The Story
Why it exists.
The beginning
Ummagumma takes its name from Pink Floyd's 1969 experimental album, a record that refused to behave like one. Bold, dense, strange in the best way. Bruno Fazzolari named this fragrance after it deliberately. The reference isn't incidental; it's structural. Like the album, this fragrance layers intensity upon intensity until the result feels inevitable rather than excessive. Dark chocolate and saffron open the track. Tobacco and leather build the middle. Vanilla and frankincense anchor the close. FZOTIC's catalog has always included collector objects, limited serigraphs accompany certain releases. Ummagumma arrives with a hand-printed, numbered edition serigraph. Only 50 exist. The drawing and design are Fazzolari's own, printed by master printer Conor Ottenweller in Oakland, California. A fragrance that comes with original art you can hang on a wall. That tracks.
The tonka bean absolute deserves particular attention here. Not all tonka is equal, and the absolute form carries a deeper, more faceted sweetness than the typical coumarin notes found in mass-market compositions. Paired with real vanilla, it creates a gourmand base that doesn't read as dessert. The chocolate isn't milk chocolate, it's dark, slightly bitter, almost medicinal in its opening burst. Saffron reinforces this complexity: warm, slightly animalic, with an edge of heat that prevents the sweetness from flattening into simple predictability. Then there's the frankincense in the base, resinous, smoky, slightly monastic, that prevents this from being a purely hedonistic experience.
The evolution
The opening announces itself immediately: dark chocolate and saffron, with carnation adding a clove-like spice that catches in the back of the throat. It doesn't whisper. The tobacco arrives within minutes, but it's smooth tobacco, the kind that smells like the person beside you rather than a shop counter. Leather emerges from the heart, softened by sandalwood's cream. Labdanum adds a sticky, balsamic quality that keeps the composition grounded. Here's where it earns those 8-10 hours: the drydown isn't a fade. It's a migration. Vanilla and tonka create a warmth that settles against the skin. Frankincense and cedar take over the air around you, a smoky, resinous haze that says the room knows you've arrived without you having to say anything. On fabric, this lasts for days. On skin, it evolves for hours, the chocolate eventually giving way entirely to incense and wood.
Cultural impact
Within the niche fragrance world, FZOTIC occupies a specific position, serious about composition, unconcerned with commercial logic. Ummagumma represents one of their most approachable expressions: sweet enough to attract, complex enough to reward attention. The reference to Pink Floyd's experimental 1969 album signals ambition over accessibility. Wearers describe it as the fragrance for someone who knows what they want and doesn't need the room to know it.































