Tag Archives: Givenchy Gentleman

A TALE OF THREE GENDERS: YSATIS (1984) & GENTLEMAN (1974) by GIVENCHY

 

 

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Every scent lover has perfumes that conjure back important events in his or her life, perfumes that can make you wince with emotional remembrance, jolts of pain, or pleasure, that stand like monuments to your past, encapsulating whole periods of your existence: an identity you may not now relate to, but which you know still stands stacked inside your soul like a barely concealed nest of experiential Russian dolls, memories that are merely a cerebral membrane away; that with perfume, smelled once more,  can be revived:  re-examined.

Although I don’t think of myself as an especially nostalgic person, though I may be deluding myself in that regard having just reread this, I also know that for me, in some ways, the past has always been more important than the future; by which I mean that I have come to have a philosophy of life that very much lives in the now: a full, sensorial experience that when it does become the past, which it obviously always does, is then a life fully lived. You are what you have done before, I believe: we are those years; your past is your oeuvre. We are all different, but for me, those that spend their entire time consumed with plans, working working working for money for the sake of some unnamable future, blinkered to the beauty of the here and now, sometimes end up, ultimately, with a more hollow form of existence: partially blinded to the present, thinking constantly of finances, of the banal concrete realities of material possession and daily life, they end up in a strange state of nothingness, with neither a fulfilling life in the now, nor decent past experiences to look back on when it is all behind them.

 

And time is always slipping away.

 

The future, for me, must always be hazy. I have to have something to be looking forward to, always, and a vague idea of the direction I am going in, a six to twelve month plan, but that is enough. I know I could die tomorrow, as we all could, and I just don’t believe that excessive obsession with future plans is worth it. Not for me in any case. And, in relation to this way of thinking,  it is possible that my cabinets of perfumes in some ways exist on several existential planes: mostly for the immediate pleasure they give me on a daily basis, with no emotive ties or associations (though I am also aware that  some of them will probably be heart-jerkers someday in the future for that very reason: I am very much enjoying this stage in my life and who knows? Perfumes that remind me of my forties could be the ones that kill me the most when I am old, decrepit and on the way out): I am unconsciously making my perfume memories now, all the time, even as we speak…

 

 

There are also perfumes that I keep in my collection that remind me of other people but that I would never wear myself; that are almost like a long distance hug, like apparitions momentarily standing before me. Certain family members and friends, and most definitely  Duncan, are almost available to me, thus, in liquid form; their essence, or what my brain perceives as their essence (this is what was so devastating about Solaris: the piercing realization that we can never truly know everything about another person, that our understanding of them is always skewed, biased, un-full…), whatever it is, I reach into the cabinet, unstopper a bottle; breathe in, and my loved ones are there, in unbodied, ghostly form, right with me.

 

Then there are many other scents, of course, that represent me alone. I am in the middle of writing something, actually, about a very disturbing Japanese scent I bought when I first came here to Japan, and that one is almost unbearable for me to smell now as it just brings back – vividly –  waves of isolation and depression. And yet I would never get rid of it. It is time, bottled – me at 26. I have to be feeling peculiarly masochistic to sit down with that one, though: and yet the very fact that such strong emotions are possible from the mere inhaling of a bouquet of molecules is intensely thrilling to me: it could almost make me believe in eternity.

 

Others in my collection,  most of my perfumes in fact, merely represent particular episodes in my life as lived thus far. Serge Lutens’ Vitriol D’Oeillet reminds me of certain Christmas a few years ago; my Montales just make me think of a liberating, hot and sexy summer in Berlin. Kouros of me as a young man; Calèche of myself in a particular wistful, Sunday mood; Bal A Versailles parfum as me full stop.

 

 

But, strangely, there are two perfumes, not my holy grails, but ones that I love very much nevertheless, that can fit into all the above categories, yet that can transcend thoses boundaries; time and space;  and thus have a unique position in my pantheon: Ysatis and Givenchy Gentleman. These, in vintage, unadulterated form (they have both been unacceptably reformulated as I am sure you can imagine) not only represent extremely important events in my life but also were worn by its key figures: the turning point in terms of sexuality; my mother, my father; but also myself. They are also both scents that I can happily wear now, despite their seemingly gendered disparities – I feel perfectly at ease in both, like them equally. There are days when some Ysatis parfum, layered with a coconut scent like Yves Rocher Noix De Coco, are utterly delightful ( I wore buckets of it for some reason the last time I went to get my visa renewed at Yokohama immigration: I’m surprised they even stamped my passport…)

 

Gentleman I wear when I want to feel manly, together, hairy and assertive : I have a collection of vintage bottles that I have come across at flea markets, and although it is not a scent I wear that often, I need to always have some in my collection. When I think about it, there aren’t any other scents I own that have this quality, that exist on the level of symbol and representation and strange captivations of youth, gender, and sexuality, but which I can also still wear quite happily now as beautifully made perfumes that suit me even in my current form of more experienced, older existence.

 

 

 

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And with that rather portentous opening over with I will now go back to the mid-eighties.

 

 

 

Looking back I can see that there was never a shortage of good perfume in our house. While neither of my parents are particularly interested in fragrance as a topic of conversation, nor especially eager to buy truckloads of it the way I am, like most British people who spray on something or other before going out the door, there were always fragrances standing on bedside tables or dressers that were worn on a daily basis: my dad always wearing ‘aftershave’ for work and particularly when going out anywhere in the evening, my mum exactly the same. Dolled up for her shop assistant job at Jaeger, or for a night out on the town with ‘the girls’, there would never be any doubt that the air on the upstairs landing would be pungent with their combined scent choices, the very atmosphere changed irrevocably by the exotic flowers and animal extracts that happily clogged my senses. They both smelled great, and in retrospect I see that they had very good taste. My dad fortunately eschewed the nightmareishly male, harsh braggadoccio scents like Tsar, Drakkar or Jazz, which I loathe, and loathed, and instead went for the more open-to-interpretation scents such as Chanel Pour Monsieur, which in the après rasage format was so indescribably beautiful; so head-changingly optimistic and elegant, and a scent I would use on a regular basis ( you wouldn’t believe how quickly his collection went down – I used to get into quite a lot of trouble). He also wore Eau Sauvage, Aramis, and Paco Rabanne, all excellent masculines, and a beautiful thing I discovered by the side of his bed one day called Givenchy Gentleman, which in some ways was the most unusual of his collection, and one that I was peculiarly drawn to with its tender lingering of citric freshness, old rose and refined patchouli.

 

My mother, on her side of the bedroom, had a fairly large rotation of perfumes. Working in a department store I suppose she was exposed quite a regular basis to whichever new releases were coming out, and in any case she tended to get bored of her scents quite quickly, preferring to try something new once a bottle got fully used up, which was great for me as an incipient perfume obsessive. The only perfumes I can think of that were bought again and again were First – her signature, and the perfume that suits her best –  and perhaps Rive Gauche. There was Nº19 in eau de toilette (she never had any parfums, preferring to spray), but she didn’t restrict herself to elegant aldehydics: Oscar De La Renta was a favourite, and it suited her perfectly, as did Samsara, though, as on anyone, it was always just that bit too much (that is a perfume that will fill an entire house with just one spray). I never felt that Opium was quite right on my mum (and smelling it on Duncan’s mother Daphne I now realize that you have to be the right person to carry that one off – she smells amazing in it). I remember, also, that Youth Dew also was just a bit too witchy, somehow, particularly when worn with fur coat, but then that was also kind of exhilarating as well, one’s own mother as vamp.

 

 

When I think back on all the perfumes that my mother had, however, I don’t think, in truth, that any was ever as exciting as Ysatis, the ‘new perfume by Givenchy’ that she bought the moment it came out and which I swooned over continually, with its tropical flowers, spice, coconut and animalics, a scintillating diamond of a scent that I personally think of even now as something of an overlooked masterpiece.

 

 

While I wore all of my dad’s aftershaves on a regular basis to school and sixth form college (the utter joy of being seventeen!! Walking through Brueton park on a spring morning, young, skinny, fresh-complexioned, with Chanel Pour Monsieur or Eau Sauvage emanating from me, a song in my head, and focusing my steps with poetic vigour; the jolly cosiness of Paco Rabanne, a huggable and trustworthy male scent if ever there was one), I would also, of course, surreptiously go upstairs and try on my mother’s, though I would never have entertained the idea of wearing one outside the house – budding sexuality is a delicate, nervous thing, you don’t want to push it- but I can see myself, post-bath in towelling bathrobe, secretly smelling Oscar on the back of my hand –  that alien, creamy American glamour (it didn’t work), or the latter, death-by-sandalwood stages of Samsara. And, of course, Ysatis. But no, I would never have worn Ysatis outside of the house. The mere idea of it at that time would have been unthinkable.

 

 

I didn’t need to, anyway, as the perfume soon came to me in the form of a girl. Although I had tried so desperately hard to be turned on sexually by the female of the species, forcing myself at night to have fantasies in a vain attempt to be something that I knew deep down in my DNA I was not, this never, strangely, stopped me from having girlfriends, who I could kiss happily enough at school discos or on the sofa at student parties – though it never went further – and whose character, or prettiness, or yes, sexiness, could induce me to pretend to myself for a while that I wasn’t what I feared I might be. So the girlfriends came and went, anyway, always breaking up fairly amicably, and, finally, at the age of 18 came the last, but most memorable, of my schoolday missies – Natasha. Hilarious, intelligent, free-spirited and gorgeous, we were more like a flirtatious brother and sister, really, but Natasha was always exciting to be with and she always smelled lovely. Really lovely (was I, in fact, dating a perfume?)

 

 

Curiously, when we first got together I found that she was wearing Cacharel Pour Homme, a harsh, nutmeg masculine that I love but which was a very eccentric, and actually rather bold choice now I look back on it; she would wear it with a tweed jacket, her long hair falling down her back, and this taut smell of citrus and nutmegs, faintly intimidating, would surround her. It was enigmatic, certainly, but I always found it slightly jarring, somehow, probably because I just loved how fantastic she smelled in her other choice of scent – Ysatis. Sigh. Just to think of it: this perfume needs someone lissome, smooth, sexy, and she had exactly the right skin to pull it off. It is a perfume that glints and swoons from the wearer: the ylang ylang, the tuberose, the coconut, all underlaid with the civet, vanilla and musk; the narcissus, the leather, the citrus top notes, it all just hovers in the air in a sly fantasia of sexual confidence but not boastery: it is rich, it is extravagant, but it never, somehow, goes over the edge. On Tash it was monstrously appealing (her subsequent boyfriend, someone I was in love with as well, would just bury his head in her neck with pleasure he loved how she smelled in it so much). It was as though the perfume had been created specifically for her. Ysatis is Natasha .

 

It wasn’t to last though, obviously: the girl had adult desires and I wasn’t the one to fulfil them. And in any case, my burgeoning sense of not being able to bear ‘it’ any longer no matter what the consequences, was growing rapidly along with my excited studies of literature and languages; that beautiful rush of brain freshening consciousness you have as a late adolescent when the world is opening up to you and you are joyously leaving childhood behind: that wonderful sense that you are becoming yourself. I often think of seventeen/eighteen as being one of the most wonderful ages, which is why I enjoy teaching kids of that age now; you can see the fervour in their eyes, the excitement that they are finding themselves and learning what they want to be in life, but still with the uncertainty of not being entirely sure of anything. There is a tremulous beauty.  It is an age when you can feel your strength rising, your physical and mental prowess, your independence, your life, and it is emphatically not a time to be pretending to be something that you are not, no matter how dire the results of your potential revelations might be. Essentially, for me that time, exciting though it was, truly felt like do or die.

 

 

To be honest, I was desperate. I was lusting after workmen on the roadside coming home from school, lost in hormonal ragings that had no outlet, feeling that I was about to explode. And then I saw Merchant & Ivory’s ‘Maurice’ and that was it. The beauty of Rupert Graves, who played Scudder;  the country estate lovers’ subterfuge, and the whole beautiful Cambridge fantasy meant that I finally had something to strive for, and so I put all my energies into getting into that prestigious institution, even though I had hardly been aware of its existence previously. I wanted the dreaming spires, to be resting in the arms of a floppy haired boy, to be punting down the river with him drinking champagne, the whole shebang, and so I did some work for once, went through the horror of the interview process, and to my great delight (and Natasha’s too – she also got in) passed and began the next, ultra-intense stage of my life (Cambridge was just a beautiful whirl of stress and exquisite yearnings: I have extraordinary memories of that time, and feel very privileged to have been there, but it is a time that I could never bear to go back to: the unhinged breathlessness of that time was very nearly nerve-breaking).

 

 

 

Before all that, however, I had to go through the pain and heartbreak of my first real relationship. It is hard for me to overstate how momentous that first kiss in the park, at night, was for me, how mind-blowing and explosive, as though my life had been dynamited into action and reality : a heart-beating secret; a revelation.  It is also hard for anyone of the current generation, difficult though it still might be, to imagine how illicit it felt for two seventeen year old boys to be kissing out there in the moonlight, how illegal feeling, and thus even more so disorientatingly, headily thrilling.

 

 

A love triangle of sorts had emerged between my close friend Sarah, her ex-boyfriend Darren, and myself. Sarah and I had part time jobs working at an Italian restaurant, and it was in the broiling kitchen at Da Corrado, washing dishes one Friday night,  that I finally allowed some words, in carefully ambiguous form in case they were thrown back in my face, to surface from my throat like overladen thieves from a vault, weighed down with guilt, fear, shame, and tension. To my inexpressible relief she understood without stating anything explicitly, and then came the revelation: Darren had told her the same thing, and now apparently had a crush on me. The level of head-spinning euphoria I experienced I will leave to your imagination, but I know I was a different person when I came home that night, going up to my room and staring at the ceiling in the dark, knowing that my parents were downstairs but that they didn’t have a clue what was going on in my head;  that their son, basically, was about to be reborn.

 

 

At this time I was wearing Givenchy Gentleman all the time. Although in some ways it is an older man’s scent, a fresh patchouli-rose-leather perfume of great complexity and construction (throwing off beautiful top notes of lemon and tarragon alongside the aromatic vetiver and animalic patchouli), in the after shave format, it was lighter and I felt that it fitted me like a glove. It had an aura about it that dad’s other perfumes didn’t, although I suppose that by this point I may have graduated to my own bottle in any case. I loved it. And it was this scent that I can vividly remember wearing on that night of my first male kiss.  I can see myself, on a warm early summer evening, in white polo shirt and this scent (he smelled of outside and bonfires); that moment, now, that June night of stark starry skies and shadows in shrubs, that is now thus enshrined for me forever in the glorious aroma of Givenchy.

 

 

 

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He turned out to be an idiot, full of pretences and academic affectations, and wasn’t very nice to me either. I was besotted however, and though we had become college superstars as the first homosexual couple ever to exist in the entire world and not give a damn what anyone thought, our very chaste liaison, which didn’t really go any further than my previous relationship with Natasha except that the kissing was perhaps rather more passionate, soon ended in tears and melodrama, me famously flinging myself on the floor at the base of an oaktree and literally begging for him not to finish with me on the day that the whole world seemed to go up in flames and the tears were hot and heavy. Oh the joys of young love. The dapper, swaggering fool’s mind was made up though;  he was confused; more bisexual than I was, and in any case was more interested in the world of dungeons and dragons and all that puerile fantasy shit that I myself have never had one iota of interest in, and for whatever dull other reasons, it was just not to be.

 

God how I pined. How I pored over messages he had written to me on small pieces of paper during lessons while listening to the Pet Shop Boys (it was all about the Pet Shop Boys, the music we had rolled about to upstairs at full volume as I was supposed to be babysitting my sister). Left To My Own Devices was our song, and to this day it gives me fantastically mixed feelings of sadness and joy, as does One More Chance, whose bridge: “You’re so extreme, I want to take you home with me” Darren sang to me and which remains perhaps the most seductive thing anyone has ever said. But I was dying. And because I couldn’t tell my parents what was wrong, fearing horrendous repercussions if I did, they were at their wit’s end trying to work out what was wrong, why their formerly readily communicative son had become so mute and sullen. I was on drugs. I had made my cousin pregnant. I had committed a crime. They were tearing their hair out, but I was still upstairs crying, splashing Givenchy all over myself and dancing around my room in a indulgent stupor of heartbreak and obsession.

 

It wasn’t until later in the year when another crush began, one that also involved Natasha, incidentally – she ended up marrying him – and the beginning of university, with all its intense changes and overwhelming emotions, that the pain of that first break-up started to abate. In reality, as there had never really been much to it to begin with, it was more the fact of my finally having emerged from my cocoon, tasted the beauty of truth, then having it cruelly taken away from me that was causing the ‘agony’ – it could have been almost anyone, probably.  Soon, other things took over, I practically forgot about Darren (I didn’t, not really, especially whenever I came back home for the holidays), but in any case the mourning and self-pitying subsided; other experiences took over; and it all just became part of my history like anyone else’s.

 

 

Except that having had such an intense experience while wearing Givenchy; the severing of my past with my future; between repression and expression; between one seemingly preordained destiny and another, far more natural one, one that made my exhilarated eighteen year old self finally emerge as a real person after all those long, long years of hiding and feeling scared, really did sear that scent’s particular orchestration into my mind, eternally, as the real me: ‘my first kiss’, if you like: cherished; much as Ysatis, if I think about it, in some ways, was my last.

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what scent? it’s a SEXUAL EMERGENCY

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Periodically, usually twice a year or so, in various locations around Tokyo, Yokohama and Kamakura, the D and I will host an event. In the whirl of work and every day living, of catching the train, getting off the train, getting back on the train, of tapping the same old keys on the computer screen, walking back up the hill and getting into bed;  getting up again, putting on the coffee, washing the coffee pot, getting back in the shower and ironing your shirt, checking your workbag and plugging in your phone, clocking in at the office, months and months can go by living in your own little world without catching up with people. I am a solitary creature in my own way and definitely do need my space ( we both have entirely different work schedules and basically only properly see each other three days a week), but you can get into a pattern of routine and repetition that can start to feel like plaque building up in your mental arteries. It is at this point that I find I just need to say ENOUGH, gather up all my friends with me and dance.

Duncan and I in fact met each other for the first time at a party, and, being the decadent hedonists that we ultimately are, have been creating fun, immersive, sense-surrounding parties together ever since. Though I also enjoy meeting friends a couple of times a month in restaurants and Japanese izakaya –  the much healthier and more conversation-conducive version of a pub (where you can actually sit down and eat good Japanese food rather than just eating crisps and knocking back the pints standing up); as well as also having the occasional dinner party at home from time to time, ultimately, for me, I think you can’t beat the excitement, energy and liberating dreaminess of a dance party.

And we definitely do know how to throw one. We go all out. When we have hit on a theme, which usually comes spontaneously upon walking into a new venue – we both love strolling and exploring the city, trying this street and that corner and then ooh what’s that place up there… that place with the light in the window, then it’s time to build the soundtrack: think decoration, costume, guests, invitation design. Suddenly the workaday grid recedes; inspirations rise up, and a creative fever is again ignited.  Some parties work; others don’t, but it never stops us from wanting to keep doing them. I can imagine a zimmerframe geriatric rave some day in the future, octogenarian old dears tortoising about the dancefloor with walking sticks and glass eyes ( “Oh, I remember this one……..”) My parents still dance with their friends, my great aunt was a showgirl, so I know I am in good hands.

Looking back now ( as I sit here knowing I have to get ready for work but feel like writing this first), reminiscing on our shared ‘festography’ of twenty years I see, to my mirth, that the first party we held together, in 1995, was entitled Nervous Exhaustion And General Debilitation; a small, appropriately named house party chez nous to ‘celebrate’ my twenty fifth birthday in London, where I happened to be going  through quite a dark period of post-university what-to-do maelstrom and no idea what to do with my life. In some ways that period was my low point, so there was lots of Jacques Brel and other miserable wintery, Amsterdam canal-side music, and though I enjoyed it myself, I can’t entirely vouch for the other guests. My mood does rather intend to dictate the proceedings.

We have had a couple of other parties in London as well, including the slightly weird Facebook In The Flesh a couple of years ago, for which we invited people from all aspects of our lives from the present and past, people who had never met each other before, except perhaps in the form of electronic social media, and bunged them all together in a theatre bar in North London. For that one, I made the honourable, but unworkable, mistake of surrendering my control-freak tendencies regarding the music and went for a ‘bring your own’ policy that for me personally was quite disastrous: people constantly ejecting and inserting their own cds into the player and never achieving the flow and pull I want from the best party soundtracks (at the next event we are splitting the work with two other DJs for an injection of freshness).  Although some great connections and friendships were forged between people that evening, I found that party a bit of a stress.

I did smell great, though, I must say, as I had planned my scent aura days in advance. Staying at Duncan’s parents’ house in Norwich I had decided on a rose, oudh,  and patchouli theme which I then executed delightedly with militaristic precision. Clothes, washed and perfect smelling in advance. A long, and very languorous bath late morning using Cussons Imperial Leather soap (great as a starting board for any perfume you want to put on later), and then oodles of patchouli essental oil floating and shimmering in the bath water to settle gently on the skin and be ready in perfection, hours later, for the ensuing night’s events. Then: significant amounts of strategically placed Montale Aoud Rose Petals, on body and clothes, with a ‘subtle’ undercoating of Aoud Lime in certain places for added raunch, but never overcoming the glorious smell of Turkish Delight that I managed to evince when the aromas finally coalesced together much later that evening ( I am sure I actually killed people on the train carriage going down, but never mind ). The efforts I put into smelling good for that party created a scent that got me masses of compliments (oh my god what is that perfume ?) and that will now form the olfactory soundtrack, in my mind, of that strange evening forever.

No, the best parties have all, to be honest, been here in Japan. Starting with Tenshi 2000 in 1999 (angels and celestial beings to celebrate the new millennium, an event with way too elaborate costume changes: I can still see me and one of my friends in kimono, long white wigs and Venetian masks drunk, literally caught up in the wires behind the DJ booth unable to move or  come out to our planned performance to the music from Close Encounters Of The Third Kind), the brilliant Voodoo followed, for which Duncan created an unbelievable ‘altar,’ and which featured an actual earthquake in the real world during the party that could have led to a veritable disco inferno with all the candles we were burning; Petrushka, a far more innocent and magical affair that I wrote about recently in my review of Equus Lalique; You’ve Got To Say Yes To Another Excess in honour of Helen and her partner when they came to Japan for the first time; Red, in which I sprayed the whole club and its velvet banquettes with Guerlain’s Habit Rouge and L’Heure Bleue; the Hitchcock homage Birdland (Duncan dressed up as a giant crow); Death Of An Infanta/Strangers In Paradise (dark, funereal classical piano concert by my friend Yoko and I, followed with a light and twinkling after party in a nearby restaurant); Baked Alaska (a big middle finger to Sarah Palin); Bomb The Boudoir; Kirsch (an ode to the cherry and our adventures in Berlin); the sweltering, delirious Delicious Banana (which I described at length in my piece on Gorilla Perfume’s Ladyboy); Crocs Of Gold (hilarious summertime alligator party in Yokohama); The Rite Of Spring, Firecracker, and many may others. What links them all is atmosphere; a slow build up, always a build up; wonderful friends all dressed up and ready to party, and then, eventually, an explosion of booze-soaked pop and fun where reality is left entirely behind and, hopefully, indelible, future memories created. For me, these gatherings work as markers of time passed, and vivid ones, something to share, dance, live.

In truth, though I really enjoy my teaching job in many ways – the interaction with kids, the imparting of knowledge and helping students to get into their dream colleges, the positive power that giving encouragement can produce; the adrenaline of it all – and enjoy the financial stability in gives me, despite the many accumulative stresses, I know I am a person essentially who is always reaching up to more to touch the beyond; in art, music, perfume, nature wherever: the dreariness of the world and its money-obsessed, zomboid and brainwashed surrogates is simply unacceptable to me after a while. As is the rigidity of the Japanese education system. I get so damn BORED with those textbooks. And the western world. The unthinking materialism. The received ideas. The media-created, Simon Cowell TV hell crassness (thank god we don’t have a television, actually). Duncan is the same. We need poetry. We need beauty. To just escape. Even if it means growing old disgracefully. I don’t care.

The last party we had, in June 2013, was an homage to the Madagascar trip that never was to be , Music For Chameleons: a fine, exotic and rainforest-humid event, foretelling our eventual, and incredible, journey through Java that did manage to achieve something quite oneiric and otherworldly, though I do say so myself. Coconut incense drifting; birdsong everywhere; me (in Vaniglia Del Madagascar and Yves Rocher Noix De Coco), and D wandering about in giant chameleon masks (the man is an absolute whizz at creating whatever props are need from all manner of sources from fleamarkets to 100 yen stores); chameleons on a video projector slithering all over the walls…..it was a lot of colourful, junglish fun: sly and sensual, red: gold and green.

Next up, though, and entirely different, coming this Sunday –  really bad timing actually, considering that is happening right before exam season (  b a d  t e a c h e r  alert  !!!!!   ) is our upcoming winter event to welcome in 2014:  SEXUAL EMERGENCY . This was an idea that I got based on a ridiculous poster I saw in Berlin for some underground sex club two years ago or so: the name really stayed with me as it tickled me (the idea of people getting that het up about a bit of rubber): and so here we go: our first overtly ‘erotic’ dance party, to held in a small place in Ebisu, Tokyo over a period of twelve hours. It’s going to be hot, it’s going to be heaving, we’ve got ourselves some cabaret acts, a sartorial theme: (‘dress…..is less’), and a raffle (some hilarious unmentionable ‘prizes’ to be given away in a prize draw), plus a hot and sizzling soundtrack that I hope will genuinely people in a bit of a tizz. Last week, while still on winter break, we went for a New Year stroll to do some pre-party reconnaissance in the markets of Ueno; old-school, downtown Tokyo, with plenty of kinky shops for lingerie, masks and the like, and came across a bizarre shop (non-sexual, in intention I believe) for military enthusiasts. Now, I am the last person to be interested in guns, and war, and all the fetishistic accoutrements that go with it, in fact I loathe such mindsets, but, perversely, we both did find it intriguing and extremely amusing to be in such an alternative world, a  place surrounded by gun geeks, weirdos and combat specialists, all looking so intently and avowedly at the somewhat disturbing products on offer (the clattering sound of machine gun fire from U.S military documentary videos as a backdrop) that before you could say bob’s your uncle there I was in the changing rooms trying on full military gear and a gas mask. So strange to transform yourself in this way, so anti-intuitive and yet peculiarly……er, stimulating actually, especially when D then also insisted I try on some jack boots….

That was me sorted out anyway. It was all soon taken to the cash register, both of us unable to resist laughing, to the obvious consternation of the assistants and the deadly serious, grenade toting customers. This is certainly a ‘look’ I have never tried before but will undoubtedly relish once I get going, but the far more pressing question right now is to be honest WHAT SCENT?

Over the last few months I have been wearing nothing but orientals; thick, cosy Bal A Versailles, which I have been basically obsessed with;  Guerlain Tonka Impériale and Spiriteuse Double Vanille; natural perfume Florascent Tonka, and of course that old winter chestnut Shalimar parfum, with just the occasional spritz of Tom Ford Grey Vetiver on my coat for an interesting, fresher, contrast. Like most perfume freaks I feel this is the precisely the time for these scents that act as a kind of furred, second skin; a barrier against the cold (its’ getting freezing here this week, and the Japanese heating systems are entirely inappropriate for it). Somehow, though, I don’t want to be warm and fuzzy, vanillic and cute in my pervy outfit (‘hey there cuddly soldier, you cheeky odalisque!): no, I want a bit of real, manly  raunch. Fierce, macho. But the kind of macho I can take and actually revel in, which doesn’t include many scents, to be honest. All standardized ‘men’s colognes’ are utterly out of the question; the dime a dozen citrus woody acrids – I would be forced to shoot myself with my fake plastic shotgun. Ouds are possible; so is patchouli, vetiver, and especially leather. Should I be raiding my Amouage sample box for some of that hairy Arab bliss? Getting out my vials of Sécretions Magnifiques? Smother myself in a bit of Jovan Musk For Men? I think I have probably narrowed the selections down, in fact ( I want to reek, to spray the uniform in advance ) to either Ungaro Pour Homme with its sweaty, animalic patchouli lavender, Azzaro (ditto), Kouros – an old, rank, sexy favourite – or perhaps more likely, and the main contender right now, vintage Givenchy Gentleman, one of my holy grails of masculine with its prolonged, aromatic patchouli and leather (on me, not the least bit gentlemanly I can tell you; the question is : with, or without, deodorant?) The contrast between my fabric-softened, fresh-shampoo olfactory work persona and the thought of this weekend Tokyo weirdo stomping stench amuses me. I want to delve into something, into unchartered, presposterone territories. I want my scent to rise up on the dance floor mingling with other bodies; my real smell, and a perfectly chosen perfume. I want the chosen scent to throb.

The party theme may be ironic, but I don’t know, when we are all there, boys and girls getting down on the dancefloor, I have a feeling, and a hope, that something will get loosened, that despite the inevitable hilarity of the theme the event should hopefully create, that underneath it all something quite genuinely warm and sexy will transpire. So is the Givenchy the correct choice, in your view, or do you have any other suggestions?

I have only two more days left in which to choose…..

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