A calamity has befallen the perfume-obsessive community. I speak, of
course, of the prolonged outage of the BPAL Madness forum, where Black
Phoenix Alchemy Lab fans meet to chat about life and perfumes. In the
interim, Facebook has been a home away from home, and a nice forum
member organized a traveling box of single note scents to circulate so
that we could train our noses to identify individual notes.
Due
to my upcoming moving plans, I got to go first so the box would not be
caught in some horrible limbo between the U.S. Postal Service and Canada
Post. The box arrived the other day, jam packed with sniffable samples
of a gazillion scents. I decided to use this moribund blog to catalog my
impressions.
I decided to begin with my favorite, a Madagascar Bourbon Vanilla Bean
CO2 extract. I love it, a very pure rich vanilla, with a hint of
booziness but nothing too buttery or too perfumey about it. If I had to
live with only one perfume note for the rest of my life, this would be
it.
Next in the package: BPAL's Neutral from the
RPG line, which is described as "a perfect skin musk." This isn't how I
usually think of skin musk, which I tend to find sort of rotten and
cloying. This is a little more of a clean laundry floral, or what skin
smells like after a bath with a perfumed soap.
BPAL Dragon's Blood
may or may not be a single note of dragon's blood resin. It's not a
note I usually care for, which smells to me like a too-sweet mothball,
but this has more honey to it than camphor, so maybe I should give the
Lab's blends containing this note another try.
BPAL Bliss is described as "pure milk chocolate" and I've always found it very true to that description. It smells a lot like a pan of brownies just out of the oven.
And now onto the hardcore single notes!
Frankincense (Somalia)
this is a piney resin that takes me directly back to my grandfather's
studio, so it must smell like some kind of solvent or oil paint from
deep in my memory. It also reminds me of when my friends and I would
attack an old pine tree in our elementary school playground and scrap
the oozing sap with rocks. I don't really like to wear piney scents on
my skin, but I could sniff this little tube all day to bring back those
memories.
Bergamot is an empty tube, so it's
hard to get a good sniff, but what I can get is a bitter orange skin,
very much the bitter oils on the skin, not anything juicy from
underneath.
BPAL Golgothan Myrrh I find it very
hard to describe myrrh. It's a sort of honeyed herbal note, I guess.
There is something I don't love about it in blends, and this single note
isn't disabusing me of that notion. I can't pin down why, but it just
doesn't hit my nose right.
Sandalwood (Australian)
This is different from many other sandalwoods I've tried. I find
sandalwood fascinating in its varieties. Some I love and find warm and
spicy, while others repel me with a sharp perfuminess. This one combines
a warm woodiness that reminds me of a cedar closet with an overlying
sweet, almost paste-like note. I like that woodiness but don't like that
other note.
Elemi is something I've heard of
but never knew what it was. It's a resin often used in varnishes, and I
get that same artist studio vibe I got from the frankincense, only this
has a top note that is almost lemony. Another note I don't think I'd
like on my skin, but I enjoy smelling it on its own.
Frankincense (India) This is sharper and stronger than the Somalian version, with a bright note that is similar to the elemi.
Carrot Seed
This smells so odd, yet strangely familiar. It smells like gardening,
like the inside of the shed where we keep the gardening tools and it
gets damp and musty but with a pleasant smell of dirt. There is a hint
of the mellow dirt sweetness of a carrot, but I wouldn't call it
carroty, either. I like this when a drop is blended into a perfume, but
on its own it is really strange and compelling at the same time it's
fairly offputting.
BPAL Siberian Musk The one
that got away. When this came out, I was convinced I didn't like musk
and didn't buy it, until I realized that the deeper, warmer varieties
did great things on my skin. When I finally got to try this, I realized it is the key note in BPAL's Snake Oil. It's both sharp and sweet, and very animal-like. It's rich.
BPAL Ambergris Accord
Such an interesting scent, and one I love when it pops up in blends.
It's both sweet and salty, floral and musky. There is something animal
and marine about it, and even in accord form, you get an understanding
of why it was so prized. It really adds something undefinable to a
scent.
Violet Leaf Absolute I haven't been
commenting on the oil colors, which range from clear to yellow to deep
brown, but violet leaf is BRIGHT GREEN! And it smells like.....mashed up
green leaves. I don't detect much of a relation to violet flowers in
this, but there is something that makes me think of strong tea and maybe
some rotting wood on the forest floor. I don't like it, but it smells
like scary essence of the outdoors and I respect that.
BPAL Caraway
At first whiff there is something piney and resinous about this that
reminds me of frankincense, but behind that is the family smell of
caraway seeds and rye bread. It's more aromatic and less foodie than I'd
imagined and I can see liking this in a perfume.
Green Cognac
really is faintly green. It smells like the strong, boozy slightly
sweet center of a filled chocolate that I would have wrinkled my nose at
as a kid but eaten anyway, or the illicit enjoyment I used to get out
of smelling the bottles in my father's liqueur collection. I inherited
my grandmother's liquor cabinet, along with an old bottle of cognac, and
the wood interior has absorbed the smell of the booze after all these
years. This is what it smells like, and I love it. No wonder I love
perfumes that have this note.
BPAL White Sage I
don't really love sage, either in perfumes or even as a flavoring for
food. Even the smell of it in the garden puts me off. I'm not sure what
about it bugs me, but there is something sharpish but also dusty about
it. This note doesn't smell all that kitcheny to me, but I get both the
sharpness and the dust, but also something else that smells a little
like a freshly painted room.
BPAL Oakmoss I
never like to wear perfumes with oakmoss in them because it turns to
instant powder on my skin. It's a very distinctive scent, and I actually
like it in the vial, but I don't enjoy what it does on my skin. The
woody dustiness reminds me of some places I have spent the summer, and
it's a very pleasant evocation, but I'd like it more as a room scent
than a scent to wear.
Neroli This is soapier and
more bitter than I expected. I love neroli in perfumes, the sweet warm
blossoms are so perfect. But in its essential form, it's much more like
the skin of the bitter orange than the pure smooth sweetness, mixed with
something a little soapy.
Labdanum This is a sweet, slightly spicy resin that, unfortunately for me, kind of smells like B.O. Oh well.
Tonka Bean
Sort of a pasty, musky vanilla scent. It smells like library paste in
the best way. I think it's sort of to vanilla as carob is to chocolate
-- nice enough on its own merits, but nowhere as good if you want to
think of it as an equivalent substitute.
BPAL Black Patchouli
This is my favorite patchouli, which smells to me like very nice fresh
newly turned earth. It's not a dirt scent that has any moldiness in it,
just like damp earth after a rainfall or when you're gardening. It's
very rich.
Pink Peppercorn This shows up in a
lot of perfumes I love, where it tends to add a kick to whatever spice
is there. By itself in the vial it smells more like peppercorns in a
pepper mill than any way I've smelled it in a blend, and I perceive the
"pink" mildness of it, vs how I would expect black peppercorns to smell.
Cacao
This looks like someone squirted some Hershey's syrup into a vial, it's
that dark and thick. Smells recognizably like chocolate, but back in
there is something slightly earthy.
Vetiver (Haiti)
I supremely hate vetiver on my skin, but I actually sort of like this
in the vial. It smells like a spicy grass and definitely makes me think
of cologne. Whatever it is that goes awful on my skin is lurking in the
back there, but I like its more immediate notes.
Cistus
I don't know what I was expecting, I guess something floral because
this is from the rockrose family, but it smells like lemon pine sol
disinfectant.
Sandalwood (New Caledonia) This is
my favorite kind of sandalwood, very rich, warm and spicy. In college I
had a little vial of sandalwood paste a friend had given me, and I've
been trying to find that smell again ever since. This is pretty close.
Agarwood
Such a deep woody smell. It smells both natural, as if I am sticking my
nose into a half-rotten log, and processed, as if it has been worked
and then oiled. There is something slightly musty about it I don't like,
but that goes away and reveals the nice wood underneath.
Vanilla Bourbon
Not sure if this comes from the same bottle I tested earlier, but it
also has a liquor smell, like the bottle of vanilla extract in the
kitchen. I love that vanilla can come on strong like this, when we often
tend to think of it as bland.
BPAL Red Patchouli Earthy like the black patchouli, but a little lighter and spicier.
Bitter Almond
I love this smell. The bitterness is in the first whiff, when it seems
almost alcoholic, but once that is gone, it's a bright rich almond, like
marzipan or a maraschino cherry.
Vetiver (Sri Lanka)
A totally different creature vs the Haitian vetiver. This is the smoky
one -- however it ends up in the same awful place no matter what type on
my skin. I can detect a hint of the spicy grassiness, but it's mostly
smoky.
Lavender This is a gorgeous lavender,
which puts me immediately in a purple field in Provence. Some lavender
perfumes smell artificial or sharp, but this absolute is the real deal.
It's totally fresh.
Fossilized Amber Oil I don't
care for golden, rich ambers, because they tend to smell sweaty to me.
This is close to that, but I can really smell the stone here. There is a
mineral quality I just love.
And that's all! I hope
this can happen again, because there are so many left to try. Various
ambers, florals, interesting accords.