Stéphane Humbert Lucas 777 Soleil de Jeddah

A ball of orange, green and gold, dripping with exotic juices from an orchard before being swathed in Russian leather and amber. Soleil de Jeddah from Stéphane Humbert Lucas often feels as bright as the sun it was named after, but there is a slow eclipse as dark, slightly smoky leather casts its shadow over its bright heart.

Stéphane Humbert Lucas. Source: SHL 777 Facebook page.

Stéphane Humbert Lucas. Source: SHL 777 Facebook page.

Soleil de Jeddah is a 2013 parfum extrait from Stéphane Humbert Lucas 777 (hereinafter just referred to as “SHL 777” or “777“). All the fragrances are created by Monsieur Lucas, who used to be the in-house perfumer for SoOud and Nez à Nez. Up to now, the 777 line was exclusive to Europe, Russia, and Middle Eastern, but there is good news. The complete SHL 777 line should be coming to America in a few days, including the stunning amber monster, O Hira, that was previously contractually limited to Harrods and to Printemps, and the 2013 iris-amber-heliotrope Khol de Bahrein.

The new 2014 releases should also be available, such as the highly original cherry-latex-almond-cedar-oud Qom Chilom, the immortelle gourmand, Une Nuit à Doha, and the Cambodian oud, smoke and leather, Oud 777. The scents will be exclusive to Luckyscent and Osswald NYC. I have samples of the line, thanks to the generosity and kindness of Monsieur Lucas, and Soleil de Jeddah is the last in my series. (Rose de Petra was accidentally omitted from my package.)

As a side note, it is Monsieur Lucas who takes all the photos of the perfume bottles that I have shown in this series, and I think the one for Soleil de Jeddah may be one of the prettiest images that I’ve seen for a fragrance in a long time.

Source: SHL 777 Facebook page.

Source: SHL 777 Facebook page.

Soleil de Jeddah is a pure parfum with 24% perfume concentration that is described in the press materials provided to me as follows:

Source: Stéphane Humbert Lucas.

Source: Stéphane Humbert Lucas.

Bakelite of pulverized amber.
A fragrance both dignified and aphrodisiac.
Solar fragrance, luminous, bright, respectful reference to the holy city.

Lemon – Roman Chamomile – Osmanthus
Iris Root – Amber – Earthy Notes
Iris Butter – Russian Leather – Vanilla from Madagascar.

Regular readers will know by now that, as with other SHL 777 fragrances, the official list is merely a nutshell synopsis. I’ll spare you the details of my now routine (and very comedic) email exchanges with Monsieur Lucas, where I tell him all the other things I smell in the perfume and ask what is missing from his official list. Suffice it say, he is a very kind and patient man, and we’ve had a good laugh about my OCD obsession with details.

Mimosa. Source: Fragrantica

Mimosa. Source: Fragrantica

The actual note list for Soleil de Jeddah is incredibly long. These are just the main elements:

Osmanthus, Roman chamomile, Acacia mimosa (Fleur de Cassie), genet (Broom), lemon, mandarin, Sicilian bergamot, iris butter, iris concrete, jasmine, carnation, Indian patchouli, Russian leather (Isobutyl quinoleine and birch wood), oakmoss, civet, musk, styrax, labdanum amber, benzoin, and Madagascar vanilla.

Photo: House of Herrera, Caroline Herrera. Source: popsugar.com.au

Photo: House of Herrera, Caroline Herrera. Source: popsugar.com.au

Monsieur Lucas described Soleil de Jeddah to me as a perfume with a powerful citrus opening, followed by a strong floral heart, above a persistent, dark, intensely leathered base that is imbued with mousse de chene or oakmoss. He visualises it as a perfume that a woman would wear to a ball, with a long, flowing gown whose open back exposes sensual skin, all worn with a “panoply of jewels” and furs. I can see his vision and understand it, but, for me, Soleil de Jeddah is more akin to a glowing ball of yellow and orange centered on a massively concentrated citric and fruity heart, above a leathered base flecked with animalic civet.

Apricot. Source: forwallpaper.com

Apricot. Source: forwallpaper.com

Soleil de Jeddah opens on my skin with juicy apricots that are tangy with jamminess, followed by very tart, sour, zesty lemon, then iris, more iris, a light dusting of iris powder, chamomile, and an odd woodiness. There are leather nuances and a touch of smokiness, but the overall impression is of brightness. (I wrote in my notes, “bright, bright, BRIGHT!”)

Osmanthus often smells of apricots, with a leathery undertone, but flower in Soleil de Jeddah is highly imbued with other fruits as well. The result is a mixed osmanthus note with a concentrated feel that I’ve never experienced before. It reminds me of Black Gemstone‘s dense, tangy lemon curd, only here, the citrus is accompanied by equally concentrated apricots and oranges as well. Just as in Black Gemstone, the fruits in Soleil de Jeddah have been heavily amplified by a jammy, purple patchouli, but the main sensation is of tartness, not syrupy sweetness. It is a saturated explosion of tangy zestiness that is fresh, crisp, heavy, sweet, and sour, all at once.

Green mango via alegriphotos.com

Green mango via alegriphotos.com

It also strongly reminded me of something else, and, for the longest time, I couldn’t place it. Initially, the overall effect made me think a little of a tart Jolly Rancher candy infused strongly with iris and a touch of chamomile. But that wasn’t really it. There was more going on. Then it came to me: the green tartness resembled a kiwi and pineapple mix, with perhaps a tiny touch of cassis or black currant. At least, the first time around. On two subsequent tests, the zingy, tart, tangy fruitiness consistently smelled like green mangoes. It is exactly like the very concentrated, potent, heady mix in Neela Vermeire‘s bright mango floriental, Bombay Bling. I tried them side-by-side at one point, and yes, I am wafting green mangoes. I cannot explain it at all.

Photo: My own.

Photo: My own.

In all my tests, however, the multi-faceted fruit accord is always cocooned in iris above a slightly leather base. The iris smells wet, rooty, woody, cool, and lightly powdered all at once. The leather base is dark, thick, and, initially, lightly smoked, with flecks of a dry woodiness that reminds me of tree bark.

Many fragrances attempt to recreate the impression of “leather” through other notes. As the Perfume Shrine explains, “[r]endering a leather note in perfumery is a challenge for the perfumer[,]” and that what is “actually used” to create that olfactory impression are vegetal or synthetic ingredients which can include birch tarjuniper cade, and quinoline. The Perfume Shrine adds:

isobutyl quinoline … possesses a fiercely potent odour profile described as earthy, rooty, and nutty, echoing certain facets of oakmoss and vetiver and blending very well with both. Isobutyl quinoline also has ambery, woody, tobacco-like undertones: a really rich aromachemical!

Source: quattraenergy.com

Source: quattraenergy.com

While some of that description applies to what I smell in Soleil de Jeddah, my nose seems to read the leather more as “birch tar,” probably because that is how I am used to “Russian leather” being replicated. The note here is very similar to the leather in Caron‘s Tabac Blond and Chanel‘s Cuir de Russie, but Monsieur Lucas said only a little birch was used in the fragrance and that the main elements in the base are smoky styrax resin and isobutyl quinoline. Still, on my skin, there was a definite streak of woodiness in one of my tests of Soleil de Jeddah that I interpreted as “birch” bark shavings.

Source: creativity103.com

Source: creativity103.com

It’s an unusual combination when taken as a whole. The iris with the tart, tangy fruits and chamomile stands out as it is, but I have to admit that the “birch” wood totally threw me the first time around. Its dry woodiness and smokiness feels a bit strange in conjunction with apricot-kiwi-pineapple (or mango). And, yet, somehow it works. On some levels, Soleil de Jeddah reminded me of a super concentrated, heavy, more powerful cousin to Creed‘s cult hit, Aventus. The fruits are completely different, but the tangy, juicy, citric, lightly smoked feel underscored by birch leather is the same. Soleil de Jeddah is more dense and complex though, with constant streaks of chamomile and iris.

Photo: My own.

Photo: My own.

Those last two notes are soon overshadowed as the leathered base grows smokier and more powerful. The iris consistently fades on my skin after 20 minutes, and is never replaced by the other floral notes on the list. Carnation? Not on me. Jasmine? Non plus. Mimosa? Only occasionally, in the background, and in the most muted way imaginable. For the most part, Soleil de Jeddah’s main bouquet on my skin is consistently some fluctuating mix of apricots, oranges, lemon curd, green mango/kiwi/pineapple, chamomile, and jammy patchouli, all over the smoky leather base made up of styrax, birch, and isobutyl quinoline.

Source: footage.shutterstock.com

Source: footage.shutterstock.com

It’s an intensely concentrated, deep, strong mix but there is a surprising weightlessness to it. Despite the richness of its notes, Soleil de Jeddah doesn’t feel opaque or dense, and the sillage is generally average on my skin. 2 large spritzes from my atomizer, amounting to one good spray from a proper bottle, gave me a soft cloud with 3 inches in projection at first. Using 3 spritzes expanded the radius by another inch. Yet, in both cases, the sillage dropped at the start of the 2nd hour, and Soleil de Jeddah lay 1-2 inches above the skin. It turned into a skin scent roughly 4.75 hours in, which is much less time than some of the other SHL 777 fragrances that I’ve tried. Still, for those first few hours, Soleil de Jeddah has good sillage, and feels particularly strong up close due to the saturated, rich nature of the notes.

In all my tests, Soleil de Jeddah starts to transition into its second phase at the end of the 3rd hour. A powdery vanilla arrives to diffuse both the smokiness of the styrax resin in the base and the tartness of the fruits up top. It casts a thin blanket over the notes, softening them through the lens of a dry vanilla. As in a few of the SHL 777 fragrances, the note is not so much powdered or sweet as grainy and sandy; it’s almost more textural at times than actual vanilla, if that makes any sense. Soleil de Jeddah is still sharp and rich up close, but it lacks the same degree of concentrated, thick juiciness in its fruits, and the woodiness has disappeared.

Source: thewallpaperr.blogspot.com

Source: thewallpaperr.blogspot.com

The leather remains, however. In the majority of my tests, the apricot-orange-mango accord takes a step back, letting the smoky Russian leather and vanilla slowly take over center stage. Tiny flickers of chamomile continue to lurk about, while the amber begins to stirs in the base. It doesn’t smell like ambergris (which is what First in Fragrance mistakenly lists it as), nor like labdanum. Rather, it is merely a soft, golden haze which adds warmth to the scent. The jammy, purple patchouli occasionally appears in its own right as an individually distinct note next to the apricot-orange-lemon-mango accord, but, generally, it melts into the fruits. Once in a blue moon, I think I may smell a brief pinch of mimosa in the powderiness, but it is probably the power of suggestion.

At the end of the 7th hour, Soleil de Jeddah is a blur of black Russian leather and abstract, tart fruits, all lightly powdered with vanilla and cocooned in a soft, golden warmth. There is a civet-like sharpness to the scent, along with a lingering touch of sweetness that made me wonder if there was honey in Soleil de Jeddah. Monsieur Lucas says there isn’t, but the sweetness has a definite animalic sharpness that seems to go beyond mere civet on my skin. Whatever the source of the note, Soleil de Jeddah’s leather has a touch of skanky dirtiness underlying it.

Photo: My own.

Photo: My own.

The leather eventually fades away, and Soleil de Jeddah’s final drydown on my skin consists of tart fruitiness with vanilla and civet. There are touches of jammy patchouli which occasionally pop up, but very little remains of the birch, isobutyl quinoline, or woodiness. There is no powder, and Soleil de Jeddah isn’t even really ambered any more, either.

In its final moments, the perfume is a mere blur of dry, semi-tart fruitiness with a touch of vanilla and some lingering sharpness from the civet. All in all, Soleil de Jeddah consistently lasted over 10 hours on my skin. With 2 spritzes, I thought it was about to die at the end of the 9th hour, but the perfume lingered on tenaciously for a total of 10.75 hours. With 3 spritzes, Soleil de Jeddah lasted just under 12 hours, really more like 11.75.

Painting by Moon Beom via lostateminor.com

Painting by Moon Beom via lostateminor.com

I could not find any comparative reviews to show you how others see the scent. On Fragrantica, where Soleil de Jeddah is categorized as a “leather,” the perfume’s entry page has no comments at this time. However, one of my readers, “Lady Jane Grey,” owns the scent and shared her experiences in the comment section of another one of my SHL 777 reviews. There, she wrote about how Soleil de Jeddah was 2 perfumes in 1 on her skin, changing its character from one occasion to the next:

Jeddah smells differently worn on the same spot (left wrist) – when I tested at Harrods (mid afternoon) it was fruity and bright and happy, a spring scent entirely with a golden agarwood note in the back. Spritzed in the evening on the same spot the oud has that medical note, which in fact I quite like, because I find it calming. The scent is sweet and creamy..

Soleil de Jeddah has no oud, so I suspect the isobutyl quinoline and birch may be responsible for the woodiness that she is detecting.

Source: hdwalls.info

Source: hdwalls.info

For another blogger, the charming Christos of Memory of Scent, a brief test of Soleil de Jeddah in Switzerland’s Theodora Parfumery was all about the bright fruits. His short synopsis reads:

777 Stéphane Hubert Lucas Soleil de Jeddah: high end, high price, Middle East oriented house. This however, 3 hours after being sparyed on a blotter, feels like it is dripping fruity juices, in the best possible way, coming from someone who doesn’t like fruity fragrances. And all this with a touch of leather and ambergris! Very interesting!

I don’t generally like fruity fragrances, either, but I share his view that Soleil de Jeddah is a very interesting take on it, thanks to the smoky Russian leather and the other accords.

While Soleil de Jeddah’s strong backbone of fruitiness isn’t my personal style, I think the perfume will be a hit for those who are looking for a more adult, polished, original take on fruity fragrances. Those who adore very bright, tangy, sunny orientals like Bombay Bling will enjoy the similar vibe here, while the inclusion of smoky leather, animalic civet, and soft ambered warmth should reassure those who aren’t into “fruit cocktails,” as one friend of mine calls the category. And, who knows, you may even be lucky enough to experience the plethora of floral elements included in the scent, though they never really appeared on my skin. Finally, if you’re a fan of Aventus‘ mix of tangy-sweet fruits with birch leather, you may very much enjoy the richer, more concentrated SHL 777 take on the theme, especially if the Creed perfume doesn’t last on your skin.

Soleil de Jeddah is priced in the middle of the SHL 777 range. In Europe, it costs €235 for a 50 ml bottle of pure parfum that has 24% concentration. I don’t have the official American pricing rate, but I believe Osswald will sell it for $309. So, it’s not at the high-end represented by the magnificent monster amber, O Hira, but it’s also not at the “cheap” level of the lovely iris-amber-heliotrope, Khol de Bahrein, or the gourmand immortelle-marmalade-tobacco, Une Nuit à Doha.

In short, if you’re looking for a leather fragrance with a twist, or if you enjoy bright, tangy fruits whose rich juices feel as though they’re dripping off the vine onto your skin, give Soleil de Jeddah a sniff.

Disclosure: Perfume sample courtesy of Stéphane Humbert Lucas. That did not influence this review. I do not do paid reviews, and my opinions are my own.

DETAILS:
Cost & Availability: Soleil de Jeddah is an Extrait or pure parfum that is only available in a 50 ml bottle and costs €235. The 777 line will be at Luckyscent and Osswald NYC at the start of May. [Update 5/2 — Osswald now has the full 777 line. They sell Soleil de Jeddah for $309.] Outside the U.S.: Currently, the SHL 777 website is under construction, and doesn’t have an e-store. The best online resource is First in Fragrance which just received the complete SHL 777 line, including the new 2014 releases. It offers a sample of Soleil de Jeddah for €14, but is currently out of stock of the full bottles. In London, you can find the entire collection at Harrod’s Black Room, while in Paris, they are exclusive to Printemps under the name 777. Zurich’s Osswald also carries the line, they don’t have an e-store any more. The Swiss perfumery, Theodora, also has SHL 777, but no e-store. In Cannes, France, the store Taizo is said to carry the 777 line, but I didn’t see the perfumes on their website the last time I checked. In the Middle East, Souq.com has about 6 of the earlier fragrances which it sells for AED 1,500. In the UAE, the SHL 777 line is available at Harvey Nichols and at Bloomingdales in the Dubai Mall. In Russia, SHL 777 is sold at Lenoma. Ukraine’s Sana Hunt Luxury store also carries the line, but they don’t have an e-store. Samples: None of the U.S. sample sites currently carry this fragrance, so Luckyscent and Osswald NYC will be your best option once the SHL 777 line is released. Osswald has changed its Sample Program such that individual pricing now depends on the cost of the particular perfume in question. They range from $3 a vial, up to $9 a vial for fragrances that cost over $300. The program is limited to U.S. customers and has free shipping, but there is also a 3-sample minimum, I believe. If you have questions, you can call Osswald at (212) 625-3111 to enquire further.

16 thoughts on “Stéphane Humbert Lucas 777 Soleil de Jeddah

    • Given your love of super-concentrated orange and citrus notes, I think this one would very much be your cup of tea, Gioff. Next trip to London, hit Harrods. You may also like the intense Neroli aspect to the fresher, lighter Generation 2022 Woman (which is unisex, despite its name).

  1. Ya kno, I’m not at all into ‘fruity-cocktail’ scents (not even ‘juicy-zesty’ ones much either for that matter) BUT somehow you’ve totally managed to whet my appetite for this SdJ. – It might just be methinx that smoky styrax (which I adore) & quinoline that’s beckoning me – those 2 might just win me over to become my first eva ‘fruity’ ‘fume. … Either way you’ve certainly made it sound delicious. 🙂

    I really NEED to explore more of this line as so many sound just up my street. I at first totally ignored them as if I’m honest I wasn’t much a fan of the Nez a Nez line, (a touch too saccharine for my liking). So consequently I also ignored SoOud … BUT now with 777 it seems I need to give Monsieur Lucas another chance to charm me.

  2. Sigh….another trip to OsswaldNYC must happen! Great review! My “sample” of Khol de Bahrein should be arriving shortly 🙂

    • I think there are a few in the line that you’d like quite a bit. Not the strong Ouds, but the others. I’m looking forward to hearing what you think of Khol de Bahrein.

  3. Back from a holiday, full of lazy sunshine, crumbly sheep cheeses and heavy red vines… Oh my, how should I go back to work tomorrow ?! (and take a flight at 7:00 am…)

    Now, I was waiting for this review like for a Revelation ! It reminds me again that afternoon at Harrods, me wandering around somewhat bored at their parfum hall and then suddenly the small boot of 777 and I was rewarded with lovely whiffs for the rather gloomy business meeting earlier that day… Of course I know that one shouldn’t buy a parfum after wearing it just for 30 minutes but I knew I can risk it. I’m not a fruity parfum person and that might be the reason why a tiny voice in my brain tried to stop me “don’t buy it, don’t buy it” but it didn’t know that Jeddah will have so many facets on my skin and that sometimes that fruitiness will be hardly there. The citrus blast lasts only few seconds and after a short pineapple Osmanthus cocktail it goes into a dark leathery, smoky, ambery woodiness (now I write wood instead of agarwood) with loads of birch. It makes me immensely happy that I get a persistant note of chamomile, which I adore here. And I get a light medicinal note I thought might be the oud…
    Sometimes Jeddah appears on my skin as a garden full of pineapples, grapefruits (instead of lemon) and Osmanthus on a bright sunny morning – I definitely cannot separate the jasmin note (but purely rationally I know it has to be there so it can amplify the perception). And then, after 2 hours it goes into leather with tobacco, powdery iris and strong birch. I can even find the Fleur de Cassie note – but only because I know now that it’s there …
    I apologize for contradicting Monsieur Lucas, but I wouldn’t visualize Soleil de Jeddah as a woman in ballgown, showing lots of skin – for me it’s the scent for Virginia Woolf’s Orlando.

    • My apologies for the late response, Lady Jane, and a big welcome back. I hope you had a good time in Spain. As for Soleil de Jeddah and Monsieur Lucas’ visualisation, I agree with you. No woman in a ballgown in my eyes, either. Orlando is an interesting alternative. I shall have to think about that one. 🙂

      I must say, I was happy to hear that you got pineapples as well! I felt rather mad for the fruits that I smelled (especially the tarter green ones), but there was definitely more things happening on my skin than just plain oranges or citrus. So, a small hurrah for your skin bringing out the other fruits as well. It’s interesting how the perfume continuously changes on you, reflecting different sides. I’m more curious than ever to see if the same thing happens with the Black Gemstone that I love so much. I’m really looking forward to hearing your thoughts on that one.

  4. The sample of Black Gemstone is waiting for me at home – now only I should get home, finally. Will definitely let you know ! (was worried already since there were no signs of life from you…). I’m looking forward to juicy reviews.

  5. Jeddah is a town in Saudi Arabia, very near to Mecca, the holly place of muslims. It seems that when ever u awake, u can always see Jeddah sun, and it heats so strong… The light from it is so bright that u may think u in heaven ;)))))
    I tested Soleil de Jeddah yesterday, applied 14 hours ago and i can still perfectly smell it ;))) WOW! And my skin eats perfumes up! Well ok ok ok ;))) About perfume itself… i just LOVE it and i already ordered ;))) I tend to dark, heavy, mystic perfumes. I never happened to love any citrus summer scents…. but this… this is something different. This is a sun in a bottle. When i first sniffed it i smiled and lost about 10 years and felt myself younger, happier and stronger ;))) I felt the feel that i had when i was really happy many many many years ago… when i was happy thanks to simple things like sun, sea, breeze, and air.
    Soleil de Jeddah is a sun in a bottle!

    • Soleil de Jeddah’s bright ball of colour and sunshine is really special, isn’t it? For me, it’s the contrast with the darkness underneath and the emerging leatheriness that make the scents truly intriguing. Like you, I’m not particularly one for citrus scents, but I like the mango (on my skin) and multi-faceted nature of the fruits here. What fruits or citruses do you get, Mark? And do you get the darkness as well?

      BTW, have you tried Black Gemstone? I know our tastes don’t frequently overlap, but I would be really surprised if you didn’t like the smokiness, darkness, and richness of that one. I really would. Please don’t crush my hopes and say that that one didn’t work on your skin. 😉 lo

  6. Kafkaesque, I really don’t get any darkness and leatheriness. May be there is a little bit something of leather but so tamed that u must be a Sherlock Holmes to detect it ;))))
    I get just bright side of it, i just get pure sun and no clouds… pure sun and pure blue sky. May be this is my chemistry but this perfume talks to me. I would never ever thought that i would love a bright and sunny scent.My God ;)) Maybe its just im 35 and i became more sentimental… don’t know but i love it love love love LOVE the Soleil! You know i usually detect notes well but in this case i think all parts come from another planet ;))) By the way, they say in Jeddah there is a place where Hava (Eve) first woman on Earth was buried after she died. Her grave is there.
    Ok, now about Black Gemstone. I tested it long time ago. I tested Soleil just yesterday because i even didn’t want to taste it due to its fruity nature u see ;)))) I like Gemstone, its a great perfume of a very high quality and its dark and its mystical. However it reminds me of Black Afgano… its not the same but it has some common wibe! To cut the******** I like it, but i would not buy it, Even if i love dark and mystic perfumes i love when they “sound” clean and more sharp. Gemstone is way too dusty and balsamic. I was born in eastern ancient town even though i’m european, but i like sharp clean european taste since i have been smelling notes that are being proposed by perfumers when they create something oriental from my childhood. But i honestly think Gemstone is a magnificent and brilliant scent. My friend loves it and he does not like Soleil u know ;)))

    • I’m grinning like crazy at your rapturous descriptions for Soleil de Jeddah, Mark. It makes me genuinely happy when someone discovers a scent that transports them and creates such joy. It’s the absolute best part of perfumery, and I know just how intense that feeling can be. I see Soleil de Jeddah as something with dark shadows amidst the glowing ball of light, but your description of “pure sun and pure blue sky”… lovely!

      I understand what you mean about Black Gemstone’s vibe, as well as its balsamic element that doesn’t translate as a “clean” darkness. Yet, it surprises me also a little because I would consider Amouage’s Interlude Man to be a little dusty as well. At least, it is on my skin, but we’ve already established that our two experiences differ substantially in that regard and we’re getting very different perfumes. But I definitely understand where you’re coming from on Black Gemstone. I suspect you’d absolutely hate the Oud 777, and possibly the Oumma, though who knows? Things show up differently on you and I. I’d love to know what you thought of them both, if you try them, as well as O Hira.

      Regarding your friend who loves Black Gemstone, I differ from him in that I can see the great beauty in Soleil de Jeddah as well, but I think you’re both right. BOTH fragrances are superbly done and of great quality. BOTH of them. The only one from the line which was a raging disappointment was the Generation Homme one, though I don’t think the Femme version was exceptional in any way, either. But the Homme… ugh. It deserves to be in the line-up for another house completely, not SHL 777.

  7. I have tested almost all perfumes, i mean all! And i got now best 3 for me 😉
    Fetish by Roja Dove(liked it more than Puredistance M), Invasion Barbare by MDCI, and Soleil de Jeddah by Stéphane Humbert Lucas 777 ;)))

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