately as a result.

The rose is a tricky one. Rose oil, or its synthetic reconstitution, is a component of the vast majority of perfumes, and there are  wildly different interpretations of this flower, meaning that though you may think you hate the rose if you have been brought up on granny talcs, or else Stella and Paul Smith and the like, there still might be a perfume out there that might sway you if you deign to explore the rosaceous galaxy further.  Though none in my opinion has ever truly captured the exquisite beauty of a living, breathing flower (surely one of the most enthralling scents in the universe), a few come close, or take the theme to newer, unexpected places.

It is also, my view, a floral that is perfect for winter, not clashing with that touch of patchouli oil that is still hanging on to your jacket, remaining poised and stoic……an aroma of both piercing sorrow and hope, with a dignity, poeticism, and romantic attachment that make it far superior in my (not) humble view, to the puny, and nothingy, frou frou cherry blossom.

ROSE ABSOLUE/ ANNICK GOUTAL (1984)

Supremely expensive for an eau de toilette, Rose Absolue is a diaphanous, sense-delighting spray of real rose oils, with several of the most prized species in perfumery. The crisp, exuberant top notes are truly delightful, and come very close to smelling like a garden of roses on a summer morning. The middle and base notes lose something as the essential oils evaporate (making it a costly habit to maintain), but for a delicious rose spritz, this cannot be beaten.

NAHEMA / GUERLAIN  (1979)

The top note of the Nahéma extrait is breathtaking: perhaps the most ravishingly gorgeous and complete rose absolute in perfume; a scent to make your heart swell, your diaphragm tremble. Whether you will fall for Nahéma or not though, (and it has its very faithful adherents), will depend on your liking roses romantic, full on, and sweet. Nahéma folds this stunning rose note in peach, hyacinth, aldehydes; ylang, vanilla and musk, and is deliriously rich, romantic – very Guerlain. If it is right for you, you will smell resplendent. If not, overdone.

ROSE/ CARON (1949)

If the roses in Goutal’s Rose Absolue are freshly picked and the scent their breath, Caron’s is their blood; the enshrinement of a beauteous Bulgarian absolute (more regal, melancholy than Moroccan rose – the more ‘classic’ rose note) over a gentle bed of vanilla and musk. The extrait is beautiful; potent, emotive; a scent to be cherished. Almost painfully pure and beautiful.

For a similar, but somewhat chicer rose, try the other Caron rose perfume, Or et Noir: for sexual mystery, the house’s woody, musky incense rose, Parfum Sacré.

FLEURS DE BULGARIE / CREED (1880/1980)

Centenary reformation of an aristocratic, very strange scent from Creed. This peculiar, haunting rose perfume evokes another time and place, leagues away from brash current trends. It is at once tender, reserved, unabashedly tasteful, yet with an undeniable whiff of madness: generations of interbreeding among the loopy upper classes. A dry, high pitched, almost saline bunch of Bulgarian roses over an insinuating ambergris: the smell of stately homes, the fragile, yellowing pages of old books. A difficult, but rather brilliant perfume, to be placed on a dresser by a window over the lawns, on which to do ‘one’s toilette.’

Beyond, the reedy river, in which perhaps to drown…

SA MAJESTE LA ROSE / SERGE LUTENS (2000)

A scornful rose. Dark swishes of crimson rose fragrance: grand, extravagant, a perfume of strength and beauty, but with ironic, opaque bitterness. Serge Luten’s rose is not romantic: his perfumer, Christopher Sheldrake, was presumably ordered to do away with such nonsense. Instead there is a stark regality here, just as the name suggests (a tart note of geranium, lychee and guaic wood sees to that), but also an elaborate heart of white roses, vanilla and honeyed Moroccan rose.  It is an effective, gorgeous perfume that will leave you feeling splendidly detached.

CE SOIR OU JAMAIS / ANNICK GOUTAL (1999)

The most vulnerable of rose perfumes, Ce Soir Ou Jamais (‘tonight or never’) is a rich, breathy Turkish rose, unfolding in a tearful desperate embrace. It is natural, supremely feminine, and one of the most romantic perfumes you could possibly wear.

ROSE OPULENTE/ MAITRE PARFUMEUR ET GANTIER

As it says, opulent, gorgeous, red-silk Bulgarian roses, for high camp and rose adorers. Quite beautiful, with leafy green top notes gracing a subtly spiced, ambergris rose.

ROSE EN NOIR/ MILLER HARRIS (2006)

Exclusive to Barney’s New York stores, this is a mildly repugnant, dark  animalic rose with woody musk facets and top notes of jammy rhubarb. Interesting, like someone unravelling at the seams.

ROSE DE NUIT / SERGE LUTENS (1994)

Paris. Had I had any money left by the time I got to the Lutens boutique at the Palais Royal (having already ‘done’ Caron, Guerlain, and Maitre Parfumeur et Gantier), this is what I would have bought from the astonishing selection of perfumes curated by the mysterious ladies hovering behind them. On myself I like darker, more menacing rose perfumes, preferably underscored by patchouli, and this really did the trick for me. Rich, effusive, and very outgoing, with a touch of jasmine, apricot, beeswax, and chypre. A rose for nighttime and adventure, to be worn with leather.

SOIR DE LUNE  / SISLEY (2006)

A gorgeous, dark, honey-drenched rose enveloped by rich notes of chypre, mimosa, and powerful patchouli, Soire De Lune is almost tailor-made to my personal olfactory tastes. It is diffusive, warm, sexy and of high quality; not dissimilar to the company’s fantastic Eau Du Soir, but in my opinion even better. A rounded, accomplished scent with presence, and a new alternative to such night time illuminaries as Paloma Picasso Mon Parfum and Voleur De Roses. I doubt I will ever be without a bottle of this.

VOLEUR DE ROSES   L’ARTISAN PARFUMEUR (1993)

The rose thief is a dark figure dressed in black, moving with stealth through the undergrowth, night soil underfoot; rose bushes standing erect and waiting in the moonlight, sensing they are about to be picked. A sensous, woody patchouli is entwined with a deep, rich rose and an unusual note of black plum, resulting in a very gourmand, intriguing scent worthy of its wonderful name.

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CINNAMON, CINNAMON : Ambre Narguilé by Hermès (2004) + Vanille Cannelle by E. Coudray (1935) + Rousse by Serge Lutens (2007) + Incensi by Lorenzo Villoresi (1997) + Ambre Cannelle by Creed (1945) + Noir Epices by Editions de Parfum (2000) + Cinnamon sherbet by Comme des Garcons (2003) +..

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January is basically a miserable time of year in Japan for me (though I suppose at least it isn’t quite as bad as February or March, when all is truly dead and cold except for some narcissi, plum blossoms, and the new buds slowly, tightly, appearing on the cherry trees….)

The pale, Christmassy sunlight of December, when everything was twinkly and filled with the promise of the homely cocoon, is taken over by often frigid temperatures; grey skies with nothing left to look at but ugly architecture, bargain shoppers, bare trees, and and an exhausting year of up and coming work.

At this time of year we need cheering up, and the smell of cinnamon-sprinkled buns and cakes drifting out from a city bakery as you walk along that dark path with hands tucked in coat pockets is surely one of life’s most comforting smells; as if the world couldn’t really be as bad as you thought (as your senses perk up without your even noticing and you plump for a Starbucks hot cinnamon roll and latte and you realize to your horror that you have just consumed 700 calories in one indolent, heartlifting go).

The effect of cinnamon in perfume is similar – it is surely the most trustworthy and unthreatening of the spices; easy, familiar, emotionally warm. Usually blended with orange, mandarin, balsams, exotic florals and other spices for the oriental cargo effect (Cinnabar, Opium); or with animalic ambers and vanilla (Obsession, Obsession Men, Cuir Mauresque) – all of which feature a prominent note of the spice that lends their blends a touch of  patisserie snugness and repose – the perfumes I describe below are more clearly cinnamon-centric, tailor-made for these darker months of winter…….

HERMESSENCE AMBRE NARGUILE / (2004) HERMES

Sunday: 6pm. It was raining; dark, freezing cold. You had just done something really bad – been shouted at and belted: and after bawling out your eyes in your bedroom upstairs, were lying prostrate, aimless and self-pitying on the bed covers; the taste of hot, angry tears still in your head.

But then – suddenly, after who knows how long, the warm, delicious smell of your mother’s baking apple pie found its way up the reproachful bannisters, and life began again to be alright. Warm apples, slow-burning cinnamon; comfort of rich buttered pastry; the promise of melting vanilla ice cream.

This is Ambre Narguilé: an exalting perfume that provokes obsessive reactions in people (an olfactory method of regression therapy? ‘Remember the pain. But also remember the good times….’), a scent that is truly designed for cuddling up to.

An hour after spraying it on, after the sweet shock of the apple strudel opening, Ambre Narguilé is an edible and addictive patisserie classic; gorgeously moreish and emotive with a vivid cinnamon underlay: I could eat myself. But to get here, you have to go through stages of ambered bulimia; and to be honest, I’m not always sure I am going to make it as for me it is just that little bit too sweet.

This scent is worth seeking out though if you are having a crap week, it is freezing with rain, and you need a sweet, sensory escape. The perfection of the ending, as it hugs to your skin in the softest, dessert-like caress, is sheer wintry succour.

VANILLE CANNELLE / E COUDRAY (1935)

Discontinued, so probably hard to find now, but I once had the pleasure of using the bath oil on a cold winter’s night when staying with Helen, and with the ambery vanilla-orange tumbling from the lip of the bottle I just melted into the hot water in total bliss. That bottle, of the very old Parisian type, next to me on the side of the bath, just added to the sensation of romance and escape: a perfectly judged dose of cinnamon and sweetly clinging vanilla in the manner of the best French cakes.

ROUSSE/ SERGE LUTENS (2007)

Rousse (‘the red head’), is possessed of red-raw spices that jump out and devour you; the fiery taste (and 3D texture) of real cinnamon sticks and cloves in an ambered, woody, and resinous setting. It is direct, pungent, and somewhat simple-minded (in the manner of Louve, Lutens’ cherry-almond), but if you like to wear your spice on your sleeve, this rough, flushed, russet perfume is perfect: a chic cinnamon bomb to take on the night.

INCENSI/ LORENZO VILLORESI (1997)

A serious cinnamon. As you’d expect from Mr Lorenzo, Incensi is a languorously layered, complicated scent, the incense of the name not prominent until the drydown as the main feature in this curious blend is more a ginger-bolstered cinnamon emerging from a blast of strange greenness (elemi, leaf notes, galbanum), the incense notes of antiquity lying calm and serious beneath (frankincense, benzoin, myrrh, styrax), while the note of cinnamon,  unsweetened and vaguely ecclesiastical, remains prominent throughout.

AMBRE CANNELLE/ CREED (1949)

If you are male and have always secretly wished you had worn Yves Saint Laurent’s Opium, the classic for women from the 70’s –balsamic, spicy and orange-laden – but were too embarrassed to buy a ‘women’s’ perfume, then here’s your chance. Ambre Cannelle is apparently a part of Creed’s men’s range; admittedly there are fewer flowers, and its physiognomy has more sinew, it’s formula perhaps more refinement, but this scent was obviously the inspiration (along with Estée Lauder’s Youth Dew) for the whole swooning-Jerry Hall-Roxy-Music-addict phenomenon that was Opium – just thirty years before. It is quite a nice  scent, with a sexed, ambergris/ musk base that clings to the cinnamon-amber-flecked accord with mystique. Somewhat old fashioned, though; check it out for yourself first before committing (in a floor length fur coat).

NOIR EPICES/ Editions de Parfums (2000)

A very well respected and original cinnamon spice that many cite as their favourite from the Frederic Malle line, for the tightly woven structure; the dense, spiced treatment of orange and geranium over arid, woody finish.  I see their point, but on this occasion I beg to differ. I can certainly see the appeal of this perfume’s fat-free structure (no musk, no fluffiness, no soft, vanillic contours), its stark angularity. But like Campari and orange, which I like in theory for its bitter sunset red but in reality can’t drink, the vile bitterness of this perfume’s orange makes me shudder. I find it quite unendurable on my own skin, though I have to say that I was astonished to find that the perfume I was complimenting on my friend Justin one night at karaoke – warm, sensual, compelling – was in fact Noir Epices. Yet another argument for the fact that some perfumes really do smell utterly distinctive on different people.

CINNAMON/ COMME DES GARCONS SHERBET SERIES (2003)

Of the three jaunty little perfumes in the Comme Des Garcons sherbet series, to me this is possibly the least successful. The rhubarb is a delight: the mint the greenest, mintiest thing you’ve ever smelled, but the cinnamon, with its contrasting (jarring?) notes of hot and cold, is less loveable. On the other hand, the freshness of the scent and its resemblance to more spicy, ozonic scents like Issey Miyake Pour Homme make it the most commercial of the three, and an original take on the note of cinnamon. Like all the sherbets, it is quite fun in a way.

The sherbets are also available in lovely little solid perfume form that let you indulge in sweet, clandestine dabs throughout the day so the room is suddenly tinged with a blast of sweet cinnamon (but nobody knows the source……)

Other cinnamons:

VANILLE CANELLE/ COMPTOIR SUD PACIFIQUE Just what you’d expect from Comptoir– a warm, sexpot aroma of cinnamon in a sweet, ready to wear (for evening) setting.

CINNAMON SPICE/ BODY SHOP Serviceable perfume oil that does the trick in a mumsy, down-at-the-shops kind of way.

CINNAMON BUN / DEMETER &

CINNAMON TOAST/ DEMETER Olfactory holograms for those cinnophiles with a healthy appetite.

Ps. We might be going to Madagascar this summer to research vanilla (!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!) and we will most certainly be stopping at Nosy Bé, or The Perfume Island in the north of Madagascar, which is apparently redolent year round of ylang ylang, vanilla, cloves, patchouli and cinnamon….

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FOUGERES AND THE BABE MAGNETS : CLASSICS AND OTHERWISE IN THE LADYKILLERS’ HALL OF FAME……(Vol 1) – - – - Green Irish Tweed (1985) : Fahrenheit (1988) : Cerruti (1990): Kouros (1981): Tsar (1989): Safari (1992): Paco Rabanne (1973): Skin Bracer (1931)

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The Black Narcissus, like most contemporary perfume writing, takes the stance that there is no gender in scent.

You wear what you like. 

In these hopefully more enlightened times, ‘only’ in high street department stores and duty free are the genders still strictly segregated with that boring sense of olfactory apartheid, that limiting,  tedious pink and blue.  Practically every niche brand makes no distinction (Lutens, Editions de Parfums, Le Labo, L’Artisan, Diptyque) and this has vastly expanded the options in scent for the thinking male or female. If, in one of these boutiques you were to ask which perfumes are for men or women, though the staff’s eyes will remain fixed and forward staring, inside they’ll be rightly sneering ‘neanderthal’.

 H  E R E     I  S      T H   E       M A   N  I    F   E   S   T  O:

A MAN OR WOMAN CAN SMELL ATTRACTIVE IN ANY SCENT IF (S)HE LIKES IT. 

(let it be sung and chanted out throughout the land!! let interesting smelling people roam freely on the streets and public transport, let all that suppressed yearning out my people………!!)

 

Think for a moment. This is more revolutionary than it seems. The vast majority of Europe and America, and Japan come to think of it,  smells so damn predictable, so in your face ‘male’ and ‘female’. So mating season. Perfume as nothing more than an invisible extension of invisible future reproduction. Which has its place. After all, the human race must prevail.

 

But perfume, an artform, for godssake, can be so much more….

When you embrace this liberating fact, it vastly changes the olfactory landscape. No more skin-oppressing stereotypes. Freedom from these boring, outmoded dictates. Whole new aromatic worlds open up.

My own ‘turning point’, where I saw the light if you like, was when I met my friend Peter in London one late evening many years ago and he smelled incredible.  We were strolling down Islington high street and the leathery, sultry scent he gave off (which reminded me of the fantastic original Sure deodorant for men)  stumped me. What was it?

‘Shalimar, in edp’.

To be honest, this was quite the revelation for me, but not long after I had ‘plucked up the courage’ (how ridiculous!) and plumped for Kenzo’s ridiculous vanilla-licorice-spice-monster Jungle L’Elephant on one return journey to Japan from Duty Free. The reactions I got from it (practically a stampede one night in an Australian bar in Yokohama – and from girls) made me realize that the arbitrary parameters laid down by the industry are sheer bullshit.

However, if we are complely honest, the majority of the niche perfume makers are preaching to the converted. Yes, perfume is art, or at the very least an elevated craft whose pieces one should consider in and of themselves as olfactory abstractions. But in reality, despite some contentions to the contrary in the world of the critics, perfume, for the majority of people, actually really is about sex. Denying this is like claiming that clothes, shoes, jewellery and all the other accoutrements that human beings spend their money on are all about their functionality, or are bought for their intrinsic beauty alone. No: you wear them to make you more attractive.

The aficionado has risen above all this. The man on the street has not – he wants something phwoooar to help him pull, and some of the best, and obviously male scents do literally elicit this reaction – we are animals after all. So, though I am directly contradicting everything I have just written above, I am going to now enter this other world of gender. Because having spent the last twenty five years surveying what is out there, having worn several of them, and knowing the reactions to these classic men’s scents from countless female (and male) friends, and deciding, for a moment, to just enter that outmoded, bullish, way of thinking, l know I can help. I can already feel her leaning in closer on her bar stool…

What smells masculine?

There are many categories in perfume that are fine from the traditional viewpoints of virility. You can’t go wrong with citrus (simple and fresh); vetiver (elegant, unforced); incense (mysterious, though dependent on your target’s religious beliefs); sandalwood, patchouli and all wood blends. The oceanics and brain-drilling,  sporty ozonics were made specifically for the modern man ( I could cross out that last word and write idiot), but for the more confident and self-assured there are also the leathers, which I highly recommend for a hint of raunch; ambers, spices, in the manner of the flamboyant Arab male; and I suppose you might even try the mens’ gourmands (Dior Homme, A*Men), though here we are definitely crossing into metrosexual territory.

Truth be told, though, despite the trends of the last twenty years, the masculine genre par excellence is, and always will be I imagine, the fougère. French for fern, the fougère is a category of perfume that has been around for almost a century yet seems to show no sign of losing popularity. The basic structure of this type is an accord of coumarin, lavender and geranium, woody notes such as sandalwood and patchouli, and animalic musks for that added vroom. But the structure is pliable and there are endless variations on the theme, the one constant being that the results are extremely male. This can sometimes be the fragrance equivalent of a dog rubbing his balls up against a tree, and is what some Japanese women call ‘otoko no kusai’ – the stench of men, but in reality there are surely far more of the species (me too, sometimes), who seem genetically preprogrammed to go weak-kneed and pliant in the presence of such obvious testosterone.

Me Tarzan:

You, Jane.

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This series, then, ignores recent high-street fragrances of the pink pepper/ ‘fresh woods’ twink variety and looks at the classics of the genre – the ‘real men’; the ‘babe magnets’. At a later point I will deal with the more thoughtful (more intelligent, he whispers arrogantly) aromatic fougères such as Hermes Equipage: :::::::::not every woman wants her man to parade his meat quite so openly.

GREEN IRISH TWEED/ CREED (1985)

This sensation by Creed has the reputation as the ultimate woman-bait. Centered on a triad of bitter-green violet leaf/verbena, Florentine iris/ sandalwood, and a magnificent note of ambergris that smooths the fragrance in ways you don’t get from the cheapo stuff, the fragrance grows in strength and character as the day progresses, yet never sinks to the chest-beating of some eighties colognes (it manages the feat of smelling both classy and highly sexed). Unavailable in most high street fragrance departments, and rather expensive, it has the cachet of being a scent for ‘those in the know’. Originally created for Cary Grant, it is also loved by such screen royalty as Robert Redford, Clint Eastwood, Richard Gere, as well as one David Beckham. Its credentials thus assured, it is nevertheless, despite its balance of ingredients and good taste, lacking in humour or ambiguity. Green Irish Tweed just gets on with the job: dressing the man to pull in the prey.

I wore this once to my company’s annual opening ceremony, and felt ridiculous. I was enjoying the beginning, but as the manliness became rampant I felt like the Hulk, that my chest might rip open. Before I went to the Yokohama Sheraton, feeling more Alpha Male then I ever have before or since (quite interesting in a sense, like method acting), I had a Japanese lesson. Ms Hiramura was quite disturbed by my ‘change of atmosphere.’

FAHRENHEIT/ CHRISTIAN DIOR (1988)

Up until the early 1990s, Dior still had the imagination to produce genuinely groundbreaking perfumes, and this was one of them; a virile, almost violent, fougère. The futuristic shock of violets, honeysuckle, hawthorn and a powerful metallic note like oil and gasoline (which had my mother scream when I doused myself in the stuff in my early twenties) dries to an erotic and arid cedar/ lavender heart; a styrax/ leather fox that has potent striking power and really gets you noticed.

A couple of months ago I passed some American sailors waiting in Yokohama station on their way to the Yokusuka navy base, and one of them had this on. It has that flip-your-gut ability that supercedes the rational.

CERRUTI 1881/ CERRUTI (1990)

Nino Cerruti, he of the Italian sharp suits, who dressed Don Johnson and Philip Michael Thomas in the archetypal 80’s TV series Miami Vice, released this ‘lethal weapon’ at the conclusion of the decade. It has endured. Many of the scents in this section have a louche brutality – the hirsute intentions very clear from the start, as if you have already started unzipping your trousers. Cerruti 1881 is a different kind of fuck-machine: chiseled, jaw clenched, fastidiously clean; an action man fresh from the shower. Extremely sharp, it begins with a herb/citrus blast of tarragon, cypress, rosemary, lemon, bergamot, basil and juniper, dries down to a taut, woody finish.

KOUROS/ YVES SAINT LAURENT (1981)

A killer. Some hate its vulgarity (hooligans are naturally drawn to it), its dirt (a hint of the urinal is never far away), but many more love this classic from YSL. Chandler Burr states that the animalics of this type are ‘now categorically unwearable except by the French. Today, Kouros will get you expelled from a restaurant. It is brutally not en phase (of the times.’) Yet, it is among Yves Saint Laurent’s best sellers all these years later; I know women who are helpless under its spell, and it is quite simply legendary – it even featured in a Destiny’s Child song. I can see why many hate the thing – on the popular Basenotes website this currently gets 80 negative reviews (mostly in response to its prominent genitalia), against 176 positives (those who revel in its exhibitionism, including myself) – so expect varied reactions.

To me, Kouros is a beautiful Mediterranean hunk of a specimen, and pure sex. The first time I encountered it was when I was seventeen in Crete, on holiday with my family, and a man walked out from somewhere in the building behind us into the main square of Heraklion. The scent he left behind him, lingering in the air, was so unspeakably erotic I’m sure I blushed.

An explosion of scent: brightly spiced orange and lemon; rose; woods, resins, incense and fougère, in a sea of animalic vanilla, castoreum (beaver gland), civet, honey and musk, the whole brilliantly blended so that it is still somehow gentlemanly and suave (until the more extravagantly sensual ingredients gradually blend with the skin, at which point those so far seduced are ready to pounce). When worn right – it really doesn’t suit everyone – this is one of the best mens’ scents ever created – though I emphatically recommend wearing it on clean, post-shower skin, and at small dosage. On hot days, when it is wrong or overpowering, it is unadulterated skank.

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JAZZ/ YVES SAINT LAURENT (1988)

In the eighties it seemed to me that from around 1986 everything split in two. Until then the radio was ripe with pop, the fashions were cool, but fun. After that, the schism occurred. Stock, Aitken and Waterman pillaged the charts, Starship landed, the Thatcher/Reagan years reached their soulless nadir. As a confused, hypersensitive seventeen year old, there was a stark choice: be one of us, or one of them. ‘Them’ was Sharon and Kevin, who went to the Ritzy and liked Phil Collins & Whitney Houston. She wore Red Door; he wore Jazz. When he walked by, the smell that lingered – stubbornly – summed up, better than words ever could, the self-centred nastiness in the air. Until the 1980’s scents had had some ambiguity – the 70’s especially, when leathery androgyny was the key. Rick Astley changed all that. It was perfumes that smelled of cerese for the women, and of hoary granite-grey for the men; square-jawed, blockhead as Schwarzenegger. In those days this represented everything a vegetarian Goth (who secretly loved Janet Jackson) despised, and I loathed it more than I could express.

I still hate this smell but two decades later I see that Jazz, which is a very big seller and something of an institution in male grooming, is a very well-made fougère with good balance (better than Tsar, say, which it is similar to). It is less crass than most, very manly, and I see why many women find it very sexy. Definitely in the magnet top 10 and something of a safe bet.

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TSAR/ VAN CLEEF & ARPELS (1989)

I can look at this from two points of view: the rational, and the irrational.

First the rational.

Tsar is an enduring success that men still buy (or their wives for them) with a deep, commanding presence: dark and rich as teak.  An uncompromising severity, with the finality of a stag head nailed to the wall.

Irrational: sums up everything I loathe about the smug, white patriarch: the vile sense of entitlement these rhinos feel. Probably the most republican scent in the world, and a scent I loathe with fervour.

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SAFARI / RALPH LAUREN (1992)

Painful. What I hate so much in Tsar, that worship of the stale armpit of macho, is strengthened to unfathomable bitterhood. This safari is surely of the ladies.

Watch them run; lasso, gun’em; harpoon them with the hard-enamelled phallus. Round up’em as trophies. Pin’em down. Subject them to your ash-mottled clichés.

Some women like it.

POUR HOMME/ PACO RABANNE (1973)

But manliness needn’t be such hard work.

Timeless is not a word that can be applied to many scents, especially the limited clichés that make up the men’s fragrance market. But the word can probably be applied to Paco Rabanne; a herbal-green animalic fougère that somehow resists the trends of each decade and comes out smelling good.

In 1983 as a teenager this was one of the scents the more ‘grown up’ girls were talking about in my classroom (the other being the more recent Kouros), and even now this inviting, aromatic blend has something of a womanizing reputation – in an episode of mafia drama The Sopranos, Paulie, about to go out on a date, asks if he’s got enough cologne on. The reply ‘You’ve got so much on you’d think Paco Rabanne had crawled up your ass and died’ pretty much sums up its credentials.

The reason this scent has survived all these years is that it doesn’t have the preposterone swagger of many fougères. It isn’t trying to prove anything, unlike some of the scents I’ve described here (which seem to be covering a lack). It has a warm, effortless confidence, and that is the source of its power – it smells trustworthy. The overall smell of Paco Rabanne is green and soapy clean (laurel, sage, rosemary, geranium) with moss, honey, amber and some soft animalics. While perhaps not an out and out masterpiece, Paco Rabanne is nevertheless a classic that I imagine will be around for many more years to come. I certainly do hope so.

SKIN BRACER/ MENNEN (1931)

Probably the cheapest scent in my collection (a pound, or even a dollar), I’d nevertheless rather smell this than eighty per cent of men’s scents. The peacock syndrome in my, and I imagine a decent percentage of heterosexual women’s opinion too, just isn’t sexy. Most of today’s fragrances are the worst combination of cheap and overcomplicated. Just too much fuss.

Skin Bracer is a truck driver in light blue jeans – the type with good personal hygiene. Simple, manly, probably a real scent when first released but now just a drug store bargain. Nevertheless, it’s a clean, mentholated fougère, with a denim-like vanillic cling that beats most other things here hands down.

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Volume 2 coming soon……

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Filed under Fougère, Masculines, Perfume Reviews, Republican

THE DANDY

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Charles Baudelaire categorized the dandy as a man who has ‘no profession other than elegance….no other status but that of cultivating the idea of beauty in their own person. The dandy must aspire to be sublime without interruption…. he must live and sleep before a mirror….’

Yet the true dandy was no mere clothes horse. In cultivating a skeptical reserve with his direct opposition to the unthinking bourgeoisie, these beautifully coddled individualists were following a code which ‘in certain respects comes close to spirituality and stoicism’.

 

Dandyism was also not limited to the male of the species. There was, of course, Beau Brummel, but there was also Marlene Dietrich. And then Cora Pearl, the ‘quaintrelle’ (woman-dandy) courtesan, whose extravagant income was apparently sufficient to allow her to dance nude on carpets of orchids, bathe before her dinner guests in silver tubs of champagne, probably mildly bored as she did so.

 

Naturally then, the true perfumed dandy wears perfume for the beauty of the perfume alone; trends and petty concerns over seduction are of no concern. He might therefore wear any perfume in the pantheon; the flowers, the musks, the powders; she might pick a scent from the roaring masculines, a brisk citrus aftershave, and carry it off beautifully. This notwithstanding, the more established image of the powdered, exquisite gentle man or woman and her peacock consorts is served pretty well by some of the following scents and their decadent, nonchalant, graceful ambiguity.

 

“I wish to be a living work of art.’

 

(Marchesa Luisa Casati, renowned quaintrelle).

 

 

ACIER ALUMINIUM / CREED (1973)

James Craven at Les Senteurs told me that there’s a small but steady band of ‘epicureans’ who come to his shop for this obscurity from Creed, a most eccentric seventies’ concoction that is the perfumed equivalent of the decadent’s unlaundered nightshirt. A curious, metallic-noted orange blossom begins; then, ochred-acacia leaves of Autumn; musky, yellowing powders: leather: and a corrupt (but subtlely: this creature has taste) end of civet-hinged musks.

 

POIS DE SENTEURS DE CHEZ MOI / CARON (1927)

 

A collection of old-fashioned flowers for the modern dandizette; she or he who wants to spoil themselves in musky, forlorn sweet-peas, those fragrant flowers scaling trellises in summertime. ‘The sweet peas from my garden’ are powdery, rosy, infused with heavy, trembling lilacs.

 

 

EAU DE QUININE / GEO F TRUMPER (1898)

Trumper is the ultimate emporium for the London gent (really, you have to go), and this, to me, is one of their crowning glories. Echoes of the Empire and tropical malaria cures are conjured up by the curative sounding name, and the scent – a gorgeous, luminous and powdery thing laced with rosemary – is odd and beautiful.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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SIRA DES INDES / JEAN PATOU (2006)

A warm, overripe breeze. A foetid satiety, and a perfume perfect for the bronzed, sybaritic woman who wants nothing more than to lie down flat on her sunlounger with her gin. One can’t help but think of Sylvia Miles in Morrisey & Warhol’s Heat.

 

A pronounced banana-leaf top note conveys the sense of the tropics: full bananas, unswaying in the dead, still air: champaca flowers with their drowsy torpor, and an apricot-hued osmanthus over a salivated sandalwood/civet, these listless ingredients adding up to the most ennui-imbued scent I have ever smelled. Sira des Indes is smooth yet enticing, almost angry; and devastating on a woman over forty who just doesn’t give a shit.

 

 

 

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PARFUM D’HERMES / HERMES (1984)

Recast as Rouge (which see), Parfum d’Hermès, which has the same basic structure, just dirtier, can still be found in various corners of the world, and I know an antiques shop near my school that has a 400ml bottle that no Japanese person would ever touch (I will, eventually). I know they wouldn’t buy it because the rude animalics here are so blatant that all the flowers, spices in the world just can’t hide its intent. It smells of a dirty mouth covering yours; a Sadeian perfume that would work shockingly well on one of his followers, female or male.

 

CARNATION / MONA DI ORIO (2006)

Mona di Orio, the perfumer behind Carnation (pronunciation: in the French manner – meaning ‘complexion’ not the flower) seemed to be seeking here the smell of a virgin’s face after a day in the sun – easy prey, perhaps, for the creatures above from Parfum d’Hermès (or Pasolini’s Salò). It is a weird smell at first, something paint-like and sour in among the dirty blooms (wallflower, geranium, jasmine, tinted with musks and styrax), but progresses to a heavenly maiden’s cheek, white; the thick, healthy skin just ready to pinch.

 

HAMMAM BOUQUET / PENHALIGONS (1872)

The maiden’s male counterpart is Hammam Bouquet; fresh from the Turkish baths with a blush on his face.

Hammam is musky, powdery and pink, with rose otto, orris and lavender over the more manly exhalations of civet and musk. Once the boy gets his breath back, he dons his white powdered wig, his cape, and rushes back earnestly to the Old Bailey.

 

 

FRENCH CAN CAN / CARON (1936)

One of the lesser known perfumes from the illustrious stable of Caron (surely one of the Dandy’s favourite parfumeurs…)is French Can Can, made especially for the post-war American Market for a bit of imported ooh la la: a strange, naughty, and now rather anachronistic perfume that treads the line between coquettish and coarse without descending to banality. Can Can is of very similar construction to En Avion (a cool, spicy, violet leather) but overlaid with more garish, extravagant bloom: rose, jasmine and orange blossom kick out from under the tulle. Behind faded, musty curtains lies a decadent heart of lilac, patchouli, iris, musk and amber.

Thinking of a candidate for this perfume (who wears tiers of fluffy petticoats that I know?) I hit upon my friend Laurie, who is never afraid to dress up in extravagant numbers – I can even see her actually doing the can-can – and with the slogan ‘Dancers: powder, dusty lace’ presented her with the scent. She came back to me later (after I had sprayed her bag with the stuff) ‘No: greying crinoline’.

 

 

 

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POT POURRI / SANTA MARIA NOVELLA (1828)

Only the dandy would wear a perfume called Pot Pourri. Bizarrely, this has recently become a massive hit with the art crowd in Tokyo (the brand’s reputed naturalness is popular with the refined eco-conscious). It is unusual, androgynous and beautiful: spiced roses, herbs, berries and grasses from the fields of Florence, fermented in Tuscan terracotta urns with darker, interior notes of resins and balsam. The result (medicinal, meditative, aromatic) is very individual; very…..dandy.

 

 

 

What else should be placed in the Dandy’s wardrobe?

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Filed under Flowers, Herbal, Musk, Orientals, Perfume Reviews, Powder

Irisia (Creed)

IRISIA / CREED (1968)

I have always loved L’Artisan’s Voleur de Roses, because that’s what I once was – a rose thief. Once I was even caught and cautioned by the police for pillaging from the neighbours’ bushes. My friend Helen and I sometimes tore up whole rose beds as teenagers – not for mindless vandalism, but for the flowers and their smell. We were floral delinquents.

This tendency also spread to other flowers. At the university library, one bored summer’s day, on an impulse when leaving and in full daylight, I uprooted four magnificent irises from the entrance garden and ran for my life. I’m not sure what I was trying to prove, but the adrenaline was potent and they looked and smelled gorgeous in my room. Creed’s Irisia, an unfairly overlooked fragrance, is the only iris that reminds me of the part of the plant above ground: the florid, waxy scent of those plundered irises. It is strongly floral (violet, tuberose, iris), woody (sandalwood), and sharp, with a bracing top accord of mandarin and Calabrian bergamot – a tri-coloured flag, like the iris flowers themselves. There’s orange; yellow; and of course intense, indignant purple (the irises were probably happy where they were.)

One of Creed’s most unusual scents and a perfect male floral.

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Aubepine-Acacia (Creed)

AUBEPINE-ACACIA/ CREED (1965)

The lemon mimosa. For an entirely different take on the mimosa tree, there is always Aubépine Acacia from the Creed Private Collection series (typically very atypical scents that are as unusual as they are expensive). Les Senteurs, which is one of the only places to stock this scent, describes it as ‘a return to a more gracious age’, the ‘scent of country hedges enhanced with powdery acacias and mimosa’, and the scent is a refreshing alternative to more traditional, powdery mimosas. Starting with a very sharp, citric and green chord of lemon, bergamot, pine and galbanum, the perfume gradually reveals the warm, almond-milk caress of hawthorn flowers and mimosa over hay and ambergris. Fresh, distinctive, and ideal on either sex.

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Filed under Flowers, Mimosa, Perfume Reviews