Someone famous in the music scene, with whom we've been emailing, has mentioned Amouage
Gold as the fragrance fit for an Oscars night. Not just wearing it in the audience, trying to steady one's shaky hands by resting them on the posh couture gown, but
presenting. There just isn't any stage fright or wavering about
Gold; it wears itself like a grande-dame, assured, polished, dramatic. This is a regal fragrance for a cool blonde of another era.
History
Amouage, the Omani firm who cater for the Omani royalty and those with a taste for French fragrance structures in Middle Eastern settings, went out of their way to make
Gold, their first fragrance, sumptuous and fit for a queen; not a princess. Top perfumer was ushered in (Guy Robert, who gave us
Equipage, among the most perfect men's scents, and the once wonderful
Dioressence which my own mother so loved); the best ingredients were specifically harvested; no budget restrictions were made whatsoever; no focus groups. You'd have to envy the lucky perfumer who worked thus unrestrained. The year was 1983. At the time Amouage didn't benefit from the creative direction it has nowadays and the fragrance circulated simple as Amouage for women. Robert considered it the crowning glory of his career and characterises its dramatic progression as "symphony".
Fragrance Description & Classification
You might have witnessed Amouage
Gold for women uttered in the same breath as Chanel
No.5. As you would expect, given Guy Robert's credentials (he's the creator of
Madame Rochas and Hermès
Calèche) and the general mad rush Middle East has for Chanel (they're mad about Chanel), this isn't far off the truth.
Yes, Gold is an aldehydic floral, in the general ballpark of No.5, a tad heavy-hitting and old-school (in a good way), lush, opulent and very luxurious, which uses traditional Omani ingredients re-adjusted in a classic French blueprint. If I were to be more specific, I'd say that
Gold for women more resembles the hypothetical child of Lanvin's
My Sin (long discontinued) and Houbigant's
Quelques Fleurs (now sadly reformulated).
But if you only know Robert's famous aldehydics I mentioned, you get an idea of how Gold smells: I need to stress that in order to like it, you have to like fragrances in the
floral aldehydic family (refer to this article to see
what aldehydes are and here for
reviews of aldehydic fragrances). And you might be questioning why splurge (50ml/1.7oz will set you back 285$) on a bottle when there are other things smelling like it. Good question! But somehow God is in the details and
Gold appears richer, more opulent than any of them. This thing radiates off skin for hours and hours on end, it just won't go away; a bottle will probably last you more than any of us is expected to make it in sane mind.
The Omani materials used enjoy a rich heritage: "Today, as in ancient times, the precious resin from the very ordinary looking frankincense tree is harvested carefully by hand, by a select caste of tribal herders. The frankincense trees that line the Dhofar landscape in Salalah are protected and the mysterious allure of their scent is blended with a host of precious natural oils and essences to form the unmatched perfume that is Amouage. The essence of an incredibly rare variety of rose called the Omani Rock Rose is extracted and also used in 'Gold Amouage.' This special variety of rose grows and flowers for the briefest period each year on the slopes of the remote Jebel Al Akhder mountains of Oman. Myrrh, another core ingredient in Amouage is also from the Jebel Al Akhder region." [
source]
The start of Amouage Gold for women is all powdery-soapy floral, much like the archetypal
aldehydics of yore; golden honey limbs, falling on a dozen silk cushions. There's a clean vibe with
lily-of-the-valley green floralcy, while at the same time you're miles away from the modern "clean" scents of laundry detergent & fabric softener. The fruity aspects are intergrained like brushstrokes in an impressionist painting; from a little distance it all mingles into a composition rather than individual shapes.The floral part is built on the intense chord of jasmine & ylang ylang that we also find in Chanel
No.5, boosted by rose and a tiny touch of tuberose; in fact this floral chord most reminds me of Patou's classic
Joy, though the whole composition does not. The natural floral, velvety sweetness is complimented by a dab of creaminess, provided -from what I can smell- from a little vanilla and
sandalwood. The
creamy aspect is what makes
Gold so lush, so nectarous, so very sinful.
As the fragrance dries down, you're suddenly face to face with the revelation that
the core structure is really that of a graceful woody floral with oriental elements: the scent becomes noticeably woody, with a downy, elegant polish that is clean and smoothed out on notes of lightly astrigent frankincense and myrrh with no smoke whatsoever and the enduring note of (rich and -again- similar to the old parfum edition in
No.5) musk.The lasting power and sillage are phenomenal.
Notes for Amouage Gold for women:
Top: lime, apricot, peach, lily-of-the-valley,
neroli.
Heart notes: rose, jasmine, silver frankincense, myrrh, rock rose flower, patchouli, orris, cedarwood and sandalwood.
Base notes:
ambergris, civet and musk.
Concentrations Available & Shopping
Amouage
Gold currently circulates as Eau de Parfum (which is plenty really!) and extrait de parfum. Older versions included an Eau de Toilette. I find the EDP the most pleasing form.
There is also a men's Amouage
Gold version, which leans into the woody musk category rather than aldehydic, even though stating almost the same ingredients.
Stockists include the Omani Amouage boutique, the boutique in London and online such as at Luckyscent.
Check the official site at
Amouage.com
pic of Anita Ekberg