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Let Me Play the Lion is a warm woody fragrance, featuring the notes of incense, woods and spices. It can take you to an exotic scented journey through wilderness. Isabelle Doyen is the nose of this perfume.
Available as 50 ml EDP.
This is a really interesting scent that I think has been written off far too quickly by many. With only the occasional cursory sniff over a single wearing one would be left thinking this is a quite linear and short lived scent. These observations prove to be both true and untrue.
LMPTL goes on with a blast of anise and a coniferous accord which features a black spruce note rather prominently, accompanied by black pepper. The anise moves to the forefront for a short while before receding to reveal a beautiful and novel accord that remains dominant from its arrival until the late dry down: cedar and carnation. I have a feeling a variety of cedar notes are used as its soft and warm and round aspects are present as well as its sharper, terpene qualities. The accord is further warmed and deepened by the carnation note which is simultaneously smooth and buttery and slightly clovey.
The clove note disappears in time and is replaced by a soft sandalwood note and a faint note of incense. A warm and yet sufficiently bitter honey/beeswax like note also becomes noticeable in the heart. I wonder if this is an illusion created by some combination of the carnation and anise, if a honey or beeswax note is actually present, or if this is the early phase of the dry down of the *real* ambergris that Let Me Play the Lion features. Yes, LMPTL features real ambergris, according to Les Nez owner Rene Shifferle.
Despite the honey-like notes and the smooth carnation, the scent never feels creamy. It feels warm and dry and yet soft. I must say that the magnificent creature in the title of the scent was well chosen - the scent is evocative not only of the color of a lion's fur but also of the softness of its mane. And yet the scent never lets your forget that there is a dangerous animal beneath all of that soft fur. This is portrayed olfactorily by the ambergris note which is slightly animalic, dirty and funky. Combined with the beeswax and carnation it sometimes comes across as though this lion had to urinate. I only pick up the urinous quality periodically, and even when I do it is not so strong as to be off-putting or make me self-conscious of my scent.
The reason I said that it was both true and untrue that the scent was linear and short-lived is that the scent is linear in that there are no significant changes from one scent category to another. No citrus->floral->woods or spice->floral->amber or anything like that. Yet, there are notes weaving in and out of its central dry/smooth/woody theme to keep it interesting. Also, it seems short lived. It seems to fade quickly on skin, and yet you will catch the occasional whiff of this golden woody aura surrounding you hours after you thought the scent disappeared. When I sniff within my shirt or the spot on my forearm where I applied I can barely smell a thing (at about 10 hours into the scent) and haven't been able to for a good 5 hours, and yet I'll still be greeted by whiffs the cedar/sandalwood/ambergris dry down when I least expect it. Let Me Play the Lion really does let you play the lion - and be surrounded in its subtle, gentle, warm and animalic aura.
An excellent scent. Great for winter but due to its lightweight treatment of heavy notes I think it'll make for a great and different summer scent, as well. While some have complained that it is lighter than the vaguely similar Gucci Pour Homme, in this case I think that is more boon than bane. It makes it versatile and also prevents it from becoming suffocating or overstaying its welcome as strong, straight-up woody scents are wont to do.
Pencil shaving incense! Dry, austere and minimalistic. An harsh woody (cedar) / incensey opening turning into a comfortable sandalwood drydown. Simple but compelling. Something that you'll love if you're into Comme Des Garcons kind of fragrances. I do.
Rating: 7/10
Not so unlike a freshly sharpened No.2 pencil or takes me back to walking into a Woodworking classroom in highschool. Have to admit guest_A. Rose may have nailed it also:".. church pews and graphite pencils.."
A dry, crisp wood. Very polished, proper and sophisticated. Do I smell guaiac wood??
I imagine crisply starched shirt collars and black suits, heels clicking lightly on polished wood floors.
Or for those of you who have a vivid imagination: How Pinocchio would smell after turning into a real boy and become a young man.
i adore this scent and would love,if finances allowed to have a bottle of this on my perfume shelf all the rest of my life! it may very well be 'my holy grail'
very good projection.rich oriental, but not enough woody. it doesn't smell like perfumme, smells like part of your body chemistry.it reminds me exotic sun lotions.
Hard, polished church pews and graphite pencils breaking against a sketchbook. Scraped, dried cinnamon stick and a hint of incense that was burned hours before and now fully dispersed into the room; not actively billowing with the smoky hotness of a present burning. Old drapes, those long infused with this same incense, create a contrast between the cool, pleasantly musty interior and the freshness of summer outdoors; with every rustle of breeze through the fabric, the hint of some holiday from a season past, blows through the room, conjuring images--in a moment of peaceful, midday solitude--of a full, boisterous gathering from another time. Like visiting an old estate or church in the easy, breezy summertime.
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