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Back To Black

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Back To Black

Honey, tobacco, and smoke walk into a dark room together, and they never leave. Kilian's Back to Black, Aphrodisiac Eau de Parfum, created by perfumer Calice Becker and released in 2009, belongs to the house's Black Masterpieces line, a series built around intensity and provocation. It was inspired in part by Amy Winehouse's raw, bruised soulfulness, and that emotional weight shows up on skin. Aromatica carries the Kilian Back to Black decant in Bangladesh in all available sizes, so you can test this notoriously polarizing fragrance.

Fragrance Notes

Top: Chamomile, Raspberry, Bergamot, Cardamom, Coriander, Nutmeg

Heart: Honey, Cedarwood, Frankincense, Oakmoss, Patchouli, Saffron

Base: Bitter Almond, Bourbon Vanilla, Labdanum, Tobacco

The Scent

Spicier and fruitier than the name suggests, this fragrance opens in a way that catches you off guard. Raspberry and chamomile arrive first alongside bergamot, giving the first few minutes a strange softness, almost medicinal, almost floral. Cardamom, coriander, and nutmeg add a warm kitchen-spice quality that feels grounding rather than sharp. It reads as unusual, not unpleasant, but genuinely unexpected for a fragrance with "black" in the name.

Then the heart hits, and everything shifts. Honey pours in thick and viscous, and it does not smell like gentle beeswax, it smells like the good stuff, dark, slightly fermented, almost waxy. Frankincense begins to pull up smoke from underneath, and patchouli adds an earthy, slightly medicinal depth that prevents the honey from reading as sweet candy. The cedarwood contributes a dry woody scaffold, and saffron threads through with a rich metallic-spiced character. This phase is dense. It can feel overwhelming on first contact, or it can feel exactly right, depending on skin and expectation.

There is a moment in the mid-dry-down where the tobacco accord becomes the dominant voice. This is not cigarette tobacco, not the sharp chemical kind. It reads closer to cured, aged leaf, something between pipe tobacco and dark dried fruit, with the honey still woven through it. The frankincense continues to smoke quietly in the background, and the oakmoss adds a faintly damp, forested quality to keep the whole thing from becoming too sweet. The raspberry's faint fruitiness, which seemed to vanish in the heart, occasionally resurfaces here as an almost jammy shadow behind the tobacco, binding the opening to the mid-phase in a way that only becomes clear in retrospect.

The honey-tobacco combination can read as deeply sensual and sophisticated, or the animalic undertone, amplified by the labdanum in the base, can feel like too much depending on temperature or skin chemistry. On a warm day or warm skin, it can feel almost suffocating. On cool skin in a cool room, it opens up into something remarkable. The same fragrance can behave quite differently across those two conditions.

The dry-down pulls back considerably. Bitter almond and bourbon vanilla soften the tobacco, making the final stages warmer and less aggressive. The labdanum, a rich ambered resin, rounds everything out. What you are left with is a quiet, slightly animalic amber-vanilla tobacco, the ghost of the dark, full fragrance that preceded it. The chamomile from the opening often reappears in this late phase, adding a barely-there floral lift that closes the loop on the opening's unusual softness. It is a genuinely complex trajectory, and one that rewards patience.

When to Wear

Back to Black is built for autumn and winter evenings, specifically the kind that involve low lighting, good company, and no need to be subtle. It belongs in dinner settings, intimate gatherings, or late-night occasions where warmth and closeness are the point. Avoid summer heat, which amplifies the honey and tobacco into something that can become genuinely difficult to wear.

Who Is It For

The person who already owns Tobacco Vanille and finds it too safe will feel at home here, someone who wants dark gourmand with smoke and an animalic edge rather than sweet vanilla comfort.

If you enjoy Angels' Share, which sits in the same boozy-gourmand warmth, Back to Black is worth experiencing as the darker, smokier counterpart. You might also find Incense Oud interesting if the frankincense angle draws you in. Browse the full Kilian collection at Aromatica.

Available as an authentic decant in Bangladesh at Aromatica in 3ml, 5ml, 9ml, and 15ml.

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From $306.25

Original: $875.00

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Back To Black

$875.00

$306.25

Product Information

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Description

Honey, tobacco, and smoke walk into a dark room together, and they never leave. Kilian's Back to Black, Aphrodisiac Eau de Parfum, created by perfumer Calice Becker and released in 2009, belongs to the house's Black Masterpieces line, a series built around intensity and provocation. It was inspired in part by Amy Winehouse's raw, bruised soulfulness, and that emotional weight shows up on skin. Aromatica carries the Kilian Back to Black decant in Bangladesh in all available sizes, so you can test this notoriously polarizing fragrance.

Fragrance Notes

Top: Chamomile, Raspberry, Bergamot, Cardamom, Coriander, Nutmeg

Heart: Honey, Cedarwood, Frankincense, Oakmoss, Patchouli, Saffron

Base: Bitter Almond, Bourbon Vanilla, Labdanum, Tobacco

The Scent

Spicier and fruitier than the name suggests, this fragrance opens in a way that catches you off guard. Raspberry and chamomile arrive first alongside bergamot, giving the first few minutes a strange softness, almost medicinal, almost floral. Cardamom, coriander, and nutmeg add a warm kitchen-spice quality that feels grounding rather than sharp. It reads as unusual, not unpleasant, but genuinely unexpected for a fragrance with "black" in the name.

Then the heart hits, and everything shifts. Honey pours in thick and viscous, and it does not smell like gentle beeswax, it smells like the good stuff, dark, slightly fermented, almost waxy. Frankincense begins to pull up smoke from underneath, and patchouli adds an earthy, slightly medicinal depth that prevents the honey from reading as sweet candy. The cedarwood contributes a dry woody scaffold, and saffron threads through with a rich metallic-spiced character. This phase is dense. It can feel overwhelming on first contact, or it can feel exactly right, depending on skin and expectation.

There is a moment in the mid-dry-down where the tobacco accord becomes the dominant voice. This is not cigarette tobacco, not the sharp chemical kind. It reads closer to cured, aged leaf, something between pipe tobacco and dark dried fruit, with the honey still woven through it. The frankincense continues to smoke quietly in the background, and the oakmoss adds a faintly damp, forested quality to keep the whole thing from becoming too sweet. The raspberry's faint fruitiness, which seemed to vanish in the heart, occasionally resurfaces here as an almost jammy shadow behind the tobacco, binding the opening to the mid-phase in a way that only becomes clear in retrospect.

The honey-tobacco combination can read as deeply sensual and sophisticated, or the animalic undertone, amplified by the labdanum in the base, can feel like too much depending on temperature or skin chemistry. On a warm day or warm skin, it can feel almost suffocating. On cool skin in a cool room, it opens up into something remarkable. The same fragrance can behave quite differently across those two conditions.

The dry-down pulls back considerably. Bitter almond and bourbon vanilla soften the tobacco, making the final stages warmer and less aggressive. The labdanum, a rich ambered resin, rounds everything out. What you are left with is a quiet, slightly animalic amber-vanilla tobacco, the ghost of the dark, full fragrance that preceded it. The chamomile from the opening often reappears in this late phase, adding a barely-there floral lift that closes the loop on the opening's unusual softness. It is a genuinely complex trajectory, and one that rewards patience.

When to Wear

Back to Black is built for autumn and winter evenings, specifically the kind that involve low lighting, good company, and no need to be subtle. It belongs in dinner settings, intimate gatherings, or late-night occasions where warmth and closeness are the point. Avoid summer heat, which amplifies the honey and tobacco into something that can become genuinely difficult to wear.

Who Is It For

The person who already owns Tobacco Vanille and finds it too safe will feel at home here, someone who wants dark gourmand with smoke and an animalic edge rather than sweet vanilla comfort.

If you enjoy Angels' Share, which sits in the same boozy-gourmand warmth, Back to Black is worth experiencing as the darker, smokier counterpart. You might also find Incense Oud interesting if the frankincense angle draws you in. Browse the full Kilian collection at Aromatica.

Available as an authentic decant in Bangladesh at Aromatica in 3ml, 5ml, 9ml, and 15ml.

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