Here are my impressions of the second set of offerings in the series of four Devil Scents made by three different perfumers, inspired by Sheila Eggenberger's novel, Quantum Demonology.
Although the opening is not as dramatic as Midnight at the
Crossroads CafĂ©, it’s still an insistent and unique blast of spicy floral seduction,
almost a more restrained version of Midnight. As it develops, it gains
strength, becoming powdery and overtly floral, with hints of roses, violets and
soft suede leather. Instead of being melodramatic, it’s just calmly beautiful in
a strong and reassuring way, like the partner who’s always there when needed,
saying “don’t be afraid. Everything will be all right.” As a stand-alone
perfume, it’s every bit as gorgeous as Midnight, and I would wear it anywhere,
any time.
Amanda’s #2 is even more woody and bitter than #1. It’s
definitely way out there in a space where perfumers generally don’t go, not
even those who make a point of being eccentric. It’s dominated at first by a
strong weedy-herbal scent, possibly an overdose of some type of Artemesia,
accompanied by a hint of chlorine from a swimming pool, and something
dairy-like that reminds me of rancid butter or oily cheese. After a while it
becomes woodier, sort of like sawdust, and I can’t help thinking about wet
sawdust or wood chip bedding in the bottom of an animal cage, maybe a guinea
pig cage. Wow! This is one of the strangest perfumes I’ve smelled. As it
develops, I think of an old-fashioned circus, with well-used sawdust in the
ring, or a big pile of slightly fermented hardwood sawdust at an abandoned sawmill.
The woody scent hangs on for hours, with very good longevity for an all-natural
composition. Almost 24 hours later, I can detect a faint, citrus scent on my
skin, and I think it’s from Amanda’s #2. This is amazing stuff.
Revisiting my own DEV #2, it’s completely different from
Neil’s and Amanda’s interpretations. It starts out with a sharp, spicy barrage
similar in intent to the “Poof!” that Neil used to such great effect in
Midnight, but of course it’s a completely different “Poof!”, a shower of hot
spices, resins, boozy fruit, well-worn black leather, and floral undertones
instead of beer and brimstone. By the next morning the spices have run their
course, and it ends up as an ethereal, slightly powdery, musky rose and incense
scent, like the remnants of an intense night of lovemaking.
I think what both Neil and I did was try to capture the
joyous moments of the courtship phase of the story, focusing on the emotional
highs while only hinting at the nightmare flashes that were increasingly
interspersed among them – horrifying visions and experiences that arose from
the heroine’s own insecurities and fears. Amanda addressed those head-on in her
perfume, portraying the circus parade of evil things that lie at different
levels below the surface, eagerly waiting for an opportunity to invade our
nightmares and tamper with our waking lives. Once again, the three perfumes
together provide a much more complete account of the story than any one by
itself.
[Paintings by J.E. Millais, 1852 and Egon Schiele, 1890]
[Paintings by J.E. Millais, 1852 and Egon Schiele, 1890]