Olivier Durbano The Gushing Water Stone 20 Review (Olivier Durbano) 2024 + Fountainhead of Hope Giveaway

Olivier Durbano perfumer for The Gushing Water Stone 20

Olivier Durbano is a perfumer, poet and jeweler 

Who transforms the rock into a pool, the impenetrable stone into springs of water ~ Psalm 114:8

 

 

There are myriad reasons why perfumisti gravitate towards Grasseois artisanal perfumer Olivier Durbano: while there exists no dearth of perfumers who create beautiful incense-centric fragrances, few are as self-effacing, sincere, and genuinely modest as Olivier is. Composing in aromatic essence and stone is clearly a devotional act for him – one not to be undertaken lightly. Sacred intention infuses each one of his oeuvres; a rare lightness of being emanates from him and draws others to him like a magnet; and his latest (and 20th!) composition La Pierre Jaillissante) 20 – The Gushing Water Stone – provides us with yet one more insight into the depths of contemplation and the evolution of the spirit.

 

Rider-Waite tarot deck: The High Priestess, The Fool, and Judgement Ida’s

Mysticism is so named with good reason: multiple layers of meaning may be carefully peeled back, one by one – and yet the enigmatic nature of its essence remains a conundrum. Olivier’s wellspring of inspiration arises from several sources – the Old Testament, New Testament, the tarot, and ancient texts teeming with context. The Gushing Water Stone retains the perfumer’s ongoing relationship with scripture, myth, and primordial wisdom. He cites three tarot cards specifically: the second card in the deck, The High Priestess – as the water element which evokes intuition and the unconscious; the unnumbered Fool, a symbol of rebirth, the alpha and the omega; and card number 20, Judgement – which represents fire, the angel of blessing – which Olivier interprets as opening the gates of intuition towards freedom.

 

Olivier Durbano Gushing Water Stone

photo by Olivier

The Gushing Water Stone 20 is alive with complementary and contrasting olfactory tones – a characteristic which I have come to associate with Olivier Durbano’s work. There is an ardent base-intense presence of frankincense, myrrh, labdanum, vetiver, musks, and the inclusion of richly complex Aleppo pine – herbal, spicy, citrus-y, and terpenic – as well as the woody-fruity verdancy of juniper. The sole floral employed is multi-faceted broom, a concentrated source of sweetness and coumarinic, haylike charm with attendant honey rose notes. Broom is surrounded by anisic elements which are present in all of the following aromatic contributors to varying extents: in the kitchen herb marjoram, liquorice, gurjum balsam, marine christe (aka sea fennel), and fenugreek – the last of which possesses a lovely maple syrup aspect combined with nuttiness. Fenugreek’s nutty character meets its soulmate in sesame. A touch of cooling bamboo slithers in, as does the warm, dry spiciness of coriander; vetiver embellishes greenness and adds to an alluring smokiness, subtly sweetened with spicy benzoin and ever-versatile ambergris. Musks play their part in a clear but noninvasive manner; they never dominate an already complex composition. Each carefully chosen material has its role – and the removal of any moving part would affect this fragrance adversely. Elaborate as The Gushing Water Stone 20 may appear, it feels precisely a one might hope: a fountainhead of fragrant hope.

Notes: frankincense, marjoram, juniper, coriander, bamboo leaves, Aleppo pine, liquorice, gurjum balm, broom, fenugreek, sesame, marine christe (aka sea fennel), vetiver, ambergris, benzoin,  myrrh, musks, labdanum

 Sample kindly provided by the perfumer – many thanks! My nose is my own…

~ Ida Meister, Deputy and Natural Perfumery Editor

La Pierre Jaillissante 20 The Gushing Water Stone Oliver Durbano

Olivier Durbano The Gushing Water Stone 20 photo from Pitti Fragranze September 13-15

Thanks to the generosity of Olivier Durbano, we may offer a 30 ml flacon Olivier Durbano The Gushing Water Stone 20 for one registered reader in the U.S. and EU. YOU MUST REGISTER OR YOUR COMMENT WILL NOT COUNT. To be eligible, please leave a comment regarding what appealed to you in Ida’s review, where you live, and whether you have a favorite Olivier Durbano fragrance. If you left a comment in Michelyn’s September 10th introduction, your entry will count twice. Draw closes 9/20/204

All photos are courtesy of Olivier Durbano unless otherwise stated

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18 comments

  • This sounds pretty good – like a piece of art, more than just a perfume. So, I am really interested in this unknown for me brand. I guess this would be a mystic and inspiring incense-based perfume. Greetings from EU.

  • Olivier Durbano is a new perfumer to me and the descriptions of his scents and what they embody, make me want sample his perfumes. The herbaceous, woody and spiciness, the aromatic note of marjoram combined with the frankincense and myrrh, would be an interesting combination.

    USA

  • If you read the name of the fragrance, you think it’s going to be an aquatic/marine reference but it’s the complete opposite. It’s a dark, resinous and also green fragrance. You also find notes like lime and bamboo leaves which the perfumer is a big fan of using, that you don’t see much on other fragrances. I love that Ida mentioned if you were to remove any of the parts of the fragrance it would completely change the smell of it and it’s true, even some notes one doesn’t think are important, contribute to the overall composition. This is a very complex fragrance and one must take it’s time to experience it throughly. I’m located in the US

  • I’ve never heard of Olivier Durbano before and I am very intrigued! As a previous commenter said the name of the perfume leads one to think that the scent will be more aquatic, maybe simply unisex leaning masculine however, after reading Ida’s review I am so excited and confused at the same time. It feels that the scent is dark, and heavy with a church-like vibe. I can’t wait to try it. I think it will be amazing for the dull fall weather that we are starting to have. I live in Portland, OR, USA

  • redwheelbarrow says:

    Beautiful review. These notes sound so interesting and quite grounding, I find myself imagining how they play together. You state that without just one note the composition would be adversely altered and I can’t help but picture a collapsing house of cards. I love the inspiration of the tarot cards. This sounds like such an artistic endeavor. I have only had the opportunity to smell Chrysolithe and it is just so beautiful. From the US.

  • Ida’s review of Olivier Durbano The Gushing Water Stone 20 is quite captivating. She beautifully describes the fragrance’s inspiration and composition, highlighting its unique blend of natural and spiritual elements. The way she conveys the scent’s connection to water and its symbolic meanings adds a poetic touch that makes the review engaging and evocative. I never tried Oliver Durbano so I don’t really have a favourite from this house but I would love to try the mentioned perfume it sounds so captivating and just magically beautiful, I live in Trzebnica, Poland, EU. I commented on the September 10th introduction.

  • My favorite Olivier Durbano fragrance is Black Tourmaline 07, which is also one of my favorite of all smoky fragrances. I love incense notes, but I find many incense-based fragrances uninteresting. Not so Black Tourmaline, which is that rare combination of very distinctive, yet immediately appealing. Ida makes the Gushing Water Stone 20 sound similarly entrancing. It features a bunch of fragrance notes I love — frankincense, licorice, myrrh among others. And I adore fenugreek as a culinary spice. But it’s the complicated interplay among the notes that Ida describes that most draws me to it. I’m in Oklahoma, USA.

  • Eris.can.swatch.kaos says:

    The inspirations behind Water Stone are totally fascinating. The note breakdown is complex, yet sounds very appealing to me. I do not have a favorite yet, as I am unfamiliar with Oliver’s work. I did leave a comment on Michelyn’s intro post. I live in Oregon.

  • I love that this review comes with an olfactory tarot spread and I love the sound of these notes. I’ve been curious about Durbano’s works for years but unfortunately I don’t have a favorite because I haven’t got my nose on any. I was always curious about Jade though! I live in the USA. Thanks for the draw!

  • I absolutely loved Ida’s review—she really captured the spiritual and mystical essence that makes Olivier Durbano’s work so unique. The way she described The Gushing Water Stone 20 with those contrasting layers of frankincense, myrrh, and Aleppo pine mixed with unexpected touches like fenugreek and sea fennel was just fascinating! Olivier’s fragrances always seem to tap into something so much bigger than just a perfume. My personal favorite has to be Chrysolithe, but after this, I’m seriously intrigued by The Gushing Water Stone. It sounds like a truly sacred experience in a bottle!

    EU

  • Going through the note list there are some things I don’t often see along with some notes that are ones I enjoy smelling. I don’t have a favorite from this house at this time. US

  • LuRon Anderson says:

    Oliver is a talented poet and I would bet that this frangrance is delightful in its poetic construction.
    Ida was wonderful in her infusion of his writing art together with the art we love most from him-his aromatic art. Thank you Ida for this article and Olivier for you hard work and dedication to your passions.
    My favorite scent of his is Promethée Extrait

    Kennewick, WA USA

  • I like that Olivier Durbano draws inspiration from the Old and New Testaments. I live in the EU.

  • Jared Overbeck says:

    Hey, I’m J. I comment frequently on these spectacularly wordy reviews regarding these fantastic scents I can only hope to be able to smell.

    I loved how detailed this review was, with descriptions of not only the contents and the spirit of the perfume, but with the spirit and the content of the perfumer as well. I live in Roanoke, VA, where I make my own line of beard oils as well as partnering with my mother for many olfactory experiments and concoctions. Nothing makes me happier than new scents, especially anything based on ambergris.

    I’d love this specific scent you described in the review most certainly, but I haven’t had the pleasure of experiencing any of Olivier Durbano’s fragrances.

    I’m currently loving combining my passion to perfume with my passion to run my own business. I’m hoping these scents take off and other people feel the enthusiasm that I’m combining them with. Until next review! -Jay

  • Olivier Durbano really is a master of incense focused, earth based fragrances. His stone series captures the intrinsic qualities of those gems he is inspired by (amethyst, black tourmaline, pink quartz, etc). The Gushing Water Stone 20 sounds herb centric with its kitchen spices and the use of hay-like broom and anise elements. As Ida said, it sounds like a fountainhead of fragrant hope. I commented on Michelyn’s Sept 10 introduction. MD, USA,

  • Chris Mugavero says:

    In NJ. Not familiar with the artist behind this fragrance, however after reading I intend to make myself aware of their work. Very intrigued by the usage of fenugreek. Not something you see everyday in perfumery.

  • In NJ. Not familiar with the artist behind this fragrance, however after reading I intend to make myself aware of their work. Very intrigued by the usage of fenugreek. Not something you see everyday in perfumery.

  • I know from this house only Black Tourmaline, but I would love to try the rest of them. I feel like each of the fragrances have a special connection to earth and nature, making them being more of a mystical, supernatural experience. Thank you for the giveaway! Europe