
M7
Few designer fragrances have had as much lasting impact as Yves Saint Laurent M7 Eau de Toilette, released in 2002 and composed by Alberto Morillas and Jacques Cavallier Belletrud. It arrived when oud was still foreign territory for mainstream Western houses, and it placed a raw, resinous oud chord directly at the center of a designer cologne built for men who were ready to be uncomfortable. It was a commercial flop at the time. It is now considered one of the most influential masculine fragrances of the past three decades. Aromatica carries the YSL M7 decant in Bangladesh in all available sizes so you can experience this pivotal piece of fragrance history without hunting down a bottle that has become increasingly hard to source.
Fragrance Notes
Top: Rosemary, Mandarin Orange, Bergamot
Heart: Agarwood (Oud), Vetiver
Base: Amber, Musk
The Scent
Bergamot and mandarin open with a brief citrus brightness, sharpened by a thin thread of rosemary that keeps things from feeling sweet. That opening is pleasant and almost conventional for the first few minutes, which makes what follows feel like a deliberate ambush. Within ten minutes the oud begins to assert itself, and this is not the polished, rose-softened oud that became ubiquitous in designer flankers a decade later. This oud is dry, medicinal, and slightly animalic, with a leathery undertone that can feel challenging on first contact. The transition from citrus brightness to that raw oud core is one of the sharpest pivots in designer perfumery, a sudden shift in register that leaves no middle ground to stand on. The vetiver arrives alongside the oud and functions less as a green, rooty note and more as a reinforcement of the dry, earthy woodiness, pushing the composition away from anything soft or easy. Together, oud and vetiver create a dark, bone-dry woody accord that is genuinely rare in the designer space, even now. As the fragrance settles into its mid-stage you may notice a subtle cherry-wood quality where the amber begins to sweeten the accord without domesticating it. The amber works slowly, warming the edges of the oud-vetiver core and drawing out a faint resinous depth that lends the composition a sense of ancient, almost architectural weight. The sweetness is warm and resinous rather than gourmand, something close to dried tree sap rather than vanilla. The base is where opinions split sharply. Some find it deeply masculine, primal, and compellingly strange. Others find the oud-vetiver combination too challenging, too animalic, too much. Both reactions are describing the same fragrance accurately. The musk in the dry-down is understated, ensuring the woody resinous character remains dominant rather than softening into a conventional skin scent. It wears close to skin but with authority.
When to Wear
Autumn and winter evenings are where M7 is most at home, particularly in cooler temperatures that slow the oud's volatility and let the resinous base develop at its own pace. It suits formal dinners, late-night gatherings, or settings where you want to make a quiet but uncompromising statement rather than reach for something crowd-friendly.
Who Is It For
Someone who has worked through the mainstream oud releases and found them too polished, too safe will find in M7 the raw, unsanded version that started the whole conversation. It is for the wearer who does not mind a fragrance that takes a firm position and holds it from first spray to final dry-down.
If you enjoy Aoud Night by Montale, M7 shares that same uncompromising dark-wood backbone and is worth comparing side by side. Browse the full Yves Saint Laurent collection at Aromatica.
Available as an authentic decant in Bangladesh at Aromatica in 3ml, 5ml, 9ml, and 15ml.
Original: $1,024.00
-65%$1,024.00
$358.40Product Information
Product Information
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Description
Few designer fragrances have had as much lasting impact as Yves Saint Laurent M7 Eau de Toilette, released in 2002 and composed by Alberto Morillas and Jacques Cavallier Belletrud. It arrived when oud was still foreign territory for mainstream Western houses, and it placed a raw, resinous oud chord directly at the center of a designer cologne built for men who were ready to be uncomfortable. It was a commercial flop at the time. It is now considered one of the most influential masculine fragrances of the past three decades. Aromatica carries the YSL M7 decant in Bangladesh in all available sizes so you can experience this pivotal piece of fragrance history without hunting down a bottle that has become increasingly hard to source.
Fragrance Notes
Top: Rosemary, Mandarin Orange, Bergamot
Heart: Agarwood (Oud), Vetiver
Base: Amber, Musk
The Scent
Bergamot and mandarin open with a brief citrus brightness, sharpened by a thin thread of rosemary that keeps things from feeling sweet. That opening is pleasant and almost conventional for the first few minutes, which makes what follows feel like a deliberate ambush. Within ten minutes the oud begins to assert itself, and this is not the polished, rose-softened oud that became ubiquitous in designer flankers a decade later. This oud is dry, medicinal, and slightly animalic, with a leathery undertone that can feel challenging on first contact. The transition from citrus brightness to that raw oud core is one of the sharpest pivots in designer perfumery, a sudden shift in register that leaves no middle ground to stand on. The vetiver arrives alongside the oud and functions less as a green, rooty note and more as a reinforcement of the dry, earthy woodiness, pushing the composition away from anything soft or easy. Together, oud and vetiver create a dark, bone-dry woody accord that is genuinely rare in the designer space, even now. As the fragrance settles into its mid-stage you may notice a subtle cherry-wood quality where the amber begins to sweeten the accord without domesticating it. The amber works slowly, warming the edges of the oud-vetiver core and drawing out a faint resinous depth that lends the composition a sense of ancient, almost architectural weight. The sweetness is warm and resinous rather than gourmand, something close to dried tree sap rather than vanilla. The base is where opinions split sharply. Some find it deeply masculine, primal, and compellingly strange. Others find the oud-vetiver combination too challenging, too animalic, too much. Both reactions are describing the same fragrance accurately. The musk in the dry-down is understated, ensuring the woody resinous character remains dominant rather than softening into a conventional skin scent. It wears close to skin but with authority.
When to Wear
Autumn and winter evenings are where M7 is most at home, particularly in cooler temperatures that slow the oud's volatility and let the resinous base develop at its own pace. It suits formal dinners, late-night gatherings, or settings where you want to make a quiet but uncompromising statement rather than reach for something crowd-friendly.
Who Is It For
Someone who has worked through the mainstream oud releases and found them too polished, too safe will find in M7 the raw, unsanded version that started the whole conversation. It is for the wearer who does not mind a fragrance that takes a firm position and holds it from first spray to final dry-down.
If you enjoy Aoud Night by Montale, M7 shares that same uncompromising dark-wood backbone and is worth comparing side by side. Browse the full Yves Saint Laurent collection at Aromatica.
Available as an authentic decant in Bangladesh at Aromatica in 3ml, 5ml, 9ml, and 15ml.











