New Perfume Review: SAUF Contre Bombarde 32, Plein Jeu III – V and Voix Humaine (Fillipo Sorcinelli) + Grande Orgue Draw

Photo: Fillipo Sorcincelli

From the sensual and wrinkled juices, angry, whose names refer to the organ registers. Nothing already heard, only compositions with a strong (very strong) personality.The bottle, of a religious White takes the form of a drawbar of the organ stop with his knob, faithful reproduction of the knobs of the stops of the “Grand Orgue” of the Notre Dame Cathedral in Paris. As concerning the names of the perfumes, they too have been inspired by the stops of the Great Organ.” Lionel Paillés (from the SAUF website)

Cathédrale Notre-Dame Paris for Sauf Fragrances (Photo by Fillipo Sorcinelli)

Notre Dame Cathedral, Paris, vespers. The thrilling hum of the great organ resonates against old stone, rising to sing rhapsodically to the stained glass angels of the basilica. Candles glow and flicker rhythmically as incense billows in puffy fragrant clouds from the censers at the altar. While the organ pipes resound and frankincense swirls among the wooden pews, heaven is on earth.

Filippo Sorcinelli pictured with Contre Bombarde 32, Plein Jeu III-V and Voix Humaine (Photo: SAUF)

Contre Bombarde 32, Plein Jeu III-V and Voix Humaine, the first fragrances in the new SAUF line from Filippo Sorcinelli, founder of UNUM, encapsulate musicality in perfume, each scent inspired by individual organ stops on the Grand Orgue of Notre Dame. Sorcinelli is a classically trained musician who was playing in cathedrals by age 13. As a perfumer, he was struck by similarities in the terminology of both music and perfume, both having “a head, a heart and a substance, as well as crescendos and decrescendos.”

 

Perfumer Filippo Sorcinelli (courtesy of SAUF)

The three SAUF perfumes are based around incense, and each translates a different timbre of the organ into scent: Contre Bombarde 32, a profound, deep and melodious; Plein Jeu III – V, a rich, symphonic chorus, and Voix Humaine, a soaring, reed-like soprano.

Perfumer Fillipo Sorcinelli playing the Organ (Photo: SAUF)

Each is stunning; together, they create a spiritual symphony, a perfume triptych of the worldly, the celestial and the human soul.

Un Musician sous le Pluie © Robert Doisneau

Contre Bombarde 32, named for an organ stop of penetrating low power, shimmers with such resonant beauty that it suggests the celestial. Tendrils of vaporous yet woody incense with an almost steamy warmth reach into the opening notes of bitter orange and elemi. The herbal-dry orange and bite of juniper act as counterpoints to the mellifluous caramel and amber base, while the midsection is layers of old wood, muted with years of polish and wear. The interplay between sweet/bitter, strong/receding notes forms into exquisite harmony. Notes: Elemi, juniper, bitter orange, cedar, sandalwood, amber, caramel, vanilla.

Les Helicopteres  1972  ©Robert Doisneau

Plein Jeu is a choral sound, a dialogue of chanting between choir and instrument. This is the most earthly of the three; spice and forest aromas suggest worldly beauties.  A lively ginger and lemon dance into the first notes, lifting the incense that follows into a lighter key. The woody notes here are less churchlike, more arboreal. There is a gentle descant from the opening as the woody notes and spice step ahead of the incense and then recede again. Notes: Lemon, ginger, mimosa, black pepper, amber, olibanum, jasmine, cedar, balsam fir, myrrh, oakmoss, patchouli, sandalwood, vetiver

La Ballata di Pierrette d'Orient ©Robert Doiseau

Voix Humaine, named for a high reed pitch resembling a human voice, is the smell of candles lit for a thousand human souls. A bright spark of bergamot is immediately warmed by cardamom and the waxy, honey-musk smell of tallow. The incense here is gentle, cradling, giving way to comforting notes of quiet loveliness. There is poignancy to Voix Humaine, a sense of something benevolent that lingers nearby. Notes: Bergamot, cardamom, elemi, ambrette, jasmine, orange blossom, amber, leather, olibanum, milk mousse, musk, vanilla.

 

SAUF FRAGRANCES VIDEO

Wearing all three perfumes on my arm, I am struck by how seamlessly they work in concert, as if each played its unique instrument to harmonize with the others. The dry downs, while by no means identical, have a kinship that is rich, warm and woody. While you would never mistake one perfume for another, they each fade into a dreamy plangency, like the echo of music against stone after the last note speaks.

Disclaimer: Samples provided by Twisted Lily many thanks. My opinions are my own.

Lauryn Beer, Editor

Art Direction: Michelyn Camen Editor-in-Chief

Photo courtesy of SAUF

Editor’s Note: SAUF fragrance is part of a larger project which also includes Jewelry …you can check it out here. Sauf debuted at Pitti Fragranze 2016. In addition to SAUF images, I used the photos of the French photo journalist Robert Doisneau.

Photo: Filippo Sorcinelli

Thanks to the generosity of Fillipo Sorcinelli, we have a reader’s choice of Contre Bombarde 32, Plein Jeu III – V and Voix Humaine for a registered reader in the EU, U.S. and Canada. To be eligible please leave a comment with what appeals to you about the SAUF perfumes based on Lauryn’s review, which one you would like to win, where you live and how you equate music and fragrance.  Please Like SAUF on Facebook  and follow us @cafleurebon and @_sauf_  Instagram. Draw closes1/20/2016

 We announce the winners only on site and on our Facebook page, so Like Cafleurebon and use our RSS FEED…or your dream prize will be just spilled perfume

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35 comments

  • cinnamon tree says:

    Thank you for so inspiring article. I can often almost smell certain kinds of music. Organ tones “smell” of wood, moss and thunderstorm.

    All three fragrances seem to be great (I love incense!), but the most inspiring combination is, I think, Voix Humaine with incense, cardamom and leather. I would love to try it. I live in Europe, thanks!

  • These fragrances seem so amazing, I love the ideals and I am super intrigued by voix Humain, that Incense and Cardamon combo sounds great!

  • Fascinating concept and reviews. Lauryn does a great job of describing the organ stops that inspire each perfume, I can almost feel the “penetrating low power” of the first perfume. Music has been a huge part of my life and I hear the bass end the most; that’s what I feel most deeply in perfume too. Does that answer the question? I could go on with different notes and the way they are used compared to combinations of different instruments but it’s late. I would most like to win Plein Jeu because I like the idea of the choral arrangement, I’m in the US, thanks to all for the generous offer.

  • I’ve sampled these and I think they’re all lovely imaginings of incense and the concept of the organ comes through quite well. Plein Jeu would my choice, although Contre Bombarde 32 has quite surprised me with it’s caramel note.

  • In my mind, “incense” immediately bring a specific image to mind but the way Lauryn describes each SAUF fragrance is so nuanced. From Lauryn’s descriptions, I get the impression that these perfumes are all very soulful.

    Music and fragrance are both forms of composition… while both can be sculpted to a certain extent, they also both decay over time.

    I’d love to win Voix Humain. I’m in the US. Thanks!

  • concertslover says:

    I suppose that there would be a connection between music and perfumes just as there is art. For instance, I reviewed the ‘notes’ for each fragrance and it was a difficult choice to decide between the three, and since we will not get all three right away to try together then I’ll have to make a choice.

    Plein Jeu
    From USA

  • marcopietro says:

    I follow Filippo Sorcinelli a long time and I admire his work. I own and love his masterpiece Lavs. FP is a conceptual artist, a little bit visionary, for which different arts inherent different human senses are the alphabet of his philosophical narratives, I love him.
    This latest work has a wonderful concept, packaging in the first.
    Plein Jeu III – V is my choice.
    I live in EU.
    Thanks!

  • fazalcheema says:

    With UNUM Lavs, Fillipo showed his mastery with the incense that is why I am particularly intrigued by Contre Bombarde 32 which is woody incense with fruity notes. The music and perfumery are similar in the sense that both depend upon how the creator mixes different notes to create the piece. My choice is Contre Bombarde 32. I am in the US

  • I LOVE the packaging design of these, I think the bottles look so smart, but also kind of creepy, like bones or something. Contre Bombarde 32 sounds most interesting to me; Lauryn’s description calls to mind how ephemeral both music and perfume are, and the desire to chase after the pieces you love. I live in Canada.

  • Hikmat Sher Afridi says:

    Thanks for the review. All the three fragrances sounds great focused on incense which is one of my favorite, but I am intrigued by SAUF Plein Jeu III-V review. I love earthy, incense woody perfumes. The music & perfume going parallel together like a rail track with same objective to bring comfort. My choice is SAUF Plein Jeu III-V
    Thanks to the generosity of Fillipo Sorcinelli and Cafleurebon for the opportunity to participate in the draw by letting my relative address in US.

  • I’ve always loved the music of perfume, how one art form can inform and inspire another. All of the perfumes sound fascinating but Plein Jeu would be my first choice. I’m in the US and have liked SAUF perfumes (love all the photos). Thank you Fillipo Sorcinelli and Cafleurebon for the draw!

  • Beautiful review. These fragrances are all sounds incredibly good. Hard to chose only one of them. And the bottles are amazing. Music and perfume have so much similarity, for example the “notes”. If I would be as lucky to win, my choice is Contre Bombarde 32 because of the caramel note. Thank you very much for the chance. I live in Europe.

  • I’m not sure how music and perfume go together except as the inspiration of one by the other. I liked the review and find that making a choice is very difficult, but Contre Bombarde 32 would be my choice if I had to make one. Thank you so much for the draw. I live in the USA

  • Wow, I have never seen so fascinating and strange bottles! They would be enough to buy such perfume – of course I believe the scent inside is even more interesting. I think I would choose Plein Jeu. Thanks! I live in the EU.

  • The SAUF perfumes have tickled my interest over the past few months, especially after coincidentally reading Septimania: a Novel by Jonathan Levi. An organist, also an organ tuner, learns he is heir to the lost empire of Septimania (modern-day Languedoc-Roussillon). The hero visits the Vatican and travels across oceans through decades searching for his lost lover and missing child. His musical ministrations at the organ are key to his destiny.

    Lauryn has lifted the veil, revealing something that feels almost sacred and entirely human, with her thoughts on SAUF perfumes. Her experiences of these scents remind me of the tension I feel when hearing an exalted moment of music while knowing it will soon end, similar to the “dialogue of chanting between choir and instrument” which satisfies the ear yet leaves the heart eternally wanting more.

    I would love to wear Plein Jeu III-V close to my own heart. I am in the US. Music and fragrance are powerfully present though they travel invisibly through the ether. Both have texture, depth, and resonance that can suggest or demand an emotional response. Cultures throughout history have used sound and scent to conjure visions and express belief in the unknown. They belong together forever.

  • doveskylark says:

    What a beautiful review, especially the line in the review of Voix Humane about the smell of candles lit for a thousand human souls. This sounds so comforting.
    I’ve only thought about scent and music in terms of jazz music and a smoky leathery fragrance like vintage Scandal.
    I’d choose Voix Humaine if I were the winner.
    I live in the USA.

  • Miss Almond says:

    This is different kind of music thah I usually listen to: more serious, powerful, unsettling perhaps. The article made me think about how often we stay within a favorite genre of music or favorite types of fragrances which gives a pleasant sense of comfort but also limits our experience.

    I am much into incense and never thought of its connection with organ music. This is an interesting discovery!

    I think I would like Plein Jeu best. Thanks for the review. I live in the EU.

  • Music is as important to me as perfume, although I tend to listen to classical. and that’s why I think SAUF sounds interesting, and I love incense. Lovely writing here, “Plein Jeu is a choral sound, a dialogue of chanting between choir and instrument. This is the most earthly of the three; spice and forest aromas suggest worldly beauties. A lively ginger and lemon dance into the first notes, lifting the incense that follows into a lighter key. The woody notes here are less churchlike, more arboreal. There is a gentle descant from the opening as the woody notes and spice step ahead of the incense and then recede again.” CANADA and great reviews and photos. I wish i could meet Fillipo and here him play the organ although I loved the video

  • I have always perceived music and perfumes as very close forms of art and beauty, but never thought organ music can be so great inspiration for perfumes. I would choose Voix Humane if I win, I loove the description:
    “Voix Humaine, named for a high reed pitch resembling a human voice, is the smell of candles lit for a thousand human souls. A bright spark of bergamot is immediately warmed by cardamom and the waxy, honey-musk smell of tallow. The incense here is gentle, cradling, giving way to comforting notes of quiet loveliness. There is poignancy to Voix Humaine, a sense of something benevolent that lingers nearby.”

    Thanks for the draw. I live in Europe.

  • I love music and perfume both, but didn’t thought of making a parallel between them. I see how one could be associated with another, though. Those reviews of SAUF perfumes sound promising and I think the second one intrigues me the most; so I’d like to win Plein Jeu. I live in Europe.

  • I love incense perfumes and different expressions of this ingredient when blended with others. Certain perfumes do remind me of melodies and the one that appeals to me most is Contre Bombarde 32. I’d love to try it for two reasons: first it has elemi and I love Elemi very very much and second I want to feel its penetrating low power. Thank you! I am in the UK

  • Very interesting reading and idea to create fragrances based on music. As for me both can make me relaxed and happy. Both can lift my mood. I used to play the little organ when I was young and I remember even “Voix Humaine” written on organ stop, so I love this idea! I am in EU and I would choose Plein Jeu

  • I have never thought of associating a fragrance to music, altough they could easily be linked since they can trigger the most intimate emotions. I will have to think about it and see what connections I can make.

    I liked the review for Contre Bombarde 32. Seems like something that I would enjoy very much, but all three look great since they are based on incense, but my pick would be Contre Bombarde 32.

    I live in EU. Thanks!

  • I think I would like to try Contre Bombarde 32 and its unusual combination of elemi with caramel. I like low, humming tones. Experimental accents in music are as interesting as niche ideas in perfumes. Thank you for the draw. EU.

  • Encapsulating musicality in perfume is probably one of the most demanding challenges ever. And also the most exciting one. I love the description of each organ stop and its energy. Sounds (!) really awesome.

    My first choice, after reading the three reviews, woud be Plein Jeu. The suggestion that “the woody notes here are less churchlike, more arboreal” speaks to me and I can almost smell the combined notes of ginger, black pepper, jasmine, and olibanum.

    Thank you Lauryn and Fillipo!
    I live in Europe.

  • Valentine Girl says:

    I find that fragrance and music are very powerful triggers of many memories, With a whiff of a scent, or the strain of music, I can suddenly be transported back in time to relive an experience of my past. Love the concept of organ music and incense – one of my mother’s close friends is a professional organist and I used to go to her concerts when I was younger. Every time I heard her play Widor’s Toccata, I swear I could smell incense in the air. I think I would enjoy Contre Bombarde 32 the most for it’s interplay between sweet & bitter notes. Brilliant bottle design of looking like the stops on the organ. USA resident.

  • I love the notes and description of Voix Humaine: “Voix Humaine, named for a high reed pitch resembling a human voice, is the smell of candles lit for a thousand human souls”. It reminds me how I loved singing in a choir during university times, it was one of the best experiences I’ve had.

    Thanks for the article! I live in the EU and I’d be happy to win Voix Humaine if I’m lucky.

  • Great reviews. I love incense and tried their previous effort the Unum Lavs and really liked it.
    Would want to see what they did with incense this time.
    Vox Humaine soundsgood and description is amazing

    Voix Humaine, named for a high reed pitch resembling a human voice, is the smell of candles lit for a thousand human souls. A bright spark of bergamot is immediately warmed by cardamom and the waxy, honey-musk smell of tallow. The incense here is gentle, cradling, giving way to comforting notes of quiet loveliness.

    I live in the US and would love to win Vox Humaine.

    Thanks.

  • I loved the video and the photos. Organ music has always been very close to my heart. I used to play a lot years ago and I remember I could entirely lose myself in music.

    I would choose Plein Jeu – it sounds like my kind of incense.

    Thank you for the draw and for letting us all know about so interesting brand.

    (EU)

  • Goodness, these sound exquisite! I love incense scents most of all, so am very excited to read about these. What a wonderful origin story, too. I love hearing about the crossover between different art forms. Perfumers really are a creative bunch! I’d love to win Voix Humaine. I live in Canada, thank you.

  • Fragrance and music have a lot in common: they bring back memories, they, like any kind of art, make life and experiences richer.
    If I am to choose one of the three, I think I would pick Contre Bombarde:”Tendrils of vaporous yet woody incense with an almost steamy warmth reach into the opening notes of bitter orange and elemi. The herbal-dry orange and bite of juniper act as counterpoints to the mellifluous caramel and amber base, while the midsection is layers of old wood, muted with years of polish and wear. The interplay between sweet/bitter, strong/receding notes forms into exquisite harmony” – sounds fantastic. I live in EU, thanks!

  • I’m sure every incense lover would agree that all three SAUF perfumes sound exciting. The bottles and jewellery are brilliant. I would love to try Plein Jeu because it seems to be the most masculine of the three. I’m in the EU. Thank you for the draw.