The Story
Why it exists.
Xerjoff's Opera is the work of perfumer Chris Maurice, who approached this composition as an exercise in contrasts. The brief was to create something that held its own kind of grandeur quietly, close to the skin. Not performative. Not theatrical. Intimate. Maurice spent time understanding the mood he wanted to capture before selecting a single raw material, building the fragrance around a tension between bright, almost translucent top notes and a deeper, warmer foundation that stays with you. The result is a composition that opens with clarity and evolves into something unexpectedly warm, a fragrance that invites proximity rather than announcing itself across a room.
If this were a song
Community picks
La Vie en Rose
Édith Piaf
The Beginning
Xerjoff's Opera is the work of perfumer Chris Maurice, who approached this composition as an exercise in contrasts. The brief was to create something that held its own kind of grandeur quietly, close to the skin. Not performative. Not theatrical. Intimate. Maurice spent time understanding the mood he wanted to capture before selecting a single raw material, building the fragrance around a tension between bright, almost translucent top notes and a deeper, warmer foundation that stays with you. The result is a composition that opens with clarity and evolves into something unexpectedly warm, a fragrance that invites proximity rather than announcing itself across a room.
The top notes bring Fruits and Turkish Rose together in an unexpected pairing that establishes the fragrance's character from the first spray. The rose is not heavy or old-fashioned; it's bright and present, lending a certain polish that catches the light. Beneath it, the fruit notes add a subtle sweetness that feels natural rather than constructed. The heart introduces Ylang-Ylang and Nutmeg alongside Leather and Amber, creating a middle stage that shifts the composition from airy to grounded. The amber warmth begins to emerge here, a soft richness that invites you closer.
The Evolution
The opening registers as bright and clean, the Turkish Rose and fruit notes creating an immediate impression that doesn't shout. It illuminates rather than announces. Within the first thirty minutes, the heart notes begin to unfold, the warmth of the amber and the richness of the leather softening the initial brightness. For the next several hours, that's the story: warm, intimate, quietly present. The patchouli and musk foundation begins to show itself, adding an earthy dimension that grounds the sweeter elements above. The vanilla emerges gradually, creating a soft counterpoint to the more grounded base notes. The drydown sits close, moderate projection, the kind you have to lean in to find, but once you do, it stays for a long time before the sweetness finally fades into something skin-close and quiet.
Cultural Impact
Opera occupies an unusual position in the landscape of niche fragrances. The combination of Turkish Rose and Leather isn't common, and the way it wears close to the skin keeps it personal rather than ambient. The interplay between the brighter top notes and the deeper base creates something that means different things to different noses. Some wearers find the rose the dominant impression throughout the day; others experience the warm amber and vanilla as the defining character. That variation is the fragrance's quiet distinction.
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
Opera has the warmth of a small room. Close, intimate, the kind of presence you'd find in a dimly lit Parisian café where the conversation stays between two people. The bergamot opens like a clean chord, brief, precise, before the almond slides in soft and warm. That warmth builds. The coffee arrives late, darker, and holds the final notes like a whisper that outlasts everything else. This is music for the hour after the show ends, when the crowd has thinned and the building is almost yours.
La Vie en Rose
Édith Piaf
























