When I sprayed this new and lavishly sensual incarnation of Angel on a friend, he seemed momentarily lost and later came back to me and said it smelled of Portishead because of his emotive connections to a friend who wore Angel years ago and played a lot of Portishead at the time.
I love
these synaptic firings, the strange ways we associate and layer our emotions
with memories and experience. I smell aircraft fuel when I smell Opium due to the amount of travelling I
did as a child and my mother wearing the classic YSL oriental to try and mask
the smells of planes, the metallic hum of fuselage, the drifting smoke from the
backs of planes (you could smoke on planes then….) and that very particular dry
foamy smell of aircraft seating.
I have
realised throughout my years of wearing Angel
and to a lesser degree, Alien, how
reactive these scents are, how like so much art and music they provoke extreme
reactions. And yet very few people would even begin to categorise these iconic
scents as any kind of art. Yet in their own way they are, created to have
impact, move and divide us. Everyone I have mentioned Angel to recently has a reaction, good or bad or at the very least
a distinctive memory or story to tell. I had a friend who laced her hair with
it, long dark hair, that swung in heady sweet hanks around her as she moved.
She permeated a room, the scent crashing against the walls like caramelised
water.
Angel is 20 years old this year and to celebrate,
Parfums Mugler have released another innovative quartet of flankers celebrating
Angel, Alien, A*men and Womanity. Following on from the critical
and commercial success of ‘The Taste of Fragrance’ quartet last year, a
collaboration with Hélène Darrouze, the Michelin starred chef who highlighted
notes to sublimate and ‘pop’ the four signature scents. I loved them and bought a couple each of Angel and Alien. They are privately sublime. Angel had a massively amplified dark cocoa note injected through it
and settled down like sexy mulch on the skin. Alien had buttered salted caramel oozing through it and this worked
so well with the jasmine sambac that gives Alien
its distinctive glowing soul.
The new
flankers have the name Collection de Cuir
or Leather Collection. Mugler have really pulled out the technological and
referential stops with this set of scented incarnations. Collaborating with
Clarins Laboratories, the Centre
Tecnhnologique de Cuir and Orfeverie
d’Anjou, Parfums Mugler have produced I think one of the best flanker
collections in quite some time. It proves you can take classic fragrances and
with careful application of imagination, technical nous and of course an
in-depth knowledge of your brand produce witty and revealing depths to existing
formulae.
This is
the trick, to explore existing icons in a new and exciting way, unfurling new
facets and perhaps if you are lucky, creating something golden and revelatory from
the original motherlode. Mugler have travelled some distance from the
originals, but seem to enjoy playing with the recipes. Sometimes it works, like
last year’s foodie flankers, the Liqueurs de Parfums, Alien Absolue, the recent Angel Eau de Toilette, the transcendent
Rose and Pivoine incarnations of Angel
and the joyful tobacco and whiskey tinted A*mens. This restless reworking of
thematics will always have failures, like a shattered pots on the floor of a
kiln, experimentation is necessary in order to find form and function that
might possibly work.
Last
year’s mouthwatering quartet worked so well because of the precise application
of the sublimated gourmand notes. Long accused of triggering the avalanche of
gourmand trends that cascaded extravagantly subsequently through the world of
fragrance, Angel in fact re-wrote the
rules entirely in terms of construction and ingredients. It is hard now twenty
years on to truly appreciate the seismic shock the launch of Olivier Cresp’s
original Veltol and patchouli drenched oriental had.
What I
admire in the evolution of the Mugler olfactory family, is the careful scrutiny
of the notes and facets in each of the four classic Mugler scents and the
consideration of how these aspects can be honed, twisted and re-orchestrated
without losing sight of what made them unique in the first place. This is
actually very hard to do. Many brands tinker with favourites and archive
classics but rarely get it right. I was not overly impressed with Thierry
Wasser’s attempt to modernise Shalimar
with Parfum Initial. Intended as a
lighter, softer, more pinkified rendition of the House classic it felt weirdly aggressive
and cheap somehow, Shalimar viewed
through a cracked Fisher Price camera lens.
This
year’s batch of Mugler flankers are inspired in part by the traditional craft
of scented glove-making, where the glove leathers are carefully and deeply
cured in scented oils and then handmade has revived this classic tradition this
year as part of their beautiful Collection
De Grasse. The artisan gloves are scented with the House’s iconic Mure et Musc perfume.
Working
with the Orfeverie D’Anjou, the
world-renowned pewter specialists, Parfums Mugler commissioned bespoke Inox
vats in order to soak the four fragrances with specially created vegetal
leather. This note really radiates out of all four scents. It smells very
different from trying to recreate a leather facet from aromachemicals. There is
no bitterness or underlying tar-like ambiguity. There is a reality to the
Mugler leather facet, suppleness, softness, malleability and in the case of Alien a wonderful brushed white suede
effect that complements the jasmine beautifully.
I dived
in and bought two, Angel and Alien, the same two I bought last year
from The Taste of Fragrance collection. I have never really been won over by Womanity. I will admit it’s a clever
take on fig, marrying it with a marine breath of caviar, but I really dislike
the saline undertones and the name is ghastly. I just hear womb all the time. I have never been taken with A*men, the recipe has smelled
perpetually cheap, although the valiant whisky and tobacco permutations did
bring new life to an increasingly dull formula. It took me a while to warm to
the tobacco version though. I bought it, wore it, hated it and shelved it. Then
one weird autumn day of rain and heavy hot showers I wore it and loved it, the
notes fell into place and the delicacy of the smoky, amber facet gave a certain
gravitas to the somewhat generic coffee, chocolate and spice combo.