Fragrance Review Monsillage Aviation Club: “The Power Of The 60’s”

Americans seem to have a fascination with looking back to what they believe were better days, or at least, more interesting days. When I was a teenager the 50’s was the decade longed for. Recently it seems to be the 60’s which has caught the attention of those who want to stare in the rearview mirror. TV shows like “Mad Men” and “Pan Am” almost fetishize the ability to smoke in public, drink heavily, and participate in social revolution. The design tropes of that time are also starting to crop up in fashion as well. Lisa Perry is one designer who has taken her inspiration from the 60’s but created fashion for the twenty-first century. In fragrance I think Isabelle Michaud has also been inspired by that decade in her fragrance Aviation Club for her Monsillage line of fragrances.

Aviation Club is the most unabashedly masculine of the four current fragrances in the Monsillage collection. It fairly reeks of dark wood paneled rooms where men, and women; smoked, drank and whiled the evening away. The other three fragrances Dupont Circle, Eau Fraiche, and Ipanema Posto Nove are all pretty interesting too. I really enjoyed all four fragrances that I tried but it was Aviation Club, with its unapologetic 60’s powerhouse cologne architecture, which was the most memorable to me.

Café de Paris Casino Monaco 

While I impose my 60’s fetishism on Mme Michaud; on her website she tells the story of how Aviation Club came to be. Aviation Club was a casino in Paris where Mme Michaud spent nights playing poker. In her story she remarked that it was just before smoking restrictions started to take effect in France and so Aviation Club is a fragrance full of smoke, leather, and wood.

Aviation Club opens with a cup of black coffee strong and steaming; this is the smell of the coffee pot just after it is ready. I really enjoyed the fullness of the coffee accord that Mme Michaud coaxed into life in the early development. The heart is the powerful mix of tobacco and leather. These two notes make up the core of many men’s powerhouse fragrances and the key to getting it right is balance. Mme Michaud clearly understands that, as both the tobacco and the leather tip the scales equally and create that powerful familiar vibe. The base notes are also familiar to those who enjoy powerhouse colognes as Mme Michaud chooses rich woods and amber to complete Aviation Club.

Aviation Club has excellent longevity and above average sillage, Mon(do)sillage in fact.

Created in1966: Edmond Roudnitska

2011-it no longer roars due to EU restrictions

Those powerhouse men’s colognes of the 60’s are some of my earliest scent memories of the men I looked up to as a small child and as such forever encase them in a time capsule within that decade. Aviation Club expertly captures that time as easily as it does Mme Michaud’s Parisian casino. In both cases she has satisfied the ability of fragrance to simultaneously look back and move forward.

Monsillage is currently only available on the website and in stores in Canada and Paris.

Disclosure: This review was based on a sample provided by a reader. Thanks Claudia!

Mark Behnke, Managing Editor

 What's your favorite  fragrance that was created during the 60s'?

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4 comments

  • Yeah i am so happy you decided to mention this beautiful line of fragrances. I own 2 of the line…Aviation Club and Dupont Circle, truly amazing fragrances. Awesome lasting power/sillage. You can order them online from Monsillage directly and pay via paypal…..it was so easy. Thank you for mentioning a gorgeous line of fragrances.

  • The coffee note is a winner for me. This sounds very unique:) and a naked man in ad for you first thing in the morning. What could be better? xox

  • Armando Martinez says:

    I haven’t smelled this line of scents yet.

    I just read the top lines about our longing for days of old thinking/feeling they were better times. It made me think of Woody Allen’s last year film “Midnight in Paris” and the theme of that movie being just that “Didn’t the times before us seem like the better times in which we didn’t live in?” We romanticize about the past of times we read about. I have, no doubt. For me, it would be the 20’s, 30’s through the 70’s. I lived in the 80’s as a teenager; for me, it was the best of times and the worst of times, difficult times whenever one is trying to forage their own identity. When the 20’s hit, it was the 90’s, I still didn’t have a backbone yet, I was still trying to figure out what I wanted but had a mad love for Art Deco of the 20’s and 30’s. I was deeply into the scents of the era for the 90’s, no doubt, but my heart longed for a time I never had a part of. As I hit the 2000’s, I was in my 30’s. I felt at peace with hitting this decade and wasn’t as afraid as some were but it was a tumultuous time for me. I really started to enjoy what was “Now” of the times but still longed for times of the past, gained more of an appreciation for the current moment but still had a foot in the past. As the latter part of the 2000’s hit and I was nearing the new decade of 40 for me, I really started to want to hold onto the past, I feared the new decade that was looming upon me. I dreaded it like it was the plague but you can’t stop the future from coming because when you least expect it, it’s there/here. But as time mellows now and I really feel the truth of the essence of me in the hear and now, I enjoy now more so than “The past” I take pleasure in my love of the past but I don’t let it take over me as the past having been the better of times because there were some really hard times in my past of which I wouldn’t want to have to relive again. But to realize our desire to live in times that we never had part of; that’s okay to daydream about that, I still do but I am more at peace knowing that “now” is actually the golden times, they truly are. Don’t forget about “now” Now will be gone before you know it and you may be toiling over a new decade of life that you were dreading and then it’s here and you are back where you started again. Of which I’m sure I will feel when this fairly new decade of my life: the 40’s I am at peace with now.

    I don’t know why I had to write that but felt the need to post about my thoughts. Sorry if they had NOTHING to do with this article at all.

    My sincerest regards
    Armando C. Martinez