The Story
Why it exists.
Chris Maurice approached Symphonium as a study in contrast. The name itself, a musical term for multiple instruments sounding together, set the framework: bright citrus and dark chocolate as competing voices in the opening, warm spice bridging them in the heart, resinous oud and vanilla as the final chord. Released in 2020 as part of Xerjoff's 17/17 Stone Label collection, the fragrance translates orchestral structure into olfactory form, each stage of the scent designed to arrive on schedule, play its part, and hand off to the next without rushing.
If this were a song
Community picks
Dreams
Fleetwood Mac
The Beginning
Chris Maurice approached Symphonium as a study in contrast. The name itself, a musical term for multiple instruments sounding together, set the framework: bright citrus and dark chocolate as competing voices in the opening, warm spice bridging them in the heart, resinous oud and vanilla as the final chord. Released in 2020 as part of Xerjoff's 17/17 Stone Label collection, the fragrance translates orchestral structure into olfactory form, each stage of the scent designed to arrive on schedule, play its part, and hand off to the next without rushing.
What makes Symphonium distinctive isn't just the materials but the tension between them. The opening pairs fruit-forward brightness with dark chocolate richness, a contrast that could tip into cloying sweetness without the cardamom to ground it. That spice element acts as a bridge, keeping the composition from becoming a one-note gourmand. The base takes over from there: Laos and Thailand oud bring resinous depth, Madagascar vanilla adds warmth without softness, and musk threads through to keep everything cohesive. The interplay between sweet and dark, bright and deep, that's what makes this composition hold together rather than collapse into pleasant monotony.
The Evolution
The mandarin fades within the first hour, chocolate retreats to a whisper, and then the oud arrives to take permanent residence. That's when Symphonium stops being a fragrance and becomes something closer to a statement. The drydown on most skin types runs 8-10 hours, strong for the first 3-4 hours, then settling into something intimate and close. On fabric, it holds even longer. There's a vanilla trace the next morning, something almost smoky, and underneath it all, that dark resinous oud that keeps pulling you back to check if it's still there. This is the fragrance that makes you wonder if the person wearing it planned the whole thing or just happened to smell this good.
Cultural Impact
Symphonium occupies a specific corner of the niche fragrance world where chocolate and oud meet, a combination that divides opinion in productive ways. Some find it too sweet; others find that sweetness the entire point. The fragrance has developed a following among collectors who appreciate its sillage and longevity, with the opening frequently cited as the signature moment that either converts immediately or requires patience to appreciate. In the broader context of Xerjoff's output, it represents one of the house's more accessible entries, still luxurious, still complex, but with a gourmand warmth that broadens its appeal beyond the usual oud-and-oud again suspects.
The House
Italy · Est. 2007
Xerjoff is an Italian luxury fragrance house that defines modern opulence through scent. It merges the rich heritage of Italian perfumery with artistic, almost sculptural, presentation. This is perfume for those who believe a fragrance should be a complete sensory statement.
If this were a song
Community picks
Symphonium sounds like a track that opens bright and becomes something else. Warm synths over a steady pulse, the kind of song that makes a room lean in. Not obvious. Not trying to be. Just working.
Dreams
Fleetwood Mac






















