Ocean Rain for Men (Cologne) by Mario Valentino
Bottle Design:
Pierre Dinand
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Ocean Rain for Men 1990 Cologne

8.6 / 10 48 Ratings
A popular perfume by Mario Valentino for men, released in 1990. The scent is floral-spicy. The longevity is above-average. The production was apparently discontinued.
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Main accords

Floral
Spicy
Green
Aquatic
Woody

Fragrance Pyramid

Top Notes Top Notes
Green notesGreen notes ArtemisiaArtemisia BasilBasil BergamotBergamot LavenderLavender LemonLemon
Heart Notes Heart Notes
CyclamenCyclamen Marine notesMarine notes RoseRose ThymeThyme FirFir
Base Notes Base Notes
AmberAmber CedarCedar FrankincenseFrankincense LeatherLeather MossMoss

Perfumer

Ratings
Scent
8.648 Ratings
Longevity
8.136 Ratings
Sillage
7.334 Ratings
Bottle
6.436 Ratings
Value for money
7.113 Ratings
Submitted by DonVanVliet · last update on 07/05/2025.
Source-backed & verified
Interesting Facts
Ocean Rain was the last opus of Edmond Roudnitska.

Smells similar

What the fragrance is similar to
Ocean Rain for Men (Freshening After Shave) by Mario Valentino
Ocean Rain for Men Freshening After Shave
Chamade Homme by Guerlain
Chamade Homme
Le Parfum de Thérèse by Editions de Parfums Frédéric Malle
Le Parfum de Thérèse
Globe (Eau de Toilette) by Rochas
Globe Eau de Toilette
Une Fleur de Cassie by Editions de Parfums Frédéric Malle
Une Fleur de Cassie

Reviews

10 in-depth fragrance descriptions
jtd

484 Reviews
jtd
jtd
Helpful Review 5  
lineage
Ocean Rain is the last perfume by Edmond Roudnitska.  How should we view it?

Roudnitska is known for his perfumes, for his influence on the state of the art of perfumery and, more than many other noses, for his discussion of the art of perfumery. I don’t know all his work. I’m not an historian and there has been very little critical analysis of perfumery as an art form. There isn’t much to draw on for those who would like to know more. The eternal proviso that a little knowledge is a dangerous thing comes to mind. Still, I’d like to write about Ocean Rain.

Ocean Rain is nominally a floral chypre perfume made for the Italian luxury leather shoe and accessory firm of Mario Valentino. It was released in 1990. It braids ideas present in Roudnitska’s earlier works. It comments on the hygeine/human line drawn in his earlier masculine offerings Rochas Moustache and Dior Eau Sauvage. It has a chilly freshness. Where Eau Sauvage’s freshness is citric and a little tart, Ocean Rain’s is closer to antiseptic. It’s also a fruity chypre in the line of Rochas Femme and Dior Diorella but it has none of their warmth. The real predecessor to Ocean Rain is Dior Diorissimo, Roudnitska’s tribute to the lily of the valley.

Even though I’ve never smelled the original Diorissimo, I’ll talk about it. Thanks to the work of Roudnitska we’ve been given some tools to discuss perfume conceptually. An important part of his legacy is the discussion of perfumery. Roudnitska saw perfumery as a place for discourse and I am grateful to him for having helped those of us who wear perfume to think and talk about it.

Ocean rain has a cool, motionless tone that distances it from some of its siblings. Where Diorella and Femme focus on the warmth at the heart of a chypre and suggest body contact, Ocean rain puts a lid on things.  It has a dampening tone. It acts more as a filter than a springboard. As soon as it puts forward an idea, it pulls it back almost suspiciously. What seems like a chypre’s moss, and the foot in the door to a bodily scent, freezes suddenly and appears mineral.  The citrus topnote doesn’t lead to green woods and indolic flowers, the fullness of hesperidic notes that often follows the initial tartness of bergamot in a chypre. It becomes a cold breeze and leaves behind a clinical wake. Ocean Rain isn’t tentative, it is exceedingly careful.

I've never quite know what to make of Ocean Rain.  Roudnitska trained us to understand that at the heart of a chypre is a fundamentally devil-may-care attitude.  Before anything else, a chypre is about pleasing oneself. Ocean rain reads more as restrained, grim to some. Where Diorella suggests an infinite range of color tones hiding behind each olfactory note, Ocean rain tells you that the world is a blanched sepia.  Earthy olfactory tones can the suggest decay of autumn, the freshness through the muck of spring, the vegetal richness of early summer. The commonality is richness. Ocean Rain's earthiness is less optimistic in tone. It's dirt as opposed to soil.

Seen as a chypre, Ocean Rain is dour. Perhaps a better lens through which to see it would be Diorissimo. Again, I know Diorissimo from descriptions of the original fragrance, through anecdotal history of its making and from the general writing of Rounitska found online--not from smelling the vintage perfume. Seeing Ocean Rain, the last perfume of a dead perfumer from the perspective of one of his great works that had effectively been hobbled by reformulation before his own death, is a bit ghoulish and essentially fictitious since it is based on so many weak links. But the history of perfume is largely the interpretation of discussions of suppositions of gossip in the first place. I’ll proceed, if cautiously.

The muguet at the heart of Diorissimo is the height of synthesis and a success of abstraction as the tool of a trained mind. Roudnitska chose as his topic a fragrance he knew couldn’t be gathered botanically as the flower produces no fragrance materials that can be collected and there is no other scent in the environment that closely mimics it. He chose this target as the means by which he would show the perfumery of the time (mid-20th century) as burdened and overstuffed. He sought to create Diorissimo not only to create what nature wouldn’t surrender, he meant it to be a lesson in the conceptualization and execution of perfumery.

Diorissimo is the only perfume I have found that in fact presented a manifesto. I’ve mentioned in the past that perfumery doesn’t have artistic movements, as in deliberate artistic explorations and uncovering of dogma, credos or theories pre-existing the art itself. Perfume has genres, which are really objective or subjective descriptions and classifications. Here, Diorissimo stands apart from all other perfumes.

I don’t think that Ocean Rain was the artistic assertion that Diorissimo was. I simply find that the tones used to create a crisp, hygienic tone like lily-of-the-valley as the same palette that will let us take apart Ocean Rain. Ocean Rain isn’t a frigid, sociopath of a chypre, it’s simply a cold beauty. The soapy muguet in Diorissimo suggested a temperature that in Spring is cool but warming. The same temperature in Ocean Rain is simply travelling in the other direction, not halfway to summer warmth, but halfway to frozen. It’s the scent of an imaginary late-autumn-blooming fruit tree.

Ocean rain smell of dirt and wood and chilled flowers.  Does that seem unwelcoming?  I find it enticing.

from scent hurdle.com
0 Comments
8Scent
Smellsogood

75 Reviews
Smellsogood
Smellsogood
Helpful Review 2  
Bizarre Name Choice
My bottle of Ocean Rain by Mario Valentino arrived today. It has a little pamphlet inside that reads

Ocean Rain by Mario Valentino is a study in green, with hints of fruit and flowers, and woody ambered tones. The initial fresh effect is created by herbal essences, blending harmoniously with the fruity and marine fragrances to produce an aromatic mixture reminiscent of the delicate bouquet exhuded by "Chartreuse." This base is enhanced and softened by the perfume of tropical flowers, imbued with woody, ambered tones. This marvellous combination is the source of a splendidly sophisticated fragrance.

Why this was called Ocean Rain has me scratching my head. Not getting ocean or rain.

On first sniff I got a dark green, herbal, animalic bomb, with quite a bit of woods. This is followed by those florals along with salty resin. This is cypress trees on the coast and Mediteranean herbs in the heat. I can almost feel that hot breeze. Really liking this unusual scent.
0 Comments
8Scent
Drseid

828 Reviews
Drseid
Drseid
2  
A Great Discontinued Scent With A Misleading And Unfortunate Name...
Ocean Rain opens with a very nice herbal green and rose tandem that combines with citrus and lavender to come off as almost banana-like of all things. This banana-like herbal rose accord hangs around through most of the scent's duration, but well into the heart notes a very nice cedar and oakmoss combo appears and takes center stage away from the herbal rose. Finally, well into the base you get a supporting leather accord that blends into the remaining woody late heart notes with the rose now all but gone. Somethings noticeably not present throughout the scent's development of note are any oceanic or watery accords (despite the scent's listed note pyramid and name). Projection and longevity are both average.

I find the name "Ocean Rain" highly unfortunate and misleading here. If there is any calone in here, it is obscured so well that I cannot detect it at all, and I wonder if it really is even there. At best, calone is certainly not the focus of the scent; instead the herbal rose, cedar and oakmoss are the real stars. Poor name choice aside, Ocean Rain really does indeed smell quite good. It uses its rose and herbal greens in a unique way to create what I can only describe as banana, and while it may sound bizarre it really does work here. I find it disappointing that Ocean Rain has long-since been discontinued, as it is quite a distinctive departure from all the "me too" designer scents released present day. If you are seeking it, there still are several 50ml bottles on eBay that can be acquired for relatively silly money as of the date of this review. I blind bought this one, and am quite happy with the purchase. Ocean Rain gets a strong 3.5 to 4 stars out of 5. Just ignore the name and enjoy Roudnitska's final creation for the very good scent that it is.
1 Comment
ChicoRoch1

163 Reviews
ChicoRoch1
ChicoRoch1
1  
A class by itself scently speaking
As I sit here and scroll through some of these reviews I'm very much amazed and impressed at how these reviews are written. There is absolutely NO WAY on God's green Earth I'd be able to intelligently take apart a fragrance and break it down like I've just witnessed. For one thing my sense of smell just isn't that advanced as such that I'd be able to put together that kind of review, especially the 5 paragraph long reviews. Maybe one fine day it'll come up on me. For now though all I CAN say is that this is a fine tuned underrated scent from the final decade of quality masculine perfumerie, because after the year 2000 it has been a fast track race to the bottom barrels of scented water. Fox fragrances confirms this is a Vintage formulation that I ALWAYS COVET. However the performance could be better but that could be due to the age of the fragrance. It smells wonderful though and the discontinuation forces me to continue to scroll for backup stock. Kudos to Mr Roundnitzka for putting this together at the age of 85 and bowing out gracefully after. I keep hearing Ocean Rain being connected to Diorella so I I'll be the future judge of that and I wouldn't DARE buy the reformed juice. NO WAY EVER MY FRIEND! But this is a great creation despite the odd name of it.

8/10
0 Comments
Krmarich

227 Reviews
Krmarich
Krmarich
1  
Fantastic!
It time I say a few things about this obscure little masterpiece. It appeared on my radar when I first joined this site a few years ago. Otherwise, I had never heard of Mario Valentino or Ocean Rain. I picked up a bottle this spring before its gone forever.

I was always afraid it may be a forward aquatic-given the date of 1990 and the dreadful Cool Water trend. Its nothing like that. This is a classic floral that originates from the nose of Edmond Roudnistka. There has been much said about his masterful artistry below and elsewhere. All that I have to add is this is best way to end a career as an artist.

The only thing I associate with ocean or rain is sitting in a garden in Provence as the surf and spray waft through the garden that is full of herbs, roses and a cedar tree. This is not for club kids or muscle boys. It's totally casual and perfect for relaxing in the garden with a glass of Pastis observing a perfect sunset. It is cerebral and sublime...
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Statements

21 short views on the fragrance
2
1
Complex spicy floral and slightly aquatic perfume of that great era. The last creation of the legendary Edmond Roudnitska. Fine creation!
1 Comment
2
Very floral. Something vintage and very elegant.
An absolute beauty on skin you can wear like a precious jewel.
0 Comments
1
A welcome deviation from all of those COMMON fragrances invading us nowadays. Vintage only
0 Comments
54
51
Starts with blooming flowers.
An incredibly captivating yet gentle animalic takes over.
Beautiful woods finish it off.
Noble jungle*
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51 Comments
46
54
One of the most complex aquatics of its time
Rain shower in the
conifer green, mossy & nectar-floral forest
Yet the deer lifts a leg for
pee shower
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54 Comments
36
36
The thunderstorm green glow
Fades jasmine like a rain shower
In the kiss of melted tears
So violet-blue the hope
Magic of the fleeting
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36 Comments
32
26
Citrus depth of sun
Babbling brook
Through mountain valleys
Letting green rise
Herbs reincarnate
Fawns jumping around
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26 Comments
11
7
A tropical rain shower on flowers and foliage, steaming earth brings mineral heritage to the surface.
Timeless masterpiece.
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7 Comments
11
8
Still warm sand, while the wind brings cold rain from the sea. Soft, fuzzy animalic. Flowers, almost wilted. Truly heartbreaking.
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8 Comments
8
6
A confident violet in the wind. It gallops swiftly on a horse across the meadows, radiating energy and joy. Enchanting!
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6 Comments
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