L'Homme vs Jazz
Side by side. Scored honestly.
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Side by side
Comparing the originals — price, breadth, listed-note depth.
Opens with a bright, almost fizzy collision of ginger and bergamot over a clean lemon bite — citrus that actually has some spine to it. The heart settles into a quietly interesting pairing of basil and violet leaf, herbal but soft, never sharp. Vetiver and cedar anchor the dry-down without going heavy, while tonka bean rounds the whole thing into something warm and skin-close. Projection is moderate; sillage stays in polite range rather than announcing itself. — Office-appropriate and season-spanning, best on someone who wants clean masculinity with just enough edge to avoid being generic.
Opens with a crisp bergamot-basil accord that has real bite before lavender and geranium pull it into clean, aromatic fougère territory. The heart is classically structured — cool, slightly soapy, barbershop-adjacent without tipping into cliché. The dry-down is where it earns its keep: vetiver and oakmoss lay down a dry, earthy base that sandalwood and amber soften just enough to keep it wearable rather than austere. Projection is moderate, sillage polite but present. Vintage in spirit, disciplined in execution — best worn in cooler months by anyone who finds modern masculines exhaustingly sweet.
How they overlap
L'Homme and Jazz share 3 notes (bergamot, basil, vetiver). The same note name doesn't always mean the same scent — different houses use different vanillas, different woods, different musks — but a multi-note shared spine usually does indicate genuinely-comparable wear character. The remaining notes (5 unique to L'Homme, 5 unique to Jazz) are where the divergence happens.
The buying decision
Jazz is the cheaper original at $85 compared to $95 for L'Homme — about 11% less. L'Homme covers 3 seasons (spring, summer, fall) — wider weather range than Jazz, which leans spring/fall-only.