Route du Vétiver by Maître Parfumeur et Gantier
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7.2 / 10 49 Ratings
A perfume by Maître Parfumeur et Gantier for men, released in 1988. The scent is woody-earthy. It is still in production.
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Main accords

Woody
Earthy
Spicy
Green
Smoky

Fragrance Pyramid

Top Notes Top Notes
BlackcurrantBlackcurrant AldehydesAldehydes Leaf greenLeaf green
Heart Notes Heart Notes
Bourbon vetiverBourbon vetiver JasmineJasmine Precious woodsPrecious woods
Base Notes Base Notes
MuskMusk SandalwoodSandalwood

Perfumer

Ratings
Scent
7.249 Ratings
Longevity
7.635 Ratings
Sillage
6.933 Ratings
Bottle
7.533 Ratings
Submitted by Seglein, last update on 31.12.2023.

Reviews

3 in-depth fragrance descriptions
Intersport

62 Reviews
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Intersport
Intersport
Very helpful Review 10  
'...Unveiled by Chemical Synthesis'*
When I was trying to get an overview of vetivers a few years ago (an unfinished business to this day) I got stuck with Route du Vétiver. As with almost all of my favorites of this particular ingredient, the modulation of the vetiver by something else plays a key element - much like Goutal's Vétiver Eau de Toilette and Lutens' Vétiver Oriental. In Maitre's vetiver, it's cassis, blackcurrant, probably the whole bush including the foliage, which adds a decent dynamic. Despite all the modulation, Route du Vétiver remains a very clear and impressive vetiver fragrance. Released in 1988, from the hand of the often mentioned but unfortunately rather cryptically documented Jean Laporte, it is also - together with the aforementioned Goutal Eau de Toilette - the 80s precursor for the multitude of vetivers released since 2000. My reason for this comment, however, is the recently published essay "The Smelling Principle of Vetiver Oil, Unveiled by Chemical Synthesis" by a team of olfactory chemists, including Philip Kraft, which goes into detail about the complexity and many unknowns that make up the fascination and diversity of vetiver. There is also reference here to a small amount of (-)-geosmin, that transgressive as well as mysterious component responsible for all sorts of impressions of damp earth, wet asphalt, pre-thunderstorm air, etc. Long before Ellen Covey's excellent Bat / Night Flyer, or the increasing 'molecular awareness' and namedropping of geosmin as an ingredient, Route du Vétiver was the root of this representation of moisture. I've often wondered how this perfume manages that, Laporte achieved a similar if much more floral swampiness in a non-vetiver fragrance with Jardin Du Nil, the geranium equivalent to Route. Although Radish Vetiver, released in 2019, flirts with Route du Vétiver, Laporte's perfume remains a solitaire in this category.

* Ouyang, J., Bae, H., Jordi, S., Dao, Q.M., Dossenbach, S., Dehn, S., Lingnau, J.B., De, C.K., Kraft, P. and List, B., 2021.The Smelling Principle of Vetiver Oil, Unveiled by Chemical Synthesis. Angewandte Chemie (International Ed. in English), 60(11), p.5666.
1 Comment
7.5
Bottle
10
Sillage
7.5
Longevity
10
Scent
MemoryOScent

37 Reviews
MemoryOScent
MemoryOScent
Very helpful Review 4  
How reformulation works.
The first scent that got me stuck in niche perfumes was Maitre Parfumeur et Gantier, Route du Vetiver. But it was more of a Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde experience… I was still only sampling when the name caught my eye: the root of vetiver… “Quite promising!” I thought. So I ordered my sample and when it arrived…. It was heaven! Or should I say Underworld…? A dark, earthy scent that smelled exactly as the name promised, the smell of dirt hanging from the roots of a plant just pulled out of the earth! I have never smelled a vetiver plant, but these dirty roots I was smelling were definitely vetiver roots. It was love at first smell. I knew I had to have a bottle of this so I ordered it from the same online shop that I ordered the sample from.

The days of waiting just heightened the anticipation. My first niche buy, the best fragrance I had ever smelled up to then (and probably until today), I just couldn’t wait. And then the bottle came in the post. And it was so…. different. I must admit that I tried to convince myself, day after day, wearing after wearing that what was coming out of the bottle appealed to me as much as the scent that was coming out of the sample vial. I really tried hard to convince myself that it was the same smell. You see I hadn’t started reading Basenotes’ forums yet and the term “reformulation” sounded like a science experiment at the time. But there comes a time where one has to face denial and come to terms with it. I started searching around, read every thread on vetiver on Basenotes and finally came to terms with the simple fact that RdV was not what it used to be. It wasn’t my idea. The juice didn’t smell the same any more. Most of MP&G fragrances had been reformulated, got a new bottle and carried the names of their ancestors, others proudly, but from what I was reading RdV was the apple that had fallen furthest from the tree.

I felt like someone was playing with my mind. I had found my Holly Grail and they decided to melt it down and sell it for good luck charms. I wrote an angry e-mail to the online shop and let them know what I was thinking about someone who gives out a little taste of something they cannot deliver. Of course I offered to buy the rest of their tester since it wouldn’t make any sense selling samples from a tester that was different from the actual bottles it was supposed to promote. To my astonishment the extremely professional people of the online shop apologized and offered to send me the tester, free of charge. At the end of the day, I had my first love in my hands as well as the her botox-ed little sister. A happy ending.

Side by side

Vintage: Sharp, metallic, diluent. Ink, much like the ink in Encre Noire, only more upfront, more confident, in your face. As the fragrance warms up on the skin the harsh, cool, almost minty top disappears. Berries start adding some thickness. The vetiver starts to become prominent. It is green with a cold, detached earthiness. The vetiver is always underlined by this cold diluent note but now the earthiness starts to grow stronger. It is now the smell of soil after the rain, the smell of a dump basement. You can smell the wet walls but you can also hear the chains rattle. Gothic, dark shiny metal. The earthiness doesn’t bring nature to mind but a man-made situation. A cell, a dungeon in a castle. Not a prison but a hideaway for the owner of the castle. Nothing involuntary in his presence in this cell. On the contrary it is his favorite place in the castle, where he comes to be free of conventions. Woody notes start anchoring the scent in more comfortable domains. It sits on the skin like shiny black panther fur.

Current: White flowers against green background. The white flowers start to subside and a berry note adds sweetness. Now the flowers smell almost like tuberose. The diluent note appears pulling the leash on the white flowers. The flowers keep coming down. A creamy dimension kicks in. The vetiver starts becoming more obvious at long last. Musk forms the base. It sits on the skin like an aqua colored velvet glove, definitely more feminine than the vintage version. A flamboyant elegance of an effeminate dandy.

After about half an hour the two versions come so close that it seems like a magician’s trick. The current juice still boasts a creamy sweetness and a stronger jasmine that forces one to categorize it as a floral vetiver. The vintage version however is somewhere in a land of its own: a mineral vetiver? A metallic vetiver? No sweetness at all, not a hint of musk.

All in all the vintage version is a masterpiece. No other vetiver has managed to put wet earth in the forefront but still keeping the fragrance “clean”, metallic, distilled. The new version is humbled by the comparison but in fact if it had been released as “Fleur du Vetiver” (Vetiver Flower) it might now be considered a classic. Well this is a story we have seen many times: it’s not good enough to be good, you have to be good enough to fill the shoes you are given.
2 Comments
jtd

484 Reviews
jtd
jtd
1  
Thrilling find. I found an original 90 ml bottle for $25 in 2012.
Closest thing to dried vetiver roots I’ve ever smelled in a perfume. Captures the dusty, arid quality of dried soil on roots. Vetiver, along with sandlewood, frankincense and a handful of other non-floral botanicals, can stand on its own not only as a scent but as a fragrance. RdV takes this path and goes straight to the root. It remains undistracted and doesn’t try to highlight any particular facet (eg. licorice) or complement (lemon), just the whole root-cellar vibe. Feels a bit searing in a nice, powerfully dry way as it goes on, but then calms down on a fairly linear course to a low-sillage, intimate scent.
0 Comments

Statements

1 short view on the fragrance
MeliponeMelipone 1 year ago
I get a kind of vodka note in the opening, then a very dark vetiver. No blackcurrant, no jasmine. This is a bit confusing.
0 Comments

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