Entry 3: Ralph Lauren Chaps Musk, paired with Barbershop Musk by CBL
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Release Date: 1985
Status: Discontinued (BONUS: Hey look, it's Red Dye 40)
Alright, so. I have shown this before but it is apart of the musk lineup, so why not reintroduce it. So, this is one of the odd Ralph Lauren releases that easily gets forgotten after the advent of Polo. This is a flanker to the original 1979 Chaps, which was originally made with Warner fragrances. After Cosmair took over via L'Oreal, they had reformulated chaps and polo, but then released this soon after during the Musk frenzy in the late 70s to the mid 80s. Besides the fact it retains the iconic silver bull cap and bottle silhouettes, it has a familiar green bottle with green juice, which is funny to me because so did Polo. Another addition is now they added an atomizer for the cologne, something that Warner did not have or they at lease used rarely as they were mainly using splashes around that time. Something to mention was that Chaps was a more affordable sublabel by ralph lauren geared towards more casual or less formal wear that still retained a clean look, while the marketing of this was to invoke this idea of freedom, adventure, and open exploration in the high plains.
However, despite such a rugged philosophy, this is actually the opposite. You expect a dark, musky, rugged green scent for a macho crowd but this is a shockingly simple and approachable blend of notes. No, really! This has Anise, Lavender, Citruses, Spices, Geranium, WHITE Honey, Musk, Sandalwood, Patchouli, and Amber. This is an incredible simple and relatively modern combination of notes. If the anise was removed and some of the notes changed places this would work as a basic 3x3 fragrance of today's standards. Even though there is musk in the name, it takes a back seat here, and the after shave and cologne smell totally apart but has the same lack of musk going on.
The after shave, which is superior in my opinion, smells strikingly fresh. I smells like Hugo Boss Boss Sport but incredibly cleaned up and simplified. In the opening you are hit with a relatively mild Anise and plant-like lavender that has a backing of aquatic citrus rinds, which is the citrus note mixing with the geranium that has a wet floral smell, so think of lemon cucumber water at a fancy place. This ends on a relatively light sweet musk, the amber and honey just blend into each other or one leads to another with the musk actually being saved for the end, but it's hardly there. It's like a light whiff carried in the breeze. Honestly, even though I'm not the biggest Anise nor Lavender fan, this is very, very pleasant, and simple. You can imagine there is oakmoss despite it not being there at all. Only downside is that this after shave HURTS, incredibly bracing and it cooks into your pores, but the scent lasts for a few hours, impressively.
But the cologne is the dead opposite. Maybe it's aged, or has signs of spoiling, but this stuff is crazy. The cologne is a start of sharper anise and lavender with heavy sandalwood coming to play, that then becomes a floral honey bomb with lighter citrus touches, and then slowly the floral eases out for a much more raw honey stank that the amber and musk comes out at the end, but it's sweet and very powdery, but still relatively fresh. Dirty fresh, if you know what I mean by that.
In all honesty, I do like this fragrance for what it is. I truly think if it was slightly retooled and reformulated it could have a modern audience for the cheaper drug store level crowd. It smells almost like a prototype to Ralph Lauren Safari but ultra simplified. In fact, I'd almost prefer it if it were more readily available. But, on the musk scale? It ranks very low.
Side note: Barbershop Musk by
@CBLindsay is another excellent soap blend with a smooth, easy glide, but the scent is pretty different. There is musk but it's not there too much, it's buried by the heavy talc and blue disinfectant smell. It's nice, and interesting, but the musk is like this scent: There and gone.
Musk Meter™: 3/10: A nice scent but where's the musk? If it was a white musk (plant based/scented) it would make more sense, but there isn't any animalic presence or sweet musk. It just is what it is.
Soap: 2/10: Just like Wild Country Musk, a sharp barbershop scent with musk in the name, but still an excellent shave nontheless.