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Electric Wood - parfum extract

by Jérôme Di Marino
Wood saturated with sound, warmer, denser, like an amplifier pushed too far. Electric Wood by Room 1015 is set at the moment when the sound becomes overwhelming. The guitar is plugged in, the strings vibrate, the amp heats up. The wood no longer sounds clean; it saturates, becomes denser, almost burning.
Capacity 100ml
175,00€
Regular price 175,00€
Familles olfactives
Boisée
Boisée
Épicée
Sucrée
Notes de tête
  • cardamom
  • saffron
  • nutmeg
Notes de cœur
  • Orris
  • Myrrh
  • Oakmoss
Notes de fond
  • Cedarwood
  • Cypriol
  • Vetiver
  • Vanilla

Occasions
  • Casual evening
Sillage
Spoken
The Fragrance

Electric Wood Extrait plays out when the sound goes awry. The amp is cranked up, the signal saturates, the wood vibrates too intensely. It’s no longer a clean sound; it’s a warm, dense, almost burning matter that lingers in the air.From the opening, the wood is present, but thicker than in the original version. Less crisp, more laden, as if permeated by a continuous vibration. There's an immediate warmth, something more enveloping.Then, the fragrance tightens. The notes become creamier, deeper, with an almost tactile texture. The wood gains weight, becomes darker, without losing that idea of constant vibration.Over time, Electric Wood Extrait remains warm, dense, with a musky and woody base that clings to the skin. The signature is more intimate but more pronounced, like a distorted sound that continues to resonate long after.

The brand

Room 1015 is a niche perfume house founded in Paris in 2015 by Michael Partouche, a pharmacist by training and a musician at heart. His passion for psychedelic rock led him to London, where he performed with his band for five years. Back in Paris, he sought a third language, one that would unite the precision of a pharmacist and the energy of a musician: perfume. The name comes from a hotel room. In the 1970s, the Continental Hyatt House in Los Angeles was a haunt for touring rock bands. Legend has it that The Rolling Stones guitarist, Keith Richards, threw a television from room 1015, propelling the hotel into rock history. The fragrance became a symbol of rebellion, a banner inspired by musical trends, philosophies, and alternative spiritualities. An olfactory manifesto oscillating between the punk movement, artificial paradises, the sexual revolution, and transcendental meditation. Each perfume tells a specific story: Cherry Punk begins in Vivienne Westwood's boutique, Hollyrose pays homage to the groupies of Sunset Boulevard, Yesterday imagines The Beatles shaving together in a hotel bathroom. The compositions are signed by Studio Flair, founded by perfumers Amélie Bourgeois and Anne-Sophie Behaghel.

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